Yet Another American Healthcare Catastrophy
Wed Aug 06, 2008 at 08:33:31 AM PDT
Note: This diary has some overlap with a diary my friend Eve put up this morning. As usual, she does it better, but I had this ready and it's enough of a different focus I thought I'd go ahead with it.
We've grown all too used to these stories - stories of the failure of American healthcare. Stories of individuals let down. Stories telling us how much more we spend than anyone else to get less. So today I see yet another one in the New York Times, headlined Millions With Chronic Disease Get Little or no Treatment
This one hits close for me, as the patients it talks about are the ones I see and work with every day - when the consequences of their chronic disease have brought them to heart attacks or heart surgery - or worse.
So what about this "bag tax"?
Wed Jul 30, 2008 at 10:01:41 AM PDT
Everywhere I go in the blogosphere the last couple of days I see these big bright red ads telling us to call our legislators and stop the "bag tax"
Apparently there is a move in Caliornia to put a surcharge on plastic bags as a way of encouraging folks to bring their own.
Being a curious sort of fellow - one of those things that sets us apart from the far right - I clicked on the link to see what I could learn.
Darcy Burner and political star power
Sat Jul 19, 2008 at 07:29:28 PM PDT
I am now approaching the end of my first NN and have had the privilege to see a number of the brighter lights in the Democratic firmament. While we didn't have a current presidential candidate - unless you count Bob Barr - We had Al Gore, Wes Clark, Howard Dean, Nancy Pelosi, Gavin Newsom and no doubt others I'm forgetting. These are all very big names. Some we love, others we have a more complicated relationship with. But each of them has undeniably played a very important role. And yet one sweet-faced and unassuming woman who has yet to hold elective office was loved and cheered like no one else
Getting excited about a House candidate
Sat Jul 12, 2008 at 03:50:35 PM PDT
I live in the deep red 2nd congressional district of Northern California. It's a great place to live, but one of the bad points has been the feeling of virtual certainty that I would never have a representative in either the California Legislature or the US House who represented me.
Now, for the first time in over 30 years, I feel a real glimmer of hope that might change. And I want to call your attention to a race that is not yet on the national radar, but that I hope will soon be.
The Truth about "Healthcare for America Now"
Wed Jul 09, 2008 at 03:24:59 PM PDT
As a long term veteran of the fight for single payer healthcare - for a real solution that will meet the care needs of all Americans, I was pretty excited at first when I saw the splashy new rollout for "Healthcare for America Now"
You can see their web ads on this site and on many others.
You can see their splashy website
I took a look at it and at first, things looked pretty good. They say lots of bad things about the health insurers, which is a good start. My first clue that something was wrong was when I followed a link to a survey. Follow me below the fold for that first clue.
How the Trad. Media limits the healthcare debate.
Sun Jun 29, 2008 at 09:00:57 AM PDT
One of the things readers here have become familiar with is the way the Traditional Media limit the terms of political discussion in our country. One oft-cited example is the war and continued occupation in Iraq. If we had only the TM for a news source, we would be exposed only to two sides: Those who favored the war in the beginning and now think it was a mistake, and those who still support it. Those who thought it was a terrible idea from the beginning rarely make the talk shows.
My purpose here today is to discuss the way the same narrowing of the spectrum of discussion has happened in the healthcare debate, with particular focus on a recently pulished online article from FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting). I highly recommend you read the original article and follow some of it's references to original sources. It's worth the effort.
Taking the Healthcare battle to the streets
Thu Jun 19, 2008 at 06:19:25 PM PDT
I'm just home after a long day and a long drive home, but can't wait to get up at least a bit of information on a truly inspiring event.
This week, at San Francisco's Moscone Center, AHIP - America's Health Insurance Plans - are having their annual meeting. Today, a coalition led by the California Nurses Association gave them an appropriate greeting.
It was an event that made me proud to be a nurse, proud to be a member of my union and hopeful for the future.
No doubt others will do a better job of telling the story and add some visuals I don't have immediate access to. But until they do, I wanted to get this up.
SEIU raid on New York Nurses
Fri May 02, 2008 at 02:05:28 PM PDT
Over the last several weeks, since the SEIU (Service Employees International Union) came into conflict with my union, CNA/NNOC (California Nurses Assn./National Nurses Organizing Committee), we have been treated to a steady parade of statements from SEIU attacking CNA for what they chose to call "union busting".
In retaliation, they have attempted to violently disrupt a labor conference, sent mass mailings to our members and are currently here in California making home visits to our members trying to undermine our union.
But it appears that their abhorrence of raiding is subject to a double standard. It's OK when they do it.
Digging Deeper into SEIU vs CNA/NNOC
Tue Apr 22, 2008 at 03:16:54 PM PDT
Much has been made of two recent events - CNA/NNOC intervening in a Ohio representation election arranged by SEIU and a chain of hospitals called Catholic Healthcare Partners and the retaliatory attack by certain SEIU staff on a labor conference where the executive director of CNA was scheduled to speak.
Many observers not directly involved have tended to write this off as a simple turf war between two unions competing for members. While there is history behind these events, the real roots are in deep-seated philosophical differences. Because these differences have real implications for the labor movement, I think it is worth the effort to try to step back from the immediate heat and look at fundamental nature of the differences.
More views on SEIU actions at Labor Notes (Updated)
Tue Apr 15, 2008 at 02:59:16 PM PDT
(Note: the Labor Notes Conference is a biennial gathering of activists seeking to build a more democratic and more effective labor movement. It takes place in Detroit Mich.)
In the aftermath of the disruption and violence by SEIU at last weekend’s Labor Notes conference, there have been a flurry of analyses, finger-pointing, hindsight, and criticisms. This issue is too important to drop...in recent days SEIU’s campaign against CNA/NNOC (California Nurses Assn/National Nurses Organizing Committee) has veered from harassment into violence—which has absolutely no place in the labor movement. I think it’s important to listen to a few of the voices coming out of this melee with first-hand experience of the incident. I'll warn you that this has grown rather long, as I have found more voices it seemed important to include. Note that two of the folks whose words I include are connected to CNA/NNOC. The others are not.
SEIU hits a new low - attacks labor conference.
Sun Apr 13, 2008 at 01:38:30 PM PDT
Along with a group of my friends and fellow board members of CNA/NNOC, I have been spending the weekend in Detroit Michigan for a conference –"Rebuilding Labor’s Power". The conference is put on by Labor Notes magazine, a magazine devoted to building a better, more democratic and more effective labor movement.
Last night, the conference attendees experienced an example of the kind of thuggery that illustrates the worst of the American labor movement. The kind of thing that the Right has used to give unions a bad name with much of the American public.
SEIU Member Nurses in their own words
Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 02:58:54 PM PDT
In the last few days we've seen an escalation of the war carried out by the current leadership of SEIU International against my union, California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee and against dissident factions within SEIU. With the enormous resources that come with size, the Liebermans of the labor movement have been able to plaster the blogs with deceptive ads. As a proud member and volunteer board member of CNA/NNOC I feel some compulsion to do what I can to combat a misleading impression and to set the record straight
What is This Union War all About???
Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 09:25:31 PM PDT
By now, if you are a regular on this site or any other in the liberal blogosphere, you have noticed a series of blogads that involve battle between unions or combat within a union (the theme color is often purple) and you may well be wondering what the hell is going on. Starting today, you will notice an add featuring a stern looking older woman attacking the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee.
If you have lifted your head up at all, from your obsession with the latest polls in the Deocratic primary, you are surely a little bewildered by all of this.
Follow me to learn more - at least from one point of view.
Incredible CNA/NNOC victory in Houston (Updated)
Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 09:01:46 PM PDT
I am posting this fast with relatively little detail yet available, but I wanted to get this word out.
CNA/NNOC just moments ago, won the first ever representation election for private sector registered nurses in the state of Texas. This is a stunning victory, won in a very difficult organizing environment - a right to work state with essentially no other unionised nurses other than, I believe, a few who are federal employees. This is just stunning.
Troubling Alliance of Union and Drug Company
Wed Mar 26, 2008 at 04:59:57 PM PDT
Disclosure: I am a 27 year Registered Nurse, working in Cardiac Rehabilitation in Northern California and proud board member of the National Nurses Organizing Committee/California Nurses Association—America’s RN union, 80,000 members strong in all 50 states.
Many of you know that there is a major debate breaking out in the labor movement, pitting SEIU on one side against some of its own locals and much of the rest of the labor movement on the other side. At its heart is the philosophy of "partnerships"—SEIU believes in "partnering" with employers, HMOs, the insurance industry, the drug companies, etc., in a short-term strategy to gain new members. NNOC/CNA believes we will only achieve healthcare reform by standing up to healthcare corporations—and will only achieve worker power by organizing workers, not organizing employers.
Looking to Nomination Endgame
Sun Feb 10, 2008 at 09:07:07 AM PDT
I'm going to make a conscientious effort to keep this candidate-neutral, for all of us who have had it with candidate promotion diaries.
As it becomes increasingly likely that neither of our candidates will win enough pledged delegates to lock up the nomination, we need to look ahead to how that may play out and how our party will be affected.
I'm in the camp that is not afraid of a long selection process. The longer it goes on, the longer the attention is focused on our candidates and the more an already pale and gray McCain fades into the background. But I do have a different worry.
ANA endorsement - Don't be too impressed
Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 05:30:40 PM PDT
Disclaimer - this is NOT an anti-Clinton diary. We have too many of those as it is. But I'm fairly involved in nursing politics and y'all need the straight story on what this endorsement is worth. Which in my mind is nothing. The relationshops among the various nursing organizations - the ANA, the UAN and the various state associations - are too convoluted for almost anyone to care about. But here's the essential information:
The ANA is an organization with a once proud history of building the nursing profession. Unfortunately, for at least as long as I have been a nurse - 26 years - it has been an organization led entirely be academic nurses and management nurses. I would bet plenty there is no working bedside nurse - no nurse who actually cares for patients - in its top leadership.
Cheneycare
Sat Jan 26, 2008 at 03:58:02 PM PDT
Many of you will have noticed the Chaneycare ad running on the front page today.
It makes me so darn proud to see it there because this is my union at work: the California Nurses Assn./National Nurses Organizing Committee.
It's one of the few unions in the country acting like a real union should.
What are those ads about? They're about advancing the cause of real healthcare reform and pushing the Democratic candidates to show the backbone to support real reform - based on our belief that the private insurers have no place in a real solution.