Two emails forwarded below:
FW: [DFHA] A public option!
FW: [DFHA] Kansas City to hold national free health clinic for the uninsured Dec. 9-10
Please forward this email and support a group working hard for you. Help them send a valuable message to DC with the simplicity of the “healthcare for america now” link below.
There is strength in numbers and civil action.
Thanx,
Dave
From:
df...@googlegroups.com [mailto:df...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Phyllis
Sheaks
Sent: Monday, October 26, 2009 6:13 PM
To: df...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [DFHA] A public option!
|
Friend: |
From:
df...@googlegroups.com [mailto:df...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Tom
Klammer A
kind of cynical take on things by Mr. Barnhart - however true any parts
of the motivation for when and where to hold it, it should be a national
shame that such events are so well-attended, by people who are concerned
about getting healthcare, not coming to play politics. Tom
Klammer We have breaking news, if by "breaking news" we mean
stuff that happened while I was out last week ... As you may know, a series of mass free health clinics are
being held across the country to call attention to the number of uninsured
Americans and the strain that their untreated illnesses put on the nation's
health care system. The timing of these clinics is obvious - free clinics are
part of our health care system and they believe passionately that everyone
deserves good medical care - an objective that dovetails with the current
drive in Washington for universal health care. This is perilous territory for physicians to tread. Taking a
stand on such an incendiary political issue is not for the weak of stomach.
But then, most doctors and nurses have tummies of steel. Besides, even the
most feckless politician would agree that providing quality health care for
all at the lowest possible cost is a worthy cause -- and it doesn't get much
lower-cost than free. It all started when celebrity physician Mehmet Oz, who has a
new syndicated TV show, led a
widely publicized free health clinic in Houston last month, at which
nearly 1,800 patients were seen in one day. Many had
symptoms that should've been taken care of long ago. One of the most
extreme cases was Steven Cantrell, a working man with a blister on his lower
lip that developed into a huge, ugly, life-threatening lesion. (Click here if
you have a strong
stomach.) A producer on MSNBC's "Countdown with Keith
Olbermann," Rich Stockwell, suggested to his boss that he use his pulpit
to raise money for more such clinics ... and to hold them in key states where
Democratic senators were wavering on a public option in the upcoming
legislation on health care reform. Just like that, $1.2 million was raised
and a clinic was announced in the home state of Arkansas senator Blanche
Lincoln. Then a second, in the state represented by Sen. Mary Landrieux. Well, on Wednesday's "Countdown" last week, the
National Association of Free Clinics announced a third mass clinic for the
uninsured, right here in Kansas City. It
will be the first 2-day-long clinic (Dec. 9-10) and according to Nicole
Lamoureux, executive director of the association, it is designed as "a
national version" of the Houston and Little Rock clinics.
So it's not aimed at Sen. Claire McCaskill per se, but rather to make "a
huge statement" about the crisis of Americans postponing vital,
relatively low-cost medical care because they don't have insurance. Kansas City was chosen, Lamoureaux told Keith Olbermann,
because it has a "robust" free health clinic network, unlike other
parts of the country; and, of course, it helps that we are in the middle of
the country. Volunteers are
always needed for free health clinics coming up, but in
particular the big one coming up in Kansas City, so check out the freeclinics.us web site for more info. For a related story on Dr. Oz, I spoke recently to Sheri Wood,
who heads the Kansas City Free Clinic and is the president of the national
association that Lamoureux serves. That story is appearing tomorrow in the
Kansas City Star. Here's a quote from it. I asked Wood if holding these big
free clinics at this time wasn't politically provocative: “We are trying to stay out of the politics,” says
Wood. “There are already clinics in those states. You can turn anything
political that you want to. We’re not pushing the public option. The
free health clinic movement believes that health care is truly a right, not a
privilege, and the more people are insured, the less it will cost the system,
because caring for the uninsured is expensive.” Posted on October 26, 2009
at 04:43 PM | Permalink
Sent: Monday, October 26, 2009 9:25 PM
To: df...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [DFHA] Kansas City to hold national free health clinic for the
uninsured Dec. 9-10
www.tellsomebody.us Kansas City to
hold national free health clinic for the uninsured Dec. 9-10 ... the biggest
one yet ... why KC was chosen
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