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Medical Forum / General / Alternative / June 2007

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Nurses launch national "Scrubs for SiCKO" campaign to endorse universal health care following Michael Moore's film

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Jan Drew - 30 Jun 2007 04:15 GMT
http://www.newstarget.com/z021921.html

NewsTarget.com printable article
Originally published June 29 2007

Nurses launch national "Scrubs for SiCKO" campaign to endorse universal
health care following Michael Moore's film
by Mike Adams

Starting June 29th, the launch day of the SiCKO documentary, nurses, doctors
and other health care practitioners are launching a national campaign to
urge support for a shift to a universal health care system. They'll be
handing out flyers and recruiting people to support a campaign to shift
America away from its current greed-based system of medicine to one that
offers universal health care to everyone.

Universal health care is a system where the government provides
taxpayer-funded health care to all citizens in the nation, with no
exceptions, no pre-existing conditions, no application forms and no service
denials. Services are usually paid for by tax dollars or employer
contributions that go into a government-administered health care fund.
Nearly all advanced nations use this system today, as it removes the
profiteering, greed, monopoly pricing and most of the paperwork surrounding
health care services. It also eliminates a tremendous amount of stress and
worry among the population, greatly enhancing the quality of life of that
nation's citizens.

Canada relies on universal health care. So does the U.K., France, Japan,
Taiwan and even Cuba, as is pointed out in the SiCKO movie by Michael Moore.
Only the United States remains steeped in health care corruption, stuck in a
system of greed, run by corporations who are out to make a profit, not to
make people well. (And disease pays big bucks, by the way. That's why
conventional medicine today has no real interest in preventing disease or
curing disease. There's only a focus on treating symptoms and keeping
patients addicted to pharmaceuticals for life.)

NewsTarget fully supports universal health care. While the thought of
government running health care is rather horrifying, the only thing scarier
is the thought of greedy corporations running health care. I'd much rather
have health care left up to incompetent bureaucrats than scheming profiteers
who have no ethics. The very idea that drug companies and insurance
companies are right now profiting from disease and sickness is bewildering.
Shouldn't health care be more concerned about the health of the people than
the profits of the wealthy elite?

As I said in a previous article, no nation that neglects the health of its
people can expect to have a future. America's current system of medicine has
clearly abandoned the needs of its people while protecting the profits of
influential corporations who run health care today (Big Pharma, insurance
companies, hospitals and so on). The end result of all this is now becoming
obvious: A collapse of America's health and wealth. Our future is looking
increasingly like a future of rampant disease and widespread medical
bankruptcy. But it's not too late to stop this from happening. Adopting
universal health care now could save us from the national health care
disaster now brewing.

If we do nothing and accept the status quo, continuing to financially
exploit our sick while denying basic health care services to nearly 50
million Americans, our future is not in doubt: The United States of America
will find itself ruined, diseased and bankrupt, with no way out. See my
popular health care fable Welcome to the Town of Allopath for a fictional
description of how this might work. (Yes, I'm the original author of the
Town of Allopath fable. Other websites have used the story for various
purposes, but I'm the one who wrote it.)

It's interesting that even nurses and health practitioners are fed up with
the current greed-based health care system that operates in America today.
Doctors are buried under insurance paperwork (which takes up about 70% - 80%
of the staff at a given clinic or hospital), insurance companies play the
"we won't pay" game with everybody, and the people end up paying for
insurance that won't cover them when they need it anyway. This whole
situation creates stress and worry for everyone, and it results in the
needless deaths of individuals who are denied lifesaving medical procedures
simply because their insurance won't pay. Want a picture of how the industry
really operates? Just watch the behavior of the Dr. Kelso character in the
popular "Scrubs" television series -- it's more accurate than you might
suspect!

Addicted to profit
So if nurses, doctors, employers, state governments and nearly all the
people in the country want universal health care, why hasn't it happened
yet? The answer is simple: Because the corporations currently profiting from
sickness and disease don't want to give up their control over health care.
Big Pharma is making billions of dollars selling dangerous drugs to people
who largely don't need them. Health insurance companies are raking in
billions more by denying payment for medical procedures. Lawmakers are on
the food chain too, addicted to health care industry money for their
reelection campaigns. The corporations in power today are allied against any
switch to universal health care because it would take the profit out of the
system and deliver quality health care services on the cheap.

Think about it: Americans pay the most, by far, for health care. We pay
monopoly prices for pharmaceuticals. It's a great scam if you're cashing in
as a drug company or corrupt FDA official. But the People just get the
shaft. Isn't it time we took back our health care and investigated, arrested
and prosecuted all the criminals who have been running this health care scam
on us for the last few decades? (We can start by making arrests at the FDA,
by the way, for their crimes against humanity. See my article The
lawlessness of the FDA, Big Pharma immunity, and crimes against humanity for
more details.

Below, we reprint the full press release published by "Scrubs for SiCKO."
You can learn more information at: http://www.calnurse.org/sicko/

Nurses, Doctors Announce 'Scrubs for SiCKO' Campaign in Conjunction With
Debut of Michael Moore's Film to Spark Genuine Healthcare Debate
Planning to spark a fundamental change in national healthcare politics, an
unprecedented national coalition of nurses and doctors organizations today
announced plans to rally around the openings of Michael Moore's "SiCKO" June
29 to press the campaign for single-payer healthcare, guaranteeing
comprehensive, quality healthcare with an expanded and improved Medicare for
all.

Calling it the "Scrubs for SiCKO" campaign, organizers will recruit
registered nurses and doctors to every theater in the nation where "SiCKO"
opens to ensure that caregivers -- in SiCKO scrubs -- are in the audience.

The caregivers will distribute information and urge moviegoers to join the
drive for a fundamental overhaul of the nation's dysfunctional healthcare
system -- as is so brilliantly described in "SiCKO." They will urge the
audience to help pass single-payer/Medicare-for-all-type legislation such as
HR 676 now pending in Congress and several states, and make it a central
focus of the presidential campaign.

Nurses and doctors are serving as co-hosts of "SiCKO" premieres across the
nation.

Participants include the California Nurses Association/National Nurses
Organizing Committee, Physicians for a National Health Program, New York
State Nurses Association, Massachusetts Nurses Association, United
Steelworkers (USW) Health Care Workers Council, Pennsylvania Association of
Staff Nurses and Allied Professionals, United Nurses and Allied
Professionals (Rhode Island), Communications Workers of America, and the New
England Nurses Association. The Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions is also
participating, with other groups to be announced.

A delegation of nurses and doctors from across the country will embark on a
tour of East Coast cities beginning today in New York to help energize the
nurse grassroots. The tour will mostly take place in a colorfully-wrapped
bus encouraging people to see the movie and is being planned in conjunction
with premieres of the film in New York, Washington D.C., and other locales.

"SiCKO" profiles a number of Americans with insurance who have been denied
needed care by their insurance companies, describes how the insurance-based
healthcare system is structured to keep it that way, and provides examples
of other industrialized nations where insurance companies do not stand in
the way of medical care.

The campaign will highlight the need for reforms that prevent insurance
companies from denying care, and send a strong signal to politicians in
Congress, state capitals, and the presidential race who are promoting
insurance-based reforms.

HR 676 and similar bills in several state legislatures would have one public
entity collecting and disbursing all revenues for care delivered by our
current, mostly private hospitals, clinics, and doctors, similar to how
Medicare works. The system is universal, assures comprehensive benefits,
guarantees freedom to choose your provider, and controls costs. It also
drastically curbs administrative costs -- and the waste caused by insurance
company profits and paperwork.
Marcus Aurelius - 30 Jun 2007 16:55 GMT
I agree with the concept that the USA should have a national health
care program for all American citizens.
The fact is that the same would help American industry compete in the
world market place. Why? Almost all, if not all, foreign Western
industrialized nations subsidize their national industries through
government sponsored health care programs for all of their citizens.
This reduced significantly the costs for foreign industry and amounts
to a government sponsored subsidy to them.
This puts American industry at a significant cost disadvantage.
I believe that we should use a voucher program giving all American
citizens the right to individualize the the health care program that
is best for them.
The competition resulting from the same would reduce costs and provide
for greater efficiency.
I haven't seen "Sicko".However, I am looking forward to seeing the
same next week.
I receive free and excellent health care at the Veterans
Administration because I am a Vietnam Combat veteran.
 
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