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Mississippi Information

Contact Information

Email us for information on local activists

Media Contacts

John D. Bower, M.D.
601.829.2115
jbower564@aol.com

Dr. John Bower is Chief of the Division of Nephrology at the University of Mississippi in Jackson, Mississippi. His practice includes many patients in the publicly financed and highly successful end-stage renal disease program. Dr. Bower has been a PNHP member for six years, and is the founder of PNHP’s Mississippi chapter. He brought a single-payer resolution before the the state medical society, and is active in speaking and writing editorials and letters on the need for universal access to health care.

Tennessee Information

Contact Information

For information on the West Tennessee chapter of PNHP, or the University of Tennessee Health Science Center chapter of Students for a National Health Program, email Dr. Roger LaBonte at rlabonte02@gmail.com.


Chapter and Media Contacts

Roger S. LaBonte, MD, FACP – President, West Tennessee Chapter
rlabonte02@gmail.com
rlabonte@uthsc.edu

Dr. Roger LaBonte practices part time as a hospitalist at Rush Foundation Hospital in Meridian, Mississippi. He holds a volunteer appointment as a clinical associate professor in the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC), where he actively participates in the education of medical students and integrated programs with other medical disciplines.

Dr. LaBonte served 20 years in the US Navy and retired as a Master Chief Petty Officer. While in the Navy, he attended the University of Nebraska, where he received a BS in medical science. He received his medical degree from UTHSC. He completed his internal medicine residency at UTHSC and Baptist Memorial Hospital. Board-certified in internal medicine with a certificate of added qualification in geriatric medicine, he is a fellow of the American College of Physicians and a distinguished fellow of the American College of Medical Quality.


Joe Blythe, MD, FCCP – West Tennessee Chapter
jablythe337@aol.com

Dr. Joe Blythe received his medical degree from the University of Mississippi and completed his postgraduate training at the University of Tennessee with a residency in internal medicine and a fellowship in pulmonary diseases. He practiced in that specialty in Memphis until 2007, then became board-certified in palliative medicine and is currently practicing in that speciality. He is a fellow of the American College of Chest Physicians and remains certified in that field. Dr. Blythe became interested in the work of Physicians for a National Health Program by witnessing the inefficiencies and shortcomings of our health care system in his practice.


Peg Hartig, PhD, FNP, APN – West Tennessee Chapter
mhartig@uthsc.edu

Dr. Peg Hartig is a professor and chair of the department of primary care and public health. She has been a College of Nursing faculty member since 1987.

Dr. Hartig has practiced as a family nurse practitioner since 1977 in a variety of primary care clinics, an endocrinology specialty clinic, a nursing home and a disease management service. She also provides health care services and monitors the quality of nurse practitioner services provided at the Bobbitt Health Station, the health clinic at Memphis International Airport.

In addition to conducting quality improvement research and teaching related content in the graduate program, Dr. Hartig has written and spoken to many groups about faculty evaluation activities and development of evidence-based practice. She is a member of the Academic Nursing Center Special Interest Group and faculty development committee of the National Organization of Nurse Practitioner Faculties.


David Mirvis, MD – West Tennessee Chapter, TN Chapter Health Policy Advisor
mirvis@msn.com

Dr. David Mirvis will serve as the chapter’s health policy advisor. Dr. Mirvis received his medical degree from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University in 1970, and subsequently trained in internal medicine and cardiology at the National Institutes of Health and at the University of Tennessee. He joined the faculty of the University of Tennessee College of Medicine in 1975, where he currently is professor emeritus. At UT, he was the founder and director of the University’s Center for Health Services Research.

His other academic appointments include positions as adjunct professor in the Department of Public Health, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and Senior Research Fellow in the Methodist LeBonheur Center for Health Economics at the University of Memphis.

Dr. Mirvis’ research interests include health care delivery processes and health policy as well as electrocardiography. He has published over 200 manuscripts and books on these topics.


Joseph A. Weinberg, MD – West Tennessee Chapter
jaweinberg@pol.net

Dr. Joe Weinberg, M.D. is a retired pediatric emergency medicine physician and an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Tennessee Center for the Health Sciences. He was Director of Emergency Services at Le Bonheur Children’s Medical Center, Memphis, Tennessee, and President of Pediatric Emergency Specialists, P.C. He has served on many local and state organizations related to emergency services and education. He believes that children should have access to appropriate health care regardless of their parents’ station in life or the whims of their parents’ employer. He is a long-time member of PNHP committed to the need to implement a universal, single payer health care system in the United States. Dr. Weinberg hopes that his experience in consulting on local political campaigns can help West Tennessee PNHP.


James S. Powers, MD, AGSF – Middle Tennessee Chapter
james.powers@vanderbilt.edu

Dr. Jim Powers is associate professor of medicine Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, where he is director of the Vanderbilt-Reynolds Geriatrics Education Center, director of the geriatric medicine residency program, and chief of geriatrics at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Dr. Powers received his medical degree from the University of Rochester. He completed residencies at the Cleveland Clinic and Case Western Reserve and a fellowship through the US Public Health System.


In Memoriam: J. I. Hudson Jr., MD – Middle Tennessee Chapter

Dr. Hudson was instrumental in starting the Middle Tennessee chapter of PNHP. His medical career included private practice in pediatrics, associate professor of pediatrics at the Johns Hopkins Univ. School of Medicine, Associate Dean for Academic Medicine at the Univ. of Maryland School of Medicine, and associate at the Johns Hopkins Center for Hospital Finance and Management. He participated in efforts to establish nation-wide networks for quality assurance for acute hospital care in The Netherlands and Peninsular Malaysia, and consulted on matters of health care quality with the U.S. Health Care Financing Agency, the Select Committee on Aging of U.S. Congress, and USAID-supported primary health care programs in West Africa and the Middle East. Dr. Hudson passed away in 2012.


Raymond Feierabend, MD, FAAFP – East Tennessee, State of Franklin Chapter
feierabe@etsu.edu

Dr. Feierabend is professor and Director of Graduate Medical Education in the Department of Family Medicine at East Tennessee State University, Quillen College of Medicine. A native of Louisiana, he received his medical degree from Tulane University and completed his residency at Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital in Greensboro, North Carolina. He established a rural National Health Service Corps practice in Dungannon, Virginia, before moving to the Quillen College of Medicine in 1982.


Robert Funke, MD – East Tennessee, State of Franklin Chapter
r_funke@charter.net

Dr. Bob Funke is a family physician at Mountain Region Family Medicine in Kingsport, Tennessee, where he is a founding member and past president of the board of directors. He is also a member of the executive committee at Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center. Dr. Funke received his medical degree from Tulane University and completed his residency at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem.


In Memoriam: Arthur J. Sutherland III, MD, FACC – Tennessee Coordinator

Dr. Art Sutherland practiced cardiology in Memphis for 33 years and was the founder and director of the Methodist Healthcare Cardiac Laboratories, and the founder of Sutherland Cardiology Clinic. Dr. Sutherland served as state coordinator of the Tennessee chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program and as a member of the national board of directors. He received the Dr. Quentin Young Health Activist Award from PNHP in 2013.

Dr. Sutherland received his undergraduate degree from Vanderbilt University and medical degree from the University of Tennessee. He completed an internship at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and residency at the University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center. His cardiology fellowship was at the UTHSC in Memphis, and St. Thomas Hospital in Nashville. He was a diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine and Cardiovascular Disease, and a fellow of the American College of Cardiology. Dr. Sutherland passed away in 2021.


State Organizations Endorsing Single Payer

  • Warren County, TN

Local Unions Endorsing Single Payer

  • Steelworker Organization of Active Retirees (SOAR) Chapter 9-ABG 1, Kingsport, TN
  • Plumbers Local Union #17, United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry (UA), Memphis, TN

Kentucky Information

Contact Information

Email us for information on local activists.

Media Contacts

Garrett Adams
502.895.8847
kyhealthcare@aol.com

Dr. Adams Received his training at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee and Wake Forest School of Medicine. He completed his Pediatric Residency at Vanderbilt University Hospital and Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles, and the Pediatric Infectious Disease Fellowship, University of Colorado, Denver, Colorado. He also has a Master of Public Health (Epidemiology), Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health (Bloomberg School of Public Health).

Dr. Adams is a specialist in Infectious Diseases of Children and Infectious Disease Epidemiology. He is retired from the full-time faculty of the University of Louisville School of Medicine where he was Chief of Pediatric Infectious Diseases and Medical Director of Communicable Diseases at the Louisville Metro Health Department. He is immediate past president of Physicians for a National Health Program.

State Organizations Endorsing HR676

  • Kentucky House of Representatives
  • Louisville, KY
  • Morehead, KY
  • Falls City Medical Society, Kentucky
  • Kentucky Psychiatric Medical Association

Local Unions Endorsing HR676

  • United Steelworkers, Local 1693, Louisville, KY
  • Laborers International Union of North America Local 576, Louisville, KY
  • Jefferson County Teachers’ Association (NEA), Louisville, KY
  • AFSCME Local 2629, Louisville, KY
  • PACE Local 5-2002, Louisville, KY
  • Laborers International Union of North America Local 576 Retirees’ Council, Louisville, KY
  • Nurses Professional Organization, Louisville, KY
  • CWA Local 3310, Louisville, KY
  • UAW CAP Council, 3rd & 4th Areas, Kentucky
  • GCU/IBT Local 619, Louisville, KY
  • Kentucky State AFL-CIO
  • Kentucky Jobs with Justice, Louisville, KY
  • Greater Louisville Building & Construction Trades Council, Louisville, KY
  • Tri-County Council of Labor, AFL-CIO, Henderson, KY
  • Greater Louisville Central Labor Council, AFL-CIO, Louisville, KY, April 2006.
  • Steelworker Organization of Active Retirees (SOAR) Chapter 9-UR 7, Hickman, KY
  • Northern Kentucky Central Labor Council, Covington, KY
  • Western Kentucky AFL-CIO Area Council, Paducah, KY
  • Plumbers, Pipefitters and Service Technicians Local 502, United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry of the United States and Canada, Louisville, KY
  • UAW Local 2164

Illinois Information

Contact Information

PNHP Illinois
Email: illinois@pnhp.org

Illinois Single-Payer Coalition
Website: http://ilsinglepayer.org

PNHP Illinois is an organizational member of ISPC.

For upcoming single-payer events in Illinois:
http://ilsinglepayer.org/events


Speakers and Media Contacts

DAVID ANSELL, MD, MPH, FACP

Dr. David Ansell is the Senior Vice President for Community Health Equity at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.

He is an internal medicine physician, trained at Cook County Hospital in the late 1970s, where he spent 17 years holding a number of positions including chief of general medicine/primary care. After leaving County, he spent 10 years as chair of the department of internal medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital, located in one of the highest hardship communities in Chicago. He has been particularly involved in health equity work, bringing attention to higher rates of breast cancer mortality for African-American women in Chicago. In 2007 he co-founded the Metropolitan Chicago Breast Cancer Taskforce, a not-for-profit that focuses on eliminating the racial disparities in breast cancer mortality.

He is the author of numerous papers and book chapters on health disparities. In 2011 he published an acclaimed memoir based on his experiences as a doctor in Chicago, County: Life, Death and Politics at Chicago’s Public Hospital. His most recent book, The Death Gap: How Inequality Kills, was released by the University of Chicago Press in 2017.

Dr. Ansell is a graduate of SUNY Upstate Medical University and received his Masters of Public Health from the University of Illinois School of Public Health.


SYDNEY DOE, MD

Dr. Sydney Doe serves as a Chair of the Illinois Chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program. She is faculty at the RUSH-Esperanza Family Medicine Residency in Chicago and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine at Rush University.

She provides primary and HIV care at Esperanza Health Centers and leads the health policy, scholarly activity, and HIV medicine curricula for the residency program. Her research interests include medical education and healthcare workforce issues.

Dr. Doe received her medical degree at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and completed her family medicine residency at the Northwestern University McGaw Family Medicine Residency Program at Erie Family Health.


CLAUDIA FEGAN, MD, CHCQM FACP
773.753.5509
one4singlepayer@gmail.com

Dr. Claudia Fegan is national coordinator of Physicians for a National Health Program. In her current and past leadership roles in PNHP she has appeared on national television and radio programs on behalf of the organization, and has testified before congressional committees on a wide range of health care issues. She has lectured extensively to both medical and community audiences on health care reform in the U.S. and Canada, and is a co-author of the book ā€œUniversal Healthcare: What the United States Can Learn from Canada” and a contributor to “10 Excellent Reasons for National Health Care.ā€

Dr. Fegan is Chief Medical Officer of Cook County Health. She is also president of the Chicago-based Health and Medicine Policy Research Group. In 2016, Modern Healthcare named Dr. Fegan one of “10 Minority Executives to Watch,” noting her achievements in the medical profession and her single-payer activism.

Dr. Fegan received her undergraduate degree from Fisk University and her medical degree from the University of Illinois College of Medicine. She is also certified in health care quality and management and is a diplomate of the American Board of Quality Assurance and Utilization Review Physicians.


PETER GANN, MD, ScD

Dr. Peter Gann is currently semi-retired as Professor Emeritus in the College of Medicine at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He grew up within walking distance of the NIH campus in Bethesda, MD. He has been involved in campaigns for a just system of universal health care since serving as a summer intern at the Health Policy Advisory Center in New York in 1971.

His career experience includes primary care practice, investigation of environmental and occupational hazards in the New Jersey Department of Health, and a stint in the 1980’s as a Project Director at the National Academy of Sciences. This was followed by decades of work in academia, teaching and conducting research in cancer epidemiology and prevention. He is especially appreciative to have had the opportunity to work with so many dedicated research participants, clinicians, and community activists in collaborative studies to improve population health.

Dr. Gann attended the University of California at San Francisco and received his MD from the University of Pennsylvania, where he also received an MS in epidemiology and biostatistics. He later earned a doctoral degree (ScD) in epidemiology from Harvard. He has served on national advisory committees at the National Cancer Institute, American Cancer Society, the American Urological Association, and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.


Dr. Pam Gronemeyer

PAMELLA GRONEMEYER, MD

Dr. Pam Gronemeyer is a PNHP member, co-president of PNHP-IL (southern division), board member of Missourians for Single-Payer, and vice president of the Illinois Single Payer Coalition board. She is a board-certified anatomic and clinical pathologist. She received a biology degree from Washington University in St. Louis; attended Tufts University School of Medicine; and completed her pathology residencies at New England Deaconess Hospital in Boston, Barnes-Jewish Hospital of St. Louis, and St. Louis University Hospitals.

Dr. Gronemeyer is the director and a woman small business owner of SEMC Pathology, LLC in Highland, IL, a pathology business that provides services to six critical access hospitals in southwestern Illinois – St. Joseph’s Hospital (Highland, IL), Red Bud Regional hospital (Red Bud, IL), Washington County Hospital (Nashville, IL), Pinckneyville Community Hospital (Pinckneyville, IL), Marshall Browning Hospital (DuQuoin, IL) and Community Memorial Hospital (Staunton, IL). The service also runs a CAP accredited cytology laboratory with testing for sexually-transmitted diseases and gynecologic and nongynecologic cytologies.

She is actively involved in directing the infection control committees in the hospitals as well as working on quality assurance activities and advocating for patient safety. She believes “healthcare is a human right” and provides healthcare insurance to her employees and their dependents. She is an activist in her community and in the healthcare arena. As the child of a late union laborer, she knows that our safety net is vital to the preservation of our democracy.


WINNIE LIN, MD

Dr. Winnie Lin is one of the co-chairs of the Illinois chapter of PNHP. She was born and raised in the Chicago area. She received her MD from the University of Pennsylvania and completed pediatric residency at the University of Chicago.

She is a primary care pediatrician at Mile Square Health Center, a Federally Qualified Health Center on the South Side of Chicago. She is also an Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics at the University of Illinois Chicago, where she teaches pediatric residents and medical students.

Dr. Lin is a board member and past board president of the Illinois Single-Payer Coalition. In addition to chairing the IL chapter of PNHP, she is also an active member of PNHP’s Pediatric Organizing Team.


Peter Orris

PETER ORRIS, MD, MPH, FACP, FACOEM

Dr. Peter Orris, a founding member of PNHP, is professor and chief of Occupational and Environmental Medicine for the University of Illinois Hospital and Health Sciences System. He has been an attending physician in the Division of Occupational Medicine at the Stroger Hospital of Cook County (formerly Cook County Hospital) for over three decades, where he practiced and taught internal and occupational medicine on the teaching services. He maintains an active clinical and teaching practice and holds professorships as well in internal and preventive medicine at Rush University Medical College and the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. His research and teaching have focused on international health care systems, occupational and community effects of toxic chemicals, and more recently sustainable health care and climate change.

Dr. Orris has served as an adviser to many labor organizations, corporations, and nonprofit groups. On an international level he has been an adviser to the World Health Organization, Pan American Health Organization, World Medical Association, World Federation of Public Health Associations, and Health Care Without Harm. He has a long history of advocacy for elimination of profits and racism in health care and opposing corporate policies that poison the environment of the developing world.

He an active member of the American Public Health Association, and serves on the council of the Chicago Medical Society and as a delegate to the Illinois State Medical Society. Dr. Orris graduated Harvard College in 1967, Yale School of Public Health in 1970, and the Chicago Medical School of the Rosalind Franklin University in 1975.


JOHN PERRYMAN, MD
drjohnperryman@gmail.com

Dr. John Perryman, a general pediatrician, is a graduate of the University of Michigan Medical School, and completed pediatrics training at Children’s Memorial Hospital. He is currently employed by MercyHealth, working in the Rockford area. In addition to serving on several health care committees over his 25-plus years in practice, he has completed multiple graduate level business courses. Dr. Perryman is the current co-president of PNHP in northern Illinois, and is working on outreach about single-payer health care to a variety of organizations in the state.


Susan Rogers

SUSAN ROGERS, MD, FACP

Dr. Susan Rogers, recently retired, is a volunteer attending hospitalist and internist at the John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County. She previously was co-director of medical student programs for the Department of Medicine. She is also assistant professor of medicine at Rush University, where she is active on the committee of admissions, and assistant professor of medicine at Rosalind Franklin University. She has received numerous teaching awards from Stroger Hospital, Rush University, and Rosalind Franklin University.

Dr. Rogers received her medical degree from the University of Illinois College of Medicine and completed her residency at Cook County Hospital, where she served as chief resident. She is a past co-president of Health Care for All Illinois, and she previously served on the boards of the Near North Health Service Corp, a FQHC in Chicago, and Ancona School. Dr. Rogers is a member of the American College of Physicians, the Society of General Internal Medicine, and the National Medical Association.


Chapter Leadership

Co-Chairs:
Sydney Doe, MD
Winnie Lin, MD

Board Directors:
Peter Gann, MD, ScD
Monica Maalouf, MD
Zachary Pellis, MD

Wisconsin Information

Contact Information

Linda and Gene Farley Wisconsin Chapter of PNHP
Contact: Lydia Starkey
Email: wisconsin.pnhp@gmail.com
Facebook: facebook.com/wipnhp
Twitter: twitter.com/WisconsinPNHP

Employment Opportunity: Administrative Assistant

The Linda and Gene Farley Wisconsin Chapter of PNHP is seeking a part-time Administrative Assistant; please review the job description HERE.

To apply, please send your resume to wisconsin.pnhp@gmail.com with ā€œAdministrative Assistantā€ in the subject line.

Tribute to Dr. Beth Potter

On March 31, 2020, we lost our dear friend, colleague, and fellow PNHP member, Dr. Beth Potter, and her husband, Robin Carre. Continue reading…

Petition to the WI Secretary of Health Services

Uniform, transparent, and affordable pricing for all healthcare services

Local Unions Endorsing HR676

  • South Central Federation of Labor, Madison, WI
  • Wisconsin State AFL-CIO

Louisiana Information

PNHP Louisiana Leadership

Chair: Elmore Rigamer, MD, MPA: elmorerigamer@cox.net

Media Contacts

ELMORE F. RIGAMER, MD, MPA
504.836.7375
elmorerigamer@cox.net

Elmore F. Rigamer, MD, MPA, is currently Medical Director for Catholic Charities Archdiocese of New Orleans where he currently directs several disaster relief programs for victims of the Katrina hurricane disaster. Rigamer received his training in psychiatry at The New York Hospital- Cornell University an Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. He received his MPA from Harvard University.

Prior to joining Catholic Charities, Dr. Rigamer served the US Department of State as Medical Director advising the Secretary of State on international health issues while overseeing the health care of Foreign Service diplomats and their families. He also served the US Department of State as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Medical Affairs, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Mental Health, Director of Mental Health Services, and Regional Psychiatrist for Europe, the Soviet Union, and South Asia. Dr. Rigamer has also held positions with Kaiser Permanente Health Maintenance Organization and the Ochsner Clinic as well as served as a Peace Corps Volunteer Physician in Monrovia, Liberia.

Missouri Information

Contact Information

PNHP – Missouri
Website: www.pnhpmo.org
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PNHPMO?fref=ts
E-mail: pnhpmo@gmail.com

Contacts:
Chair: Ed Weisbart, MD, 314-265-3412, edweisbart@gmail.com

State Organizations Endorsing HR676

  • University City, MO

Local Unions Endorsing HR676

  • CWA Local 6355, Missouri State Workers Union
  • Sheet Metal Workers Local 36, St. Louis, MO
  • Building & Construction Trades Council of St Louis, AFL-CIO
  • Southeast Missouri Building & Construction Trades Council, Cape Girardeau, MO
  • Greater St. Louis Labor Council, AFL-CIO, St. Louis, MO
  • Central Trades & Labor Council, AFL-CIO, Cape Girardeau, MO
  • Steelworkers Organization of Active Retirees (SOAR), Chapter 11-3, St. Louis, MO.
  • Missouri AFL-CIO
  • District 3, Missouri Nurses Association (MONA), St. Louis City and County

Iowa Information

Chapter Leaders

Arya Zandvakili, M.D., Ph.D.
Email: iowapnhp@gmail.com

Local Unions Endorsing Single Payer

  • Hawkeye Labor Council, Cedar Rapids, IA
  • Southern Iowa Labor Council, AFL-CIO

Minnesota Information

Contact Information

PNHP Minnesota
Website: http://www.pnhpminnesota.org
E-mail: pnhpminnesota@gmail.com


Video: There is a Better Way


Board of Directors

Nelson Adamson, MD

Dr. Nelson Adamson is happy to rejoin the PNHP-MN board. He hopes to contribute some perspective from his position as a practitioner currently working full time in a multi-specialty group located in central Minnesota.

As a radiation oncologist, he often witnesses the toxic effects of the financial burden brought onto patients by our dysfunctional sick care system.

Dr. Nelson has been married for 38 years, has 4 adult children, and a 2-year-old grandson. (He is proud that three of his children have pursued medical careers!) When not working, he spends time with his family, and enjoys recreational cycling and reading.


Kari Carlson, MPH

Kari provided administrative support to PNHP-MN in 2017 and 2018, and has recently joined the organization as a board member. Kari recently graduated with her Master of Public Health degree focusing on Health Equity and Environmental Health, and is now working with a Federally Qualified Health Center serving the North/Northeast Minneapolis and surrounding communities.

Kari became drawn to the fight for equitable access to health care after experiencing and witnessing innumerable family and personal hardships for the sake of health care profits, and decided to add single-payer advocacy to her career pursuing health equity after hearing a PNHP speaker in 2013.


John Crosson, MD

Dr. John Crosson spent his entire medical career in hospitals devoted to delivering excellent medical care to the underserved, first at Minneapolis General Hospital (the MGH of the Midwest) and then eventually at HCMC. He trained initially as an internist then decided to become a pathologist. From the early 1970s to 2005 he worked at HCMC as a general pathologist. During this time he saw many patients who suffered greatly because they had inadequate insurance and could not afford to be seen in the health care system in a timely way. For over 25 years he has worked on getting universal health care available for all in the U.S. Currently he spends his time at the University of Minnesota teaching medical students and residents. He mentions the need to have single-payer health care to them every chance he gets.


Beret Fitzgerald

Beret recently helped PNHP Minnesota with rural outreach and coordination, including visits to International Falls and Worthington to connect with health care providers. She is a second year medical student at the U. Writing about her rotation at International Falls, Beret ā€œwas impressed with the quality of care and resilience that this community has shown in its commitment to providing health care. I also heard at all levels – from administrators to patients, frustration with the health care system, costs, and accessibility of care.ā€ Read her op-ed in the International Falls Journal here!


Elizabeth Frost, MD

Dr. Elizabeth Frost is a family practice doctor working at the Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. After graduating from residency at the University of Minnesota, Elizabeth spent almost a year volunteering with Doctors for Global Health in Chiapas, Mexico. She currently works with a heavily Latino and mostly uninsured population in Minneapolis, and is confronted daily with economic barriers to basic care. She co-founded Physicians for a National Health Program – Minnesota along with Dr. Ann Settgast.


Brian Yablon, MD

Dr. Brian Yablon is an internal medicine and pediatric hospitalist at HCMC in Minneapolis, where he enjoys providing care for a diverse and largely underserved patient population as well as teaching residents and medical students. He never ceases to be shocked by the inequity and inhumanity of our health care system.

As a medical resident, he served on the board of PNHP-MN from 2010-2012 before moving to Anchorage, AK as a CDC public health fellow and subsequently working for several years as a hospitalist at the Alaska Native Medical Center. On returning to Minnesota in 2017, he was excited to become reinvolved with PNHP-MN and is currently serving as board president.


Raina Young, MD

Dr. Raina Young has been a family physician with Health Partners doing the full spectrum of family medicine, including delivering babies, since she finished her residency training in Duluth in 2002. She was the clinical medical director for two clinics for almost 10 years. She grew up in a medical family in Iowa with a family physician dad and an RN/Health Educator mom. Her sisters are also in health care and many family discussions center around frustrations, barriers, and excessive costs with our current system. She continues to witness increasing stress levels among her colleagues, nurses, clinic staff, and patients that is not sustainable. Instead of just continuing to complain about our current situation she decided it was time to get more involved in the fight for a single-payer system.


Jenny Zhang, MD

Dr. Jenny Zhang is currently in residency training at a Federally Qualified Health Center, United Family Medicine in St. Paul, Minn., serving and reminded on a daily basis of the barriers our patients and communities face when uninsured or underinsured. She brings skills from her outreach work with the nonprofit FeelGood Berkeley and the Student National Medical Association, and is passionate about outreach for PNHP Minnesota. She was previously on the PNHP-MN board as a medical student.


Media Contacts

Elizabeth Frost, MD
libbess@gmail.com

Elizabeth Frost, M.D., is a family practice doctor working at the Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. After graduating from residency at the University of Minnesota, Elizabeth spent almost a year volunteering with Doctors for Global Health in Chiapas, Mexico. She currently works with a heavily Latino and mostly uninsured population in Minneapolis, and is confronted daily with economic barriers to basic care. She co-founded Physicians for a National Health Program – Minnesota along with Dr. Ann Settgast.


Brian Yablon, MD
brian.yablon@gmail.com


Laurel Gamm, MD
laurelpnhp@gmail.com


Local Unions Endorsing H.R. 676

  • Duluth AFL-CIO Central Labor Body, Duluth, MN
  • AFSCME District Council 5, St. Paul, MN
  • Minnesota AFL-CIO
  • Minnesota Association of Professional Employees (MAPE)
  • Southern Dakota County Labor Council, Apple Valley, MN

Texas Information

Contact Information

Health Care for All Texas
Website: http://www.healthcareforalltexas.org/

Media Contacts

Leonard A. Zwelling, MD, MBA
713-859-8714
lzwellin@mdanderson.org

Dr. Zwelling is a Special Assistant to the Senior Vice President of Business Affairs and a Professor of Medicine and Pharmacology at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. He was previously the Vice Presidnet for Research Administration at M. D. Anderson and is currently an active member in PNHP, The Metropolitan Organization, The Harris County Health Alliance, Doctors for Change and a member of the American Leadership Forum’s Med Class 2. He is a board certified internist and medical oncologist and a lab-based investigator. His primary interests in health policy are advancing the single payer system and improving access to life-saving clinical cancer trials.


Stephen K. Chao, MD
info@pnhp.org

Dr. Stephen Chao is a family physician at Legacy Community Health Services, a federally qualified health center in Houston. He is also a clinical assistant professor of family medicine at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, and was previously on the faculty at Baylor College of Medicine.

Born and raised in Houston, Dr. Chao attended Rice University, graduating with degrees in Biochemistry and Health Policy. He received his medical degree from the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. He completed his family medicine residency training at UT Health San Antonio and is committed to caring for the underserved residents of Houston and Harris County. His interests include care for immigrant and refugee populations, community health, and public policy.

Dr. Chao is a national board member of Physicians for a National Health Program and vice president of Health Care for All Texas. He also serves or has served on the boards of Refugee Services of Texas-Houston, OCA-Greater Houston, Eastside Promotoras de la Buena Salud, San Antonio Healthcare-NOW Coalition, and Doctors for Change. He is past president of the Chinese American Doctors Association of Houston.


Byron C. Tucker, MD
byronctucker@mac.com

Dr. Tucker is a psychiatrist who currently works at the Bexar County Detention Center in San Antonio.Ā  He received his medical degree at UTHSC in San Antonio.Ā  After his internship he completed two years of psychiatric residency training in San Mateo, California and finished his training in San Diego at UCSD.Ā  He has worked in state hospitals in three states including Texas, Georgia, and Colorado.Ā  Dr. Tucker has also practiced in community mental health clinics in Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, and in San Antonio at the Center for Health Care Services.Ā  He has been a member of Physicians for a National Health Program for eight years

State Organizations Endorsing HR676

  • Health Care for All Texas

Local Unions Endorsing HR676

  • Texas AFL-CIO
  • Austin Central Labor Council, Austin, Texas
  • El Paso Central Labor Council, El Paso, Texas
  • San Antonio Central Labor Council, San Antonio, Texas
  • Texas Building Trades Council
  • Local 6186, Texas State Employees Union/Communications Workers of America (TSEU/CWA)
  • Texas Alliance for Retired Americans (ARA)
  • Retirees Club of Local 848, United Auto Workers (UAW), Grand Prairie, TX
  • Smith County Central Labor Council, Tyler, TX

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Drew Altman on Americans affording health care

Interviews with Washington’s power players

Drew Altman, President and CEO of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
The Washington Post
November 2, 2009

MS. ROMANO: In your view, what must a bill have in order to be a step forward in health care reform.
MR. ALTMAN: Well, you know, we’re having this debate because the American people, average working Americans, became really worried about and are having real problems just paying their health care bills, and that’s having a real impact also on their family budgets and their ability to pay for other things, pay their rent and mortgage or put a kid through college.
We’ve forgotten a little bit that that’s where this came from. That’s why health got traction again as a political issue.
So the main thing I actually want to see–us health care people tend to talk about this in terms of health care goals, access to care and the quality of care. The first thing I look for is, is this legislation actually responsible–responsive in a meaningful way to the meat-and-potatoes pocketbook problems that average Americans are having, paying for their health care which brought us this debate in the first place. That’s number one for me.
*****
MS. ROMANO: With President Obama trying to cap the cost of these plans at $900 billion over ten years, does that make the discussion about subsidies very important?
MR. ALTMAN: It is a really important discussion, and one of the things that’s happened is, as so much of the debate lately has focused on this hot-button issue [of] the public option. Flying under the radar screen and not getting as much attention are these bread-and-butter consumer issues about will the policies be affordable for people who now have to buy health insurance coverage, are the subsidies high enough, is the coverage that people are going to get going to be adequate.
And I think, as we get to two bills and then one bill that the country can really focus on and that people in the media can really focus on, that issue of the affordability of the coverage will rise to the surface and will become a really big issue.
*****
MR. ALTMAN: I think the public option issue has diverted attention from lots of other issues, and I think this issue of affordability will emerge as a big issue. And there’s a tradeoff as they design this legislation between keeping the overall sticker shock, the price tag of the legislation down and the generosity of the subsidies they can give to people and the comprehensiveness of the coverage that people get, how high–how big those deductibles will be that average middle-class families are going to be asked to pay.
And that’s a very big issue. It’s going to be a big issue not just for the people who are in these exchanges, who get these policies, but for the American people generally who look at this and say is this a fair deal, is this a good deal for people who now have to have health insurance coverage.
I think this is the sleeper issue still. This affordability issue.
And it’s hard to understand. They’re focused on the public option. They haven’t gotten to it yet. So this issue of affordability, I think, is a sleeper issue because it’s complicated, hard to understand how coverage works, what an actuarial value is, how the subsidies work at different income levels, and because they’re focused on the public option. Everyone is so focused on the public option right now, but I think as they get to one bill that everyone can put under a microscope, then this issue of the subsidies and the coverage will really rise to the surface, and we’ll have a much bigger debate about that.
And that’s the consumer issue. It’s the real meat-and-potatoes consumer issue in this legislation.
*****
MS. Romano: Is there a way to hold private insurers accountable on costs other than a government option?
MR. ALTMAN: Well, you know, there are comprehensive reforms of the insurance industry in the legislation, but the one thing they didn’t do in this legislation which was proposed in the Clinton health reform plan, which as we all know failed, they did not propose this time around caps on the increases in insurance premiums. They didn’t say, “Your premiums can only go up two times inflation in the general economy.” That–those–that kind of price controls or regulation, they just didn’t think that would work this time, or they didn’t think it would fly. Anyway, it’s not in the legislation this time.
So, no, there aren’t–I mean, one of the characteristics of the legislation this time is there are not strong controls over the increases that can occur in premiums in the future.
*****
MS. ROMANO: Health care costs are a huge burden on American businesses. Are there enough incentives in these different legislations to help the businessmen pay for this, pay for it for employees, or are we fast approaching a point where businesses will be no longer offering health insurance to employees?
MR. ALTMAN: Well, it’s a big problem in this. The reason we’ve seen a sort of slow drip-drip-drip of coverage out of the employment-based health care system is simply that business can’t pay the cost any longer.
I did a projection the other day that showed that if current trends continue, in 20 years the average cost of a family premium could be 30,000 bucks a year. So we’re not on a good trajectory.
MS. ROMANO: Wow!
*****
MS. ROMANO: Do you see a time when the U.S. will ever drift towards a single-payer system?
MR. ALTMAN: You know, I don’t know for sure, but I certainly think it will be a long time, and I know the single-payer people, you know, don’t like to hear that because they believe so strongly in that approach, but we’re at a point in time now when the approach is favored by the two wings, an all-market approach–people get a voucher, and they shop for themselves–and a single-payer approach are not in the cards.
And so what we’re really looking at, if you view it through that lens, is we’re looking at some form of a centrist deal that brings together elements that the right likes and that the left likes and builds on the existing system. It’s a little bit messy, but that’s all that can fly right now in our political system.
*****
MS. ROMANO: Is the U.S. obligated to provide every citizen with health insurance–health care–let me ask that again. Is the United States obligated to provide health care to all of its citizens?
MR. ALTMAN: The way I would answer that question is to say that it is certainly something that we should do. And I don’t know anybody–you know, right, left, or center–who doesn’t believe that at some level. The debate is about how we get there, and, unfortunately, that debate about how we get there has been a really bitter and difficult debate in our country. And the tough part of it is, if you scratch beneath the surface and look at the difficult part of it, it is fundamentally about redistributing wealth in our country; that, ultimately, it means, as some of us who have more, have to pay, you know, a little bit more, so that others who have less can have health care. You can slice it and dice it a million ways with this kind of tax or that kind of mandate, but, at the end of the day, that’s what’s involved, and we don’t do that too easily in our country, too happily, or too willingly.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/02/AR2009110201285.html

Drew Altman is a very intelligent and very well informed advocate of a health care system that works well for all of us. His only handicap is that, as President and CEO of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, he must maintain his reputation as a highly credible but impartial voice on health care reform. That requires diligently negotiating his way through the minefield of Washington politics.
Setting ideology and politics aside, Altman makes it clear that wealth redistribution is absolutely essential if everyone is going to have the health care that they need. By far the simplest, most efficient, and most equitable method of doing that would be to enact a single payer system. But this is where ideology and politics enter.
How do you meld the ideology of single payer with the ideology of consumers shopping in a market of private health plans? After all, there’s that redistribution problem. The solution currently being advanced is to perpetuate the market of private health plans while superimposing government policies to achieve redistribution of wealth, without which it would be impossible to finance care for everyone.
The combination of private health plans and government policies requires a complex, difficult balancing act. Some of the variables that must be brought into balance include the package of benefits to be covered by the plans, the premiums to be charged for the plans, annual premium increases not limited by regulation, actuarial values of the plans, eligibility for the insurance exchanges, the value of the vouchers used to purchase the plans, the eligibility for the vouchers as related to income or as to wealth as some suggest, the size of the deductibles, copayments and coinsurance, financial support for out-of-pocket expenses, caps on yearly or life-time spending, payment for non-covered or out-of-network products and services, the variable contribution rates for employers, caps on federal and state budgets that limit the level of government funding, extensive corrections in the Medicare program, eligibility for and financing of taxpayer-financed Medicaid programs, financing the complex administrative services for a program in constant flux because of ever-changing eligibility status and contribution levels, balancing income taxes, payroll taxes, possibly VAT taxes, payroll deductions, taxes on health care products, taxes on insurance plans… (continue with your own additions to this list).
Once you have the full list, just try changing any variable and see what happens to the rest of the variables. What will be the most shocking is to observe what happens to middle-income Americans. They will be clobbered by health care costs!
The primary reason for these complex adjustments is that health care is now so expensive that redistribution is essential if everyone is to have the care they need. The private insurance market by itself is totally incapable engineering redistribution. Drew Altman says that this would be “a little bit messy,” and that, at the end of the day, we won’t do it “too easily, too happily, or too willingly.” But that’s as far as Drew Altman’s job description will allow him to go.
We are not so constrained. Soon we will have “one bill that the country can really focus on and that people in the media can really focus on; that issue of the affordability of the coverage will rise to the surface.”
We can take Drew Altman’s astute observations on “the meat-and-potatoes pocketbook problems that average Americans are having in paying for their health care,” and we can run with it. We know how to fix it, even if he can’t publicly endorse our model of an improved Medicare for all. When we succeed, Drew Altman certainly will be at least a little bit smug. Let’s go!

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