JAMES ADAMS
NATIONAL ARTS CORRESPONDENT
Supporters of socialized health care in Canada and the United States have a seemingly unlikely friend in Rex Morgan M.D., the handsome, deeply decent physician who has been a staple of newspaper comics since 1948.
So far there’s no record of the Romanow health care commission or the U.S. Secretary of Health having consulted the fictional doctor.
However, as any of the 30 million readers of the syndicated strip carried by 300 newspapers in 15 countries can tell you, Rex has come out foursquare in favour of what his creator calls “a single-payer, state-supported health care system.”
Interestingly, the man behind Rex Morgan’s position isn’t some “communist or liberal socialist” — although he has received plenty of mail calling him that, and worse. He’s Woody Wilson, a 55-year-old registered Republican from Tempe, Ariz., who voted for George W. Bush in the 2000 elections.
“I believe the country that is supposedly the richest and most powerful in the world shouldn’t be forcing its citizens to choose between paying their mortgage or saving their lives. Yet that is what is happening with millions of Americans right now,” Mr. Wilson said in an interview this week.
“What’s needed is health care for everyone instead of dividends for stockholders in pharmaceutical companies.”
Mr. Wilson has been writing Rex Morgan M.D., a sort of soap opera in comic form, since 1991, having worked as an apprentice under its originator, psychiatrist Nicholas Dallis (now deceased), since 1982.
Under Mr. Wilson, Rex Morgan hasn’t hesitated to tackle domestic violence, epilepsy, drug abuse, AIDS, organ transplants, asthma and sexual harassment.
“We’ve never made people laugh; we’re about informing and entertaining,” he likes to say, and, in fact, medical professionals and support groups have included some of his strips in their educational packages.
But in recent months Mr. Wilson has pulled his rock-jawed hero firmly into the far more dicey arena of health policy, even sending him to Washington, D.C., to testify before legislators.
The strip’s current storyline is dealing with the fallout from the death of Rex Morgan’s friend, Dick Coleman, who lost his job after being diagnosed with colon cancer. Losing the job resulted in the loss of his family’s health coverage and the threatened foreclosure on the mortgage on the Colemans’ home.
In the wake of Dick’s death — “the very week [in June this year] that Dubya got his colonoscopy,” Mr. Wilson noted — his wife Marsha became borderline suicidal and his daughter Dana started to use drugs and get involved with criminal elements.
“All because they couldn’t afford health insurance,” a sombre Rex Morgan mused in one recent strip.
It’s estimated that nearly 40 million Americans share the plight of Dick Coleman. Meanwhile, “We’re adding a million or more people to the rolls of the uninsured each year,” Mr. Wilson said.
Mr. Wilson likes to call himself “just a comic-strip guy,” but he’s a guy whose wife happens to have a PhD in health-care policy from Massachusett’s Brandeis University and who “sits and talks with me about my stories.”
Moreover, it’s a measure of Mr. Wilson’s perceived clout that he has been invited to speak in November at the annual convention of the 9,000-member U.S. Physicians for a National Health Program.
Despite the flak Mr. Wilson has received from some readers, no newspaper has pulled Rex Morgan M.D. from its comics section.
“Our problem goes to something else,” Mr. Wilson said.
“Strips like ours — they’re called continuity strips — are perceived to be old-fashioned these days. So we have to work harder to keep them fresh.”
Rex Morgan, he added,”will always have to be about hot issues, will always have to try to be a bit ahead of the curve, if only because we’re syndicated in so many countries.”
Mr. Wilson said Rex’s campaign for a national, state-financed health-care regime “is going to be a recurring theme for years to come.”
Right now the fight for a comprehensive medical program “isn’t a national priority,” he acknowledged, “nor is there the political will for it.”
But this could change in two or three years, if the ranks of the uninsured swell to, say, 50 million.
“That’s a political party, in effect, right there,” he said. “If someone can mobilize those people . . . that’s a major force.”
Unsurprisingly, those Americans critical of Mr. Wilson’s position like to ask him, “Do we want to have a Canadian health-care system? Do we want rationing? Do we want to wait in line for hip-replacement surgery?”
Mr. Wilson chuckled. “My wife and I were talking about this and she said, ‘Well, in Canada, [health care] is about waiting; in America, it’s about money.’ I want the waiting.”