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Thursday, July 2, 2009 9:13 PM CDT
Advocates are back with real health care stories



CHICAGO (AP) — When carpenter Greg Douglas crashed his pickup truck, his toolbox hit him and smashed his ribs and collarbone. After a month in the hospital, the medical bills hit him even harder, totaling $165,000.

Douglas is among thousands of people now telling their stories on videos, ads and Web sites on both sides of the health care debate.

He said he was drawn into political advocacy after neighbors in Harpswell, Maine, raised $3,000 toward his hospital bills with a church dinner and collection cans in stores.

Douglas said he may not understand the intricacies of President Barack Obama’s top domestic priority, but he knows he wants affordable health care for everyone, so nobody has to beg.

“People aren’t standing up to be counted,” Douglas said, explaining why he allowed his name to be used in a political YouTube video. “I just hope I can help somebody else.”

The “Begging for Change” video, posted on YouTube by Maine’s Service Employees union, depicts fundraising efforts on behalf of Douglas and other people with crushing medical bills. It includes shots of a yard-sale sign with photos of a sick baby on it, and a poster for a fundraising dinner that reads, “You Gotta Eat Anyway, Have a Heart and Help out a Neighbor.” Similar snapshots fade in and out while a musician sings the “Begging for Change Healthcare Blues.”

Foes of expanding government-run health care also have stories of real people on YouTube and in advertisements. Ads by Conservatives for Patients’ Rights feature patients like Katie Brickell, a British citizen, who says she was denied a Pap smear that could have saved her from cervical cancer.

“In all likelihood, I only have a couple of years,” Brickell says in a YouTube version of her story. “I feel the National Health Service has let me down.”

Voters and lawmakers may be moved by the stories or turned off by what they see as emotional pandering. But in the weeks to come, the airwaves and blogosphere are sure to be populated by real people telling what happened to them when they got sick.

Obama’s political operation, Organizing for America, put up a Web site last week where people can post their own health care tales and read the stories of others. The site says: “When the lobbyists for the status quo tell Congress to hold back, your personal story will give them the courage to press forward.”

What’s lost in the storytelling is policy nuance and the difficult question of how to finance an expansion of health coverage, said health economist Devon Herrick of the Dallas-based National Center for Policy Analysis, a research group that favors private solutions over government involvement. The real-people tactic, whether used by the left or the right, can distract from tough debate, he said.

“We can’t have policy by anecdote,” Herrick said. Stories of people who have fallen through the cracks “have an oversized influence on the debate even as they obscure the greater question of what will help most people. Even a policy that does the greatest good may still have people who fall through the cracks.”

Families USA started its story bank before President Bill Clinton’s 1993 failed attempt to retool the health care system. The group now has a database of thousands of people with stories to tell.

In 1993, the real stories could not compete with doubts raised by a fictional couple, Harry and Louise, who at a kitchen table asked questions about the Clinton plan in ads financed by the health insurance industry. This time, it will be different, said Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA.

“I ultimately believe real stories are more effective than using actors in some dramatization,” he said.

This week, Families USA and the drug lobby group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America launched a multimillion-dollar ad campaign using real people, including business owners.

“I want to provide health care to my employees,” said Maryland small-business owner Mark Derbyshire in one TV ad. “They deserve it. But it’s getting harder and harder and harder to do.”

Derbyshire owns a moving and storage company started by his father in 1956. He employs 35 workers in Aberdeen, Md., and covers all of them and their families. But he said he will soon give in to financial pressure and offer only individual coverage, not family coverage, to new hires.

“My role is to tell how serious it is,” he told The Associated Press. “There’s not a businessman out there who would disagree that the employer-based health coverage system is collapsing.”

In Maine, Douglas’ wife, Pam, is a waitress, lobster supplier and seller of Christmas wreaths. Like others in the community, she and Greg work several jobs.

“We’re working people. We don’t expect someone to give us something,” she said. They have health insurance through the hotel and restaurant company that employs her as a waitress. But the company changed insurance carriers recently and one carrier balked at paying Greg’s claim for 29 days in the hospital after the truck accident, leaving the couple owing $165,000.

“So the town put on this benefit,” Pam Douglas said. “They planned this big benefit dinner and they put posters out everywhere.”

It was difficult for the couple to accept charity, but they were touched by the support. “Nobody had ever seen so many people. The lines were out to the road,” she said. “I just cried the whole time.”

“We should not have to be begging for health care in this country,” said Arlene Holt Baker, executive vice president of the AFL-CIO. The union recently collected 6,000 stories of personal health care experiences from people who took an online survey.

“The stories are what moves people,” Holt Baker said. “This is the way we’ll get this health care reform we so desperately need.”

———

On the Net:

Faces of Government Healthcare: http://www.facesofgovernmenthealthcare.com

Begging for Change: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v

nonFMjU-iU8

Organizing for America: http://stories.barackobama.com/healthcare

Families USA: http://www.familiesusa.org

 


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medic57 wrote on Jul 4, 2009 8:43 AM:

" I would like to know how the president is going to fix 30 years of messed health care in 2 months. "

Texas T wrote on Jul 6, 2009 9:15 AM:

" CHICAGO (AP) When carpenter Greg Douglas crashed his pickup truck, his toolbox hit him and smashed his ribs and collarbone. After a month in the hospital, the medical bills hit him even harder, totaling $165,000.

That would have or should have been covered by auto insurance not regular medical insurance. Unless of course he was liable for not securing his tool box in the vehicle. "

Airy Dite wrote on Jul 6, 2009 10:09 AM:

" Texas T, you can just about bet the insurance companies did all they could to find ways NOT to pay out. They have employees who specialize in how to deny coverage.

And it can be ridiculous. Our son had surgery on both hips and the doctor said "No weight bearing for two months." The insurance company denied payment on his bedpan and urinal stating that they were personal items. Good grief. Was he supposed to use nothing and get bedsores and infections? I realize it's a small thing to complain about, but I was really ticked and called them on it. They did eventually pay for those items. "

medic57 wrote on Jul 6, 2009 10:42 AM:

" Most people are woefully underinsured with their car insurance. "

Harry Potter wrote on Jul 6, 2009 10:59 AM:

" No, it's not a small thing to complain about, Airy Dite. I read the other day that it costs people 28 billion dollars a year to pay for things the insurance companies should be paying for. The scam they run is to try to deny as much as possible. A lot of people, particularly the elderly who don't like the idea of debt will give up too easily and just go ahead and pay it. That's what they're counting on.

Good for you in being persistent.

Reform is needed, NOW. There's a reason the health care industry is spending 1.4 million dollars a day to try to buy off our politicians and keep meaningful reform from taking place. "

Hooligansmom wrote on Jul 6, 2009 11:02 AM:

" Oh my gosh! How big was the toolbox? I was talking to someone from Canada a few months ago and she hates the health care system there. She said trying to get an appointment is frustrating along with the all-day-long trip to the doctor. I think something must be done but by the same token I would hate to see our health care system backslide. Days or weeks to get an appointment then another long wait for vital tests. That just seems counterproductive to me. "

Becky wrote on Jul 6, 2009 2:37 PM:

" http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune500/2007/industries/Health_Care_Insurance_Managed_Care/1.html

Here's a list of the top health insurer's profits for 2007. If we took them out of the picture and used the money that they get from policy holders it would cover universal health care for all. If the health insurance/big pharma are so darn worried about the state of health care why are they spending 1.5 million DAILY on lobbyists to keep it going as is? "

father bob wrote on Jul 6, 2009 2:52 PM:

" medic57 wrote on Jul 4, 2009 8:43 AM:
" I would like to know how the president is going to fix 30 years of messed health care in 2 months. """"""


this i can agree with you.

at least the insurance companies are starting to agree that healthcare reform and costs have to be addressed. in the first couple months of the debate they were spending millions to lobby the same old song and dance.

the thing they DO WANT is the right to decide what treatments are most effective from you.....and this is a travesty. i want MY DOCTOR to decide my treatment, not medical underwriters. "

father bob wrote on Jul 6, 2009 2:55 PM:

" correction...."for you" not from you. "

Airy Dite wrote on Jul 6, 2009 3:00 PM:

" Becky mentioned the big pharmaceutical companies. Has anyone ever looked into the correlation between the sky high medicine costs and the advertising of these drugs on TV and in periodicals? Some magazines seem to be 90% drug ads of more than one page. That can't be cheap. Nor can running an ad for a birth control product once an hour on Tru TV. "

Harry Potter wrote on Jul 6, 2009 3:57 PM:

" Good point, I recently read that the drug companies spent more on advertising than on research on new drugs. "

just watching wrote on Jul 6, 2009 8:34 PM:

" How much $$ do you think sudafed's made in the last 5yrs? They don't even have to advertise.Their product speaks for itself.lol "

gringa wrote on Jul 6, 2009 10:44 PM:

" And speaking of drug company ads, why the hand-holding lovers in two bathtubs on the beach or the hand-holding lovers in two bathtubs on the prarie or the hand-holding lovers in two bath tubs in the middle of downtown Manhattan for cryin out loud? I just don't get it. Anyone? "

Airy Dite wrote on Jul 7, 2009 7:55 AM:

" Those bathtubs have me mystified, too. They're hardly big enough for one person to bathe in. Imagine trying to do something in one of those that requires two people. And where's the water supply? Maybe I'm just over thinking.
Thanks to one male enhancement drug ad I can never listen to "Viva Las Vegas" without that drug coming to mind. "

 

 




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