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HEALTH PAC BULLETIN
Health Policy Advisory Center
Vol. 18, No. 3 Fall 1988
E
S
HOME CARE
EMPLOYEES
LAM NO
SIAV UNITED
THEY WON
Contract Victory for Home Care Workers page 4
mene ae
Health Policy
Advisory Center
ince its inception in 1968,
the Health Policy Advisory
S
Center known - as Health /
PAC has served as a
unique progressive voice
for changing consciousness on
domestic and international health.
priorities. Through the Health / PAC
Bulletin and the books Prognosis
Negative and The American Health
Empire, and in its outreach to a
national network of grassroots
activist groups, Health / PAC con-
tinues to challenge a " medical-
industrial complex " which has yet
to provide decent, affordable care.
IN THIS ISSUE
Home Is Where the Patients Are: New York's Home Care Workers '
Contract Victory
Barbara Caress relates her experiences as a consultant in the home care workers '
contract victory. 066 4 4 4
Ordered to Care: Demystifying Nursing's Dilemma
Patricia Moccia reviews Susan Reverbifs history of nurses in a bind: caring in an
uncaring society...
.15.15
Nursing and Caring: Lessons from History
An interview with Susan Reverby, former Health / PAC staffer and author of
Ordered to Care....
.20.20
People Power vs. the Almighty Dollar: How Democratic Management
Can Help Transform the HMO's
Harry Krulewitch argues for democratically controlled health systems as the
antidote to corporate medicine.....
24 24
South Africa's Reign of Terror
Mervyn Susser reports on the Pretoria regime's attacks on health in southern
Africa..
28
Vital Signs
Notes on news, including parental consent for abortion, new health workers and
new bargaining units in health.
.30.30.30
Watching Washington
Barbara Berney talks trash: incineration, recycling source reduction.
.32
Letters.
0
.34.34
HOME CARE
EMPLOYEES
" TRET WON
Design Maggie Block, Three to Make Ready
Graphics
Typography First Galley Typography
Printing Print - Rite Press
Illustrations Phyllis Helland
Front Cover Photo Home care worker on
picket line. George Cohen, DC 37.
Back Cover Photo Nurses picket Santa Fe
Hospital, Neil Jacobs, Albuquerque Journal.
Health Policy Advisory Center
17 Murray Street New York, New York 10007 212 267-8890 /
Health / PAC Bulletin
Volume 18, Number 3 Fall 1988
Board of Editors Tony Bale, Robert Brand, Robb Burlage, Anjean Carter, Robert
Cohen, Sally Guttmacher, Feygele Jacobs, Mark Jobson, Louanne Kennedy, David
Kotelchuck, Ronda Kotelchuck, Arthur Levin, Cheryl Merzel, Patricia Moccia, Regina
Neal, Tammy Pittman, Hila Richardson, Pam Sass, Herbert Semmel, Hal Strelnick,
Ann Umemoto, Richard Younge.
Executive Editor Joe Gordon
Assistant Editor Caren Teitelbaum
Staff Editor Ellen Bilof sky
Intern Anna Reisman
Associates Carl Blumenthal, Pam Brier, Des Callan, Michael E. Clark, Mardge Cohen, Debra
De Palma, Susan Edgman - Levitan, Barry Ensminger, Peg Gallagher, Kathleen Gavin, Dana
Hughes, Marsha Hurst, Mark Kleiman, Sylvia Law, Alan Levine, Judy Lipshutz, Joanne Lukomnik,
Steven Meister, Kate Pfordresher, Susan Reverby, Leonard Rodberg, Alex Rosen, David Rosner,
Diane St. Clair, Gel Stevenson, Rick Zall.
1988 Health / PAC. The Health / PAC Bulletin (ISSN 0017-9051) is published quarterly in the spring, summer, fall, and winter. Second Class postage
paid at New York, N.Y. Postmaster: Send address changes to Health / PAC Bulletin, 17 Murray St., New York, N.Y 10007. The Health / PAC Bulletin
is distributed to bookstores by Carrier Pigeon, 40 Plympton St., Boston, MA 02118. Articles in the Bulletin are indexed in the Health Planning
and Administration data base of the National Library of Medicine and on the Alternative Press Index. Microforms of the Bulletin are available
from University Microfilms International, 300 Zeeb Rd., Dept. T.R., Ann Arbor, MI 48106.
< 9 >
MANUSCRIPTS, COMMENTS, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR, AND SUBSCRIPTION ORDERS should be addressed to Health / PAC, 17 Murray
St., New York, New York, 10007. Subscriptions are by $ 35 membership for individuals. Institutional subscriptions are $ 45.
2
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
Caring in a Care - Less Culture
The recent contract victory of New York
City's unionized home care workers repre-
T
sents a historic achievement for a group of
health care workers who have long been
publicly invisible. Unfortunately, the fight to
improve the lot of these workers - and the people they
care for is far from over.
Despite strong consensus across the political spec-
trum that the concept of home care is a practical and
humane way to help meet the nation's expanding
long term -
care needs, there is little support outside of
organized labor for providing these mostly black and
Hispanic women workers with decent training,
wages, and working conditions. We hope Barbara
Caress's story will be useful to organizers elsewhere as
a primer for building support for the majority of home
care workers who have yet to be given the time of day
in city and town halls across the country.
The New York City victory is but a chapter in a larger
national story encompassing the lives of hundreds of
thousands of workers and clients. The nation's politi-
cally powerless home care workers, like the New York
City workers whose faces and words appear in these
pages, care for people very much like themselves.
They are employees - one might even say captives - of
a fast growing -
industry in which the poor care for the
poor, and where opportunities for growth and ad-
vancement simply don't exist. Like their bedside coun-
terparts in hospitals and nursing homes, they have
little or no say over their working conditions, or, more
precisely, over their conditions of caring. As long as
home care workers remain voiceless and locked out,
the quality of care offered through the nation's fledg-
ling home - care system can only resemble the worst of
the larger institutionalized health care industry.
The conflicts and struggles arising out of this dilem-
ma of carers who are not themselves cared for are tak-
en up elsewhere in this issue by historian Susan
Reverby, by her interviewer, Bulletin editor Ellen.
Bilofsky, and her reviewer, Health / PAC board member
Pat Moccia. Serving as the centerpiece of their discus-
sions is Reverby's book Ordered to Care: The Dilemma of
American Nursing, 1850-1945, which recognizes from
the first that nurses, because they are members of a
predominantly female work force, operate under im-
mense cultural pressures to perform (read " care ") at a
level of commitment that far exceeds what is fair and
reasonable for the low wages they earn. The crisis of
caring resides not so much with nurses but with the
larger culture, which is quick to blame its women
workers, whether they labor in exploitive cotton mills,
chicken processing -
plants, or hospitals.
The general problem of democratizing the work-
place for all health care workers and their patients is
the subject of an article by Harry Krulewitch, a physi-
cian who has extensive experience working in demo-
cratically managed health clinics. Krulewitch argues
that it is in the best interests of physicians to resist the
growing proprietary forces in health care and to form
alliances with other care givers -
and community mem-
bers to build publicly accountable health systems that
serve their mutual needs. His idea appeals to us be-
cause it underscores a point that this magazine has
been advocating for 20 years, namely, that only a
health care system that's accountable to local com-
munities and its own employees - whether they wash
floors or perform brain surgery - can provide health
care that is responsive to public needs rather than
professional prestige or private profit.
-Joe Gordon, Executive Editor
Minstrie
Global
of
Board
Methodist
United
,
Godwin
C.
John
Home Is Where the Patients Are
New York's Home Care Workers'Contract Victory
BARBARA CARESS
// M very morning I say to myself, There but for
r -- the grace of God... ". says Willie Sutton, a
*'year 45 - old mother of two, whose job it is to
care for an 88 year - - old woman with severe heart dis-
ease and arthritis. Eight hours a day, five days a week,
Mrs. Sutton gets her disabled, sick, and irritable pa-
tient toileted, bathed, dressed, medicated, and fed. In
addition to her patient - care responsibilities, she cleans
the apartment, does the laundry, shops, and cooks.
For her labors, Mrs. Sutton had been getting paid
$ 4.15 an hour, with no overtime pay, no health insur-
ance, no pension, and no job security. If her patient re-
quired 24 hour -
care, Mrs. Sutton was paid for only 12
of those hours.
Willie Sutton is one of an estimated 70,000 people
who provide home care for New York City's sick, dis-
abled, and elderly. I first met her two years ago, when
I was asked to assist the staff of Local 1199, the
80,000 member -
health care workers'union that
represents Mrs. Sutton and 20,000 other employees of
the New York City home care system. The union, one
of three representing home care workers in New York,
sought a strategic understanding of the industry to
arm it for an upcoming contract battle with the city
and state. Despite the fact that I had no particular
knowledge of home care, I thought my experience as
a health policy analyst and planner in the city's health
care system would provide a decent enough ground-
ing to quickly figure it out. I was wrong.
I took the job already believing that whatever it was
these workers did, they deserved a living wage. But
before long, I discovered that this was more than a
typical union struggle of health care workers. The
more I learned about the home care system and the
workers, the more appalled I became at the exploitive
working conditions and the insecurity of their liveli-
hood. They labor in a system built on the powerless-
ness of its mostly minority, often immigrant, and
overwhelmingly female labor force. It is held together
by the decency of the workers and their commitment
to their patients.
The size and growth of the system was for a long
time a closely held secret among a small number of
state and city regulators. Few people knew much
about home care, and even fewer cared about the
Barbara Caress is a health policy consultant in New York
State and a former staff member of Health / PAC.
plight of the workers. There was much to learn, much
to be done, and there is still more that needs to be ac-
complished if these workers are to continue to make
progress. What began for me as another job, another
client, emerged as something far different. I was to be-
come not merely an expert or technical advisor writing
background papers or costing out settlements, but an
advocate for a cause.
The Long March
On March 31,1988, a jubilant Dennis Rivera, the ex-
ecutive vice president -
of Local 1199, announced a
stunning victory for that cause. Governor Mario Cuo-
mo's administration, after long resistance, had just
agreed to fund a 53 percent wage increase and to create
a decent health insurance plan for the workers. (While
the city controls the purse strings / the state is the ma-
jor funder of home care services.) These long overdue
gains were the fruits of the Campaign for Justice for
Home Care Workers, launched and maintained
through the joint efforts of Local 1199 and District
Council 1707 (AFSCME), another of the unions.
representing the home care workers. In just over a
year's time, it was joined by a coalition of the nonprofit.
employers and virtually every local politician of even a
vaguely liberal stripe. The workers, no longer invis-
ible, were recognized and even celebrated by the city's
major newspapers and television stations. Justice for
home care workers had been transformed into a
widely endorsed public cause.
Home care is the long term -
care analogue to hospital
deinstitutionalization.
While the victory was sweet, the workers had waited
a long time for some meaningful benefit from their la-
bor union membership. Fifty thousand of the home
care workers employed through vendor contracts with
the City of New York are represented by three promi-
nent labor unions. Every three years, Local 1199 of the
Retail, Wholesale Department Store Union (RWDSU),
4
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
Cardinal O'Connor and Jesse Jackson at a joint press
conference in May 1987.
DC 1707 of the American Federation of State, County
Municipal Employees (AFSCME), and Local 32 - B and
32 - J of the Service Employees International Union
(SEIU) independently went through the motions of
negotiating new contracts. After nine years, the
workers had gained an hourly wage rate of only 80
cents above the minimum wage. They had also won a
small seniority differential and inadequate vacation
and sick leave benefits.
This time around, the new leadership of Local 1199,
recently elected after a bitterly fought campaign for
control of the union, was determined to break through
and get a contract that came closer to paying a living
wage. The question was how? -how -how to force home care
agencies, the city, and the state to spend far more than
they wanted to for employees who worked alone in
50,000 different work sites? How to garner public sup-
port for people whose labors were all but invisible as
they cared for poor patients in poor communities?
How to win a radical change in wages and benefits for
workers who could not use labor's most powerful
weapon the strike?
The Campaign for Justice for Home Care Workers
was equal parts muscle and image. The muscle was
flexed by two of the three unions, Local 1199 and DC
1707, who, with the support of Jesse Jackson, put their
collective organizational and political clout on the line.
And the image was the reflection of a coordinated well -
media campaign to portray the plight of these workers
as a matter worthy of widespread public support.
The Economics of the System
Following the scandals of fraud and abuse in New
York City's nursing homes during the 1970's, publicly
funded home care programs mushroomed as an alter-
native form of care for the chronically ill and the el-
derly. The president of the United Hospital Fund,
Bruce Vladeck, summarizes the changes this way: " In
a relatively short period of time we have transformed
our entire system of care from one dominated by nurs-
ing homes to one in which a growing majority of serv-
ices are provided to people in their own homes. " The
number of patients receiving home care doubled be-
tween 1980 and 1987. And, because increasing num-
bers of them required round - the - clock or seven - day - a-
week care, expenditures grew fourfold - from $ 200
million to $ 800 million a year.
This transformation was spurred not only by fear of
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
5
V
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Local 1199 Executive Vice President Dennis Rivera
(left) and union members after a meeting at union
headquarters.
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scandal but by the fiscal implications of New York
City's changing demography. People age 85 and over
are the city's fastest growing population group, with
their numbers expected to increase by 130 percent be-
tween 1980 and 2000. Without home care, half of them,
or 90,000 people, would need to be in nursing homes.
At the same time, after a slow down -
in the -1970's,
approvals for new nursing home construction were
virtually halted in the early 1980's. In Brooklyn, the
city's most populous borough, for example, no new
beds have been added for 11 years. The current and
foreseeable supply of nursing home beds has
plateaued at about 40,000. The cost of supporting pa-
tients in these beds topped $ 1.5 billion in 1986, of
which $ 1,2 billion was public money.
Home care is the long term -
care analogue to hospital
deinstitutionalization, costing about half as much as
nursing home care. In 1987, approximately 43,000 New
York City residents were being cared for daily in
Medicaid - financed long term -
home care programs at
an annual cost of $ 700 million, compared to over $ 1.2
billion in Medicaid money spent for 38,000 nursing
home residents.
Like many other of the best laid plans of New York's
policymakers, the home care system is unraveling.
Home care is a less costly alternative to nursing home
or hospital care only if it is provided by low wage -
earn-
ers for just a few hours a day. Without low pay, it's
more costly. The reason is simple: one one - on - cover-
age is extremely labor intensive. Paying as little as $ 6
an hour for 24 hours of care would cost $ 144 a day or
50 percent more than the typical nursing home.
To keep home care cheap, wages had to be kept very
low. But this strategy too has a price. Because there are
numerous less demanding -
jobs that pay equivalent
wages, the home care industry faces a severe labor
shortage. A 1988 report by a special New York State
Task Force on Health Personnel documented a state-
wide vacancy rate of 11.4 percent in home care posi-
tions, a shortfall even more severe than that of the
much publicized - nursing shortage.
Defining the Problem
When the current leadership of Local 1199 assumed
office in June 1986, the plight of home care workers
was not first on their list. After an extremely combative
campaign in which Georgianna Johnson unseated
incumbent president Doris Turner, the new union
leaders faced a myriad of difficult problems. Chief
among them was the challenge of negotiating a final
contract for the hospital workers, an agreement that
had yet to be completed despite a bitter, unproductive
strike that stretched on for 47 days. The insurgent.
leadership inherited a union riven by deep political
6
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
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Home care workers at May 1987 City Hall
rally led by Jesse Jackson.
and ethnic divisions and almost equally divided be-
tween pro- and anti Turner -
camps. The new leader-
ship retained few of the old pro Turner -
organizing
staff, and only a handful of new staff members had ex-
tensive organizing experience.
In the home care area, the union's internal weak-
nesses were particularly acute. Neither of the officers
assigned to home care had any special knowledge of
the system or ties to home care workers. Aside from
hiring new staff, their first order of business was to get
to know the workers and develop an understanding of
the industry's history and structure. Hard work and
long hours accomplished the first. The latter I was able
to help with. The story wasn't, as I had so confidently
assumed, just another variant of health industry
unionization. Home care workers, although 20,000
strong in the 80,000 member -
union, had been or-
ganized in a manner parallel to the growth of the sys-
tem itself - that is, haphazardly, as a result of a weird
confluence of factors.
New York City's massive long term - home care sys-
tem was created in part by the welfare rights move-
ment of the late 1960's, and its unionization was in part
a creature of the city's fiscal crisis. Beginning in 1967,
welfare rights groups, most notably the National Wel-
fare Rights Organization (NWRO), mounted large-
scale campaigns to maximize welfare entitlements.
One of the little known -
benefits included in New York
State's Medicaid program was home care. As both a
strategy and a service, NWRO organizers encouraged
elderly and disabled Medicaid recipients to hire neigh-
bors, often fellow recipients, as home care workers.
These workers were, in effect, employees of the pa-
tients. They were paid by two party -
checks issued
jointly to the worker and client.
Like many other of the best
laid plans of New York
policymakers, the home care
system is unraveling.
For a decade, the system grew in an unregulated,
uncontrolled, and largely unnoticed fashion. Unno-
ticed, that is, until the inevitable scandal. In 1976-77,
then City Council President Paul O'Dwyer exposed a
system rife with bureaucratic incompetence, ineffi-
Fall1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
7
Local 1199 members hold vigil for basic rights
of New York City's 70,000 home care workers.
ciency, and outright fraud. Some workers waited.
months for their pay checks, and many checks were is-
sued to non existent -
workers.
City welfare officials considered three possible
remedies. They could maintain the existing system
with increased scrutiny and controls. They could hire
home care workers directly as city employees. Or, they
could find someone else to take responsibility for the
workers. The first alternative was thought to be ad-
ministratively unmanageable, and the second deemed
too expensive at a time when city government was lay-
ing people off. The third alternative, contracting out
the system, was considered the only practical choice.
To keep home care cheap,
wages had to be kept
very law.
With one throw, the contracting - out solution killed
two tough political birds. In addition to bringing the
home care system into line, it found a use for the rem-
nants of the city's anti poverty -
program, whose funds
had just about dried up. On the advice of the Vera
Institute of Justice, a local anti poverty -
think tank,
many of these programs were reincarnated as home
care employment agencies. Ultimately, 62 nonprofit,
community - based organizations became home care
vendors. Each now has an annual contract with the
city for a specified case load, ranging from 200 to 1,200.
The contracts are tightly written and closely super-
vised by the city's Human Resources Administration.
In effect, the agency directors function as contracted
middle managers supervising a largely unskilled labor
force of 50,000 people.
Caught in the throes of the city's catastrophic fiscal
crisis and faced with threats of massive layoffs of its
members, even New York's largest and most powerful
nonuniform public employees union, District Council
37 of AFSCME, could do little to prevent the privatiza-
tion of this growing city service. The union did not go
beyond uttering the obligatory public outcries. But DC
37 did exact two promises from the city administration
for its relative quiescence, one of great potential bene-
fit to the home care workers, and one that threatened
to undermine that advantage. First, the administration
promised to facilitate wholesale unionization of the
new industry. And second, it made an unwritten.
pledge never to give larger pay increases to contrac-
tors'employees than were won by city workers.
While DC 37, fighting to stave off municipal
8
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
rji
4 hi;
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Home care worker on picket line.
bankruptcy, wasn't interested in organizing home care
workers who were not public employees, three other
unions were. Local 1199, the voluntary hospital and
nursing home workers union, Local 32 - B and 32 - J,
primarily a union of apartment house workers, and
DC 1707, a smaller social service affiliate of the same
AFSCME international as DC 37, had soon organized
almost all of the home care workers.
If the development of the home care system was con-
voluted and complex, the needs of the workers, I dis-
covered, were simple. When the last contract expired
on June 30, 1987, most earned less than $ 7,000 a year.
They had an inadequate hospital insurance plan with
no medical, dental, or prescription benefits. They had
no job security, no pensions, and were totally isolated.
from each other. Partly because of the agreement be-
tween the city government and DC 37, workers'wages
had progressed, at an average rate of 5 percent annual-
ly, from minimum wage to $ 4.15 an hour. If one of the
three unions became a little more assertive on behalf
of its members, the city simply picked it off by impos-
ing the least expensive settlement. All three unions.
had identical wage and benefit packages.
Finding the Right Allies
No one said home care workers were adequately
paid, but just about everyone argued the impossibility
of paying them much more. The critical problem was
to develop a strategy that would make substantial change
inevitable. To accomplish this, the Local 1199 leader-
ship needed allies. The most logical allies were the two
other unions that represented home care workers.
Although they initially had some doubts about the
chances for success, DC 1707's executive director, Bob
McEnroe, and its home care director, Josephine Lebeau,
readily joined with 1199 to form the New York Labor
Union Coalition for Home Care Workers. Together, the
unions formulated a set of demands: $ 6 an hour, com-
prehensive family health insurance, pensions, job
security, overtime pay, and industrywide seniority.
Even more important than the joint demands, each
union promised not to settle without the other.
While the unions were natural allies, coalitions,
even between similar organizations, are very difficult
to sustain. DC 1707, like 1199, styled itself as a progres-
sive union a champion of left causes and minority
politics. This is not the case with Local 32 - B and 32 - J of
the SEIU. The officers of 1199 and 1707 tried through
every possible vehicle and intermediary to get the
reclusive president of Local 32 - B and 32 - J, Gus Bovo-
na, to join them, but Bovona rejected all overtures.
Lawyers representing him at two meetings with 1199.
and 1707 balked at any joint bargaining. At most, they
would agree to a position paper spelling out " the prob-
lems of the workers. '
Lacking a united front, the union coalition decided.
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
9
Care
Photography
Photography
Phot graphy
Photography
Miller
Miller
Miller
Most workers were receiving as little as $ 4.15 an hour.
The new hourly minimum is $ 5.90.
to seek the support of sympathetic local politicians.
They first approached Manhattan Borough President
David Dinkins. At the time, Dinkins was the only
minority member of New York City's Board of Esti-
mate, the upper house of municipal government.
Astonished at the size of the industry and the wide-
spread exploitation of its workers, Dinkins organized a
public hearing to draw attention to their plight.
The hearing, held in April 1987, was dramatic
enough to warrant the notice of New York's major me-
dia. The presence of several hundred minority women
packed into the board's ornate City Hall chamber, the
articulate voices of the workers, coupled with the sup-
port of the nonprofit, community - based agencies that
employed them and the unions that represented
them, made the telling of their plight extremely effec-
tive. " The only thing that I am asking for my work is
to be respected, to be paid for my job, and to have
some kind of services, " Gwendolyn Rosemond told
Dinkins and other Board of Estimate and City Council
members in the crowded hearing room. It was a sim-
ple story. Home care workers perform significant,
occasionally heroic work, for which they are abys-
mally paid.
Dinkins summed up his findings in an extensive
hearing report: " I found the employment conditions.
of home health workers unconscionable, " he wrote.
" As a result of the hearing I am convinced that the
present wages, benefits, working conditions and op-
portunities for advancement of the home care worker
must be improved. "
Just a month after the hearing, John Cardinal
O'Connor and the Rev. Jesse Jackson met to jointly ex-
press their support for the workers'cause. While the
media led with headlines about the newsmaking get-
together of the politically conservative cardinal and
the progressive reverend, the fact that the meeting was
arranged by the unions and announced their endorse-
ment of the Justice for Home Care Workers Campaign
did not go unnoticed in City Hall or the governor's of-
fice. Later the same day, Jackson addressed a rally of
about 6,000 home care workers and their supporters in
front of City Hall. Just about every liberal and minority
politician in the city jostled for space on the platform
to reiterate his or her support for the workers.
These politicians, however, could not deliver a con-
tract, nor could the nonprofit home care employers.
That power lay in the hands of the Koch administra-
tion, even though the state's Department of Social
Services actually sets the Medicaid reimbursement
rates for the home care program and picks up 40 per-
cent of the cost. The city's power lies not in its 10 per-
cent contribution (the federal government pays the
other 50 percent), but in its control of all the home care
agencies'operations, from contracts to procedural de-
tails. Before the nominally independent employer
agencies could sign a union contract, the Human
Resources Administration, the city's massive welfare
and Medicaid agency, had to approve its terms.
Despite the support of Jackson, Dinkins, and the
Cardinal, the Koch administration was unwilling to
meet the union coalition's demands. According to
Koch's chief labor negotiator, Robert W. Linn, the city.
couldn't commit money for the home care contracts
until it settled with the city workers'unions. When
that would happen, Linn refused to hazard a guess.
Developing a Strategy
More than moral high ground and the support of
selected politicians was needed to move city and state
governments to take the union coalition's demands.
seriously. Union strategists, led by Dennis Rivera,
Local 1199's executive vice president, felt it would be
best to negotiate with the home care vendors and then
present the contract as a fait accompli. With a concrete
offer, to which the city and the state would have to re-
spond, the union coalition would be in a better posi-
tion to gauge the opposition and target its activities.
The coalition laid out its strategy to the most sym-
pathetic of the home care vendors. At their suggestion,
the coalition invited the Home Care Council, a trade
association, to negotiate on behalf of its members. The
council leadership balked, however. Never before had
home care vendors entered into negotiations without
the blessing and permission of their real bosses - the
city's Human Resources Administration, nor did they
10
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
feel comfortable negotiating as a group. To allay some
of their anxiety and to get the process moving, the
coalition agreed to develop a " joint position /'not
a contract.
The unions continued to treat the joint position talks
as actual negotiations, however. They established a
negotiating committee composed of workers from
each of the agencies represented by the two unions.
The committee laid out its positions and the members
debated them. After the usual give and take of con-
tract talks, the two sides arrived at a common
position $ 5.90 an hour, significant pay differentials
for people who worked 24 hours a day (but were paid
for 12) or people working on weekends and holidays,
and the establishment of a comprehensive health in-
surance plan. They deferred agreements on pensions,
job security, and overtime pay to the next contract.
The Home Care Council and the union coalition
joined together under the unwieldy title of " Justice
for Home Care Workers and Recipients. " On January
11, 1988, they announced agreement on their " joint
position. " Simultaneously, they sent letters to the
governor and mayor requesting approval and funding
for the agreement.
##
No one said home care
workers were adequately
paid, but everyone argued
the impossibility of paying
them more.
A member of DC 1707 of the American Federation
of State, County, and Municipal Employees.
Since the joint position was not a contract, neither
executive had to reply. And neither did. Instead, each
pointed a finger elsewhere. Conveniently forgetting
that any agency signing without city scrutiny risked.
losing its vendor contract, city officials asserted that
the issue was between the unions and the employers.
The state's position, equally absurd, was that until the
city's Human Resources Administration sought ap-
proval for new reimbursement rates, the state had no
role to play. With both city and state maintaining the
posture that someone else had to go first, the cam-
paign was getting nowhere.
A more intensive, sophisticated strategy needed to
be developed. The union management -
group ap-
proached every significant elected official in the city.
They sought and received endorsements from Andrew
Stein, the City Council president; Harrison Goldin,
the city's comptroller; four of the borough presidents;
and numerous members of the City Council and the
state legislature. But neither Koch nor Cuomo, whose
endorsement would carry a commitment to fund the
agreement, made public comment.
The coalition convinced a number of city and state
Fall 1988
politicians, religious leaders, and " power brokers ".
to phone the governor and the mayor. Word filtered
back that they were now prepared to do something,
" details to be worked out. " Given the situation of
most of the workers, " something " was not enough.
The coalition was unwilling to accept anything short of
the full agreement.
At one point Bob Linn, the city's chief labor negotia-
tor, told coalition representatives that he would agree
to whatever the state was willing to give. Two weeks
later he withdrew that promise and offered instead a
complicated plan whereby workers would receive an
additional 20 cents an hour for each year of service.
Linn got so carried away with the coalition's adamant
rejection that he forgot who he was talking to. " You are
going to drive this industry out of the city, " he absurd-
ly charged. Despite a few other off record - the -
meet-
ings, the city continued to stonewall.
To move the issue and force a response, the coalition
developed a full scale -
press campaign. Moe Foner, one
of the labor movement's most experienced publicists,
went to work, tirelessly convincing major newspapers
A
to take up the crusade.
Bulletin
11
Home Care: Cooking, Cleaning, and Caring
ack in South Carolina in the 1920s, Pearl
B
Carter's Great Aunt Emma raised her to
be independent and to look after herself.
" She'd say mother, father, sister, brother,
but God bless the child that's got its own. " So in
the wake of a stroke in 1975, after a lifelong strug-
gle to live on wages from domestic work never - '
on welfare, never -Carter "
didn't take to the idea
of having a home health worker, a stranger,
around. When functioning became overwhelm-
ing she thought of asking Laura Jones, a friend
and former neighbor in her Brooklyn apartment
house, to take the job.
Jones said yes - she was tired of domestic and
factory work and so began an enduring rela-
tionship that suggests what home health care
can be when it is based on deep mutual respect
and appreciation.
" I was scared of her at first, " Jones says, stand-
ing at Carter's bedside one day in July. " I was
afraid of sick peoples. She didn't pull no games
for a long time and then one day I walked in on
her and she was pretending she was dead. "
" She was way back to the door, ready to cut
out, " Carter interjects with glee.
Jones stayed, though she did check for life by
shaking Carter's toe. Their 13 years together have
spanned important changes in New York's home
health care system, which has evolved from a
chaotic patchwork of services to a unionized in-
dustry involving some 60,000 to 100,000 workers
and 60,000 chronically ill and elderly clients.
Unions, including Jones'own Local 1199, have re-
cently made gains for home health workers, but
at 42, Jones still gets scant wages for her life-
giving services.
Today, as always, Jones leaves her home in
Brooklyn's Bedford Stuyvesant section around 8
a.m., riding two buses to Carter's apartment in
East Flatbush, and wisecracking as she lets her-
self in. The apartment is hot: no air conditioning,
and the windows are stuck closed. While chang-
ing into a work dress, Jones tells Carter to check
into getting Supplemental Security Income.
Every penny counts in this house, where any in-
creases in social security checks are invariably
matched by rent hikes, and where $ 17 monthly in
food stamps doesn't go far. They joke about old
times. For two church - going Baptists, women
whose dignity is palpable and whose shared
Leah Halper is a journalist who writes and organizes
around Central American health care issues.
standard is decency, they can get downright
raucous.
" Boy, she was big. Fat as a pea, " Carter says of
Jones, who lost weight after she began as Carter's
aide. Carter, a tall woman when she can stand,
wrinkles her brow. " She saw me and got
shamed. I could not eat. I get up with pain, go to
bed with pain. "
" I felt embarassed - I'd have my big plate and
she had a roll and coffee, " Jones says. Her cook-
ing, if not her eating, has thrived since she started
with Carter. " I learned extra dishes I had no busi-
ness learning from her. "
After a good hour's talk, Carter sits in bed with
the TV on while Jones sweeps the kitchen with
powerful strokes, steps out for bread, and washes.
out Carter's underwear. They yell back and forth.
After a while Jones helps Carter, whose ailments
include a blood clot in her leg, arthritis, and poor
circulation, plump into her taped - up wheelchair
and nudge her feet into worn slippers. Jones
gives " Miz Pearl " a bath and breakfast, fixes her
hair, and brings her outside for fresh air, where
neighbors stop to talk. Jones knows them as well
as Carter does.
Often Jones goes out for money orders so she
can pay Carter's bills, and they frequently go to-
gether to appointments at Downstate Hospital.
Carter has spent enough time immobilized in
hospitals to know home is best for her. And she,
who has done her share of hard work for low
pay, is a firm supporter of home care workers '
rights. When Jones took time off to rally at City
Hall or lobby state legislators in Albany, says
Carter earnestly, " what she was saying was
the truth. "
ridays, Jones cleans and cooks to carry
F
through the weekend, which Carter
often spends with her 34 year - - old
daughter, Julie Luke, and 4 year - - old
granddaughter, Cassandra. On Saturdays, Jones
cleans her own house, and Sundays she attends
MacClinton Baptist Church. After 21 years of not
being able to afford new curtains, Jones says
things are looking up. Her husband has rejoined
her after a long separation; her children,
Shanice, 18, and Ernest, 20, are finding jobs, and
the new pay scale will soon swell her paycheck to
$ 5.90 an hour.
The raise won't turn her into a high stepper
after years of habitual scraping. In fact, " If I
12
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
would hit the lottery, if I still be living after the
news, I would get some abandoned buildings to
fix up and make into housing and a recreation
center for people like Miz Carter. "
"
" Don't worry none about the Miz Carters,
Carter says. She would open a bus line to Atlan-
tic City for slot machine runs, she boasts from
her bed. She hasn't been there since 1985.
Since the lottery is a longshot, Jones is taking
night courses to finish high school. She might
someday go on to college. At the very least, she'd
like more medical training for her work. Fre-
quent agency seminars teach how to bathe bed-
ridden people or deal with heart attacks, she
says, but she looks forward to the day that the
unions start their own school for home health
care workers.
So far the union's effort has brought Jones,
who is a diabetic with high blood pressure, better
health coverage, the impending raise, and first
crack at jobs. A pension is yet to be negotiated,
however, and a recent call to jury duty looms as
an alarming loss of income.
Jones and Carter understand that their rela-
tionship is unusual in a field where patients '
declines and deaths mean frequent turnover.
Their intimacy makes coping with emotions dif-
ficult when Carter is hurting, says Jones.
" Sometimes I'd just go outside for fifteen,
twenty minutes not to see her in pain. " Carter,
who is usually high spirited -
, can get cranky, but
Jones has seen crankier. At least Carter's daugh-
ter is supportive, whereas Jones dislikes filling in
elsewhere on Saturdays because some children
mistreat their parents.
In fact, Jones'attachment to Pearl Carter even
compels her to rethink that lottery prize.
" I changed my mind, " she tells Carter, grin-
ning. " I'd go with you to Hawaii. We'd wear grass
skirts and dance awhile, eat pineapples and
drink that stuff, coconut juice. Whoo! Look at me
now! "
-Leah Halper
Pearl Carter (left) and Laura Jones.
Brower
Kate
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
A
13
aff - cio
M
ALL
7'.5
Photgraphy
Miler
Workers hope to win job security, a pension,
and overtime in their next contract.
Foner, a former 1199 officer with great credibility
among reporters and editors, was remarkably success-
ful. After a series of sympathetic feature and news sto-
ries, the editorial writers waded in. " Nothing's
dumber than saving pennies and wasting dollars, " the
Daily News editorialized on March 3, 1988. " Why get
tight fisted -
with home health care workers, * who clear-
ly have a strong case for a wage increase? Koch's stingi-
ness could gut the system. " The local CBS TV affiliate
broadcast a highly sympathetic editorial, " Caring for
the Caretakers, " which was followed by a Newsday
editorial declaring: " Stop the games: Penny pinching
won't save a dime. "
The turning point came on March 14,1988, when the
first of the coalition's ads appeared in the New York
Times opposite the editorial page where, perhaps
serendipitously, the Times'editors made their position.
kndwn. " Can the city and state afford the $ 96 million
it will cost over the next three years to improve the lot
of the home care provider? " they wrote. " If they are
truly committed to moving people out of poverty, the
answer has to be yes.... If they want to enable people
to stay home who otherwise have to enter expensive
nursing facilities the answer has to be yes. "
Pressured by an avalanche of political and media sup-
port, the governor's office began to move. " What do you
want? " asked a senior member of Cuomo's staff. " Our
agreement with the bosses, " Dennis Rivera replied.
Victory
On March 31, a week after the overture, four days af-
ter Jackson's victory in the Michigan primary, and 19
days before the New York primary, Cuomo's labor
commissioner, Tom Hartnett, worked out an agree-
ment with Rivera and the coalition's chief negotiator,
former Lieutenant Governor Basil Paterson.
Despite a price tag of $ 350 million spread over two
years, Koch told the press he was " pleased. " But 12
weeks of often acrimonious negotiations with the city
and the vendors followed the March 31 announce-
ment. Having been outflanked by the governor, the
Koch administration continued to make trouble. Each
time we thought the deal was made, it collapsed over
disagreements between the city and state about how
much it would cost. Until the city okayed the contract,
the agencies wouldn't sign. Once during a discussion
in Linn's office, I spent almost an hour arguing with a
senior budget official about a penny difference in the
cost figures, while Rivera, Paterson, Linn, and an aide
watched in silence.
Once the money issues were resolved, each of the
unions entered separate formal negotiations with the
agencies'management. Allies became adversaries
over such issues as paid release time for union
delegates, guarantees of a weekend off a month, drug
testing, and seniority rights. A full agreement was fi-
nally hammered out between Local 1199 and 22 home
care agencies. DC 1707 has also completed negotia-
tions, and workers in agencies represented by Local
32 - B and 32 - J will get the same wage settlement. At a
meeting last June, Local 1199 home care workers rati-
fied the contract by a vote of 849 to 9.
So Near, Yet So Far
Two months before the ratification, Local 1199 con-
vened an emergency meeting of the home care work-
ers after a disastrous session with the city. On a hot
and humid night, 600 workers packed the union's au-
ditorium on West 43rd Street in Manhattan.
I was standing downstairs when a small, 60ish
woman approached me and inquired if I were a law-
yer. I told her no, but asked if I could help. She told me
she had worked seven days a week for five years be-
cause her boss had threatened to fire her if she took a
day off. " Is that legal? " she asked.
I went back to the auditorium just as the meeting
was ending. That day, April 4, was the twentieth an-
niversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King.
As I elbowed my way through the crowd, someone be-
gan to lead the meeting in singing " We Shall Over-
come. " People linked arms and sang together.
Recalling that harassed worker's question, I
thought, we have come so far, but we still have a long,
long way to go. *
14
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
' Ordered to Care!
Demystifying Nursing's Dilemma
PATRICIA MOCCIA
urses are in a bind familiar to all who would
Y'
nurture in our society, whether they be nurses,
teachers, social workers, parents, or friends:
How can they care for those in need without sacrific-
ing their sense of self; and how can they care for their
selves without sacrificing those in need?
Susan M. Reverby's recent book, Ordered to Care: The
Dilemma of American Nursing, 1850-1945, helps us to un-
derstand the history of that bind. And, although the
purposes of such a history do not usually include
prescriptions for contemporary problems, Reverby so
clearly identifies nursing's central dilemma in her
work that it also contributes to discussions on how one
of today's health care crises might best be approached.
By defining nursing's historical problem as " being or-
dered to care in a society that refuses to value caring, "
she raises the possibility that the current shortage of
registered nurses requires social reform in addition to,
or perhaps even rather than, nursing reform. This by
itself throws more light on the issue than practically
any of the other, more popular, analyses. It also holds
the promise of empowering those who struggle for
progressive transformation in health care and society.
Reverby writes about nursing history from 1850 to
1945, during which time the act of caring for the sick
changed from a women's duty, to a woman's trade and
occupation, to a woman's profession and career. Start-
ing from the experience of nurses working in and
around Boston hospitals during that period, she de-
velops an analysis of its national implications. With
nursing as a case study, Reverby also provides a much-
needed connection between political histories of
health care and the hospital system, such as The Care
of Strangers, by Charles Rosenberg, and Health Care in
America: Essays in Social History, edited by Reverby and
David Rosner; the historiographies of nursing in a
patriarchy, such as Hospitals, Paternalism and the Role of
the Nurse, by Joann Ashley; and analyses of the work
culture of nursing, such as The Physician's Hand, by
Barbara Melosh.
The Nursing Shortage: Whose Side Are You On?
By now, the popular media has convinced all who
look or listen that the nursing profession is in the
Patricia Moccia is a member of the Health / PAC board and
Vice President for Accreditation and Education of the Na-
tional League for Nursing.
midst of a crisis of numbers. Nursing positions in al-
most all the nation's hospitals go unfilled, and nursing
schools face declining admissions, enrollments, and
graduations. Thousands of dollars are being spent by
private foundations such as Commonwealth and Pew
to analyze the reasons for nurses'dissatisfaction; by
professional and consumer - oriented organizations
such as the American Nurses'Association and the Na-
tional League for Nursing to market nursing as an at-
tractive career option; and by trade associations such
as the American Hospital Association to develop
strategies to recruit and retain nurses as hospital em-
ployees. Even the federal government has finally
decided to study the crisis, with a commission ap-
pointed by the secretary of health and human services
to offer recommendations by the end of 1988.
From 1850 to 1945, the act
of caring for the sick
changed from women's duty
to a woman's trade and
occupation to a woman's
profession and career.
Yet these intensive studies, all by interested parties,
are peculiarly limited. They attempt to explain the
shortage as the result of particular decisions by in-
dividual nurses, would - be nurses, and the nursing
leadership. In the context of Ordered to Care, this ap-
proach seems curiously ignorant of the structural de-
terminants of the problem. Despite the realities of
daily life for nurses in hospitals, which Reverby so
vividly depicts, serious proposals are still being pre-
pared to find the few nurses who have left intolerable
working conditions behind and entice them back to
lives of subordination and personal and professional
humiliation. Reverby carefully documents the fact that
nursing students historically have been recruited from
poor and working class families. Nevertheless, some
still argue that, as a result of the women's movement,
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
15
Heland
Phylis
potential nurses are now choosing to study for MBAs
or degrees in law and medicine. Yet we know that such
programs are still protected by barriers of class and
race from the majority of those in nursing's traditional
labor pool. Again, Reverby exposes the hospital - based
and controlled apprenticeship training that predated
the current collegiate programs as a source of cheap
and exploited labor, allowing institutions to profit
without regard for the quality of nurses'lives either on
or off the floors. Yet some still argue for a return to
those days and ways in order to assure an adequate la-
bor force for today's hospitals.
These arguments and proposed solutions share
several themes. First, they lay the blame for the nurs-
ing shortage on nurses themselves: on those who
choose not to be humiliated and overworked on a daily
basis; on those who might have taken advantage of an
opportunity to achieve more autonomy in their daily
lives or more money, respect, and security for their
families; and on those who have succeeded in moving
nursing students away from oppressive training sys-
tems toward the relative, albeit limited, autonomy of
educational models. In so doing, secondly, these argu-
ments divert attention and responsibility from those
who, like the American Medical Association and the
American Hospital Association, benefit from an
undereducated, divided, and subservient labor force.
By crying " nursing
shortage / medicine justifies
its latest efforts to dominate
and exploit.
Third, these analyses are critical of what they pre-
sent as self interest -
on the part of nurses and the
nursing profession. Nurses, they say, are willing to
sacrifice the good of their patients for individual and
professional advancement. This assumes, falsely, that
the nurse and the nursing profession ever had either
the sole responsibility for ensuring care in hospitals or
the power to determine how care was to be delivered.
16
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
Finally, if heeded, these arguments would put nurses
" back in their place " and serve to reinforce and
reproduce the authority of those who currently con-
trol health.
Although Reverby's work
stops at 1945, attempts by
organized medicine to
control the education and
supply of nurses have not.
Reverby pulls the veil from these illusions. She iden-
tifies nursing's " crucial dilemma. " She presents the
reader with ample evidence of nurses'struggle with
" the dichotomy between the duty and the desire to
care for others and the right to control and define their
activity. " Most significantly, Reverby exposes the root
of nursing's problems, those of the health care system,
and perhaps even those facing us as a civilization as
" the failure of our society to create the conditions un-
der which the desire to care can be valued. "
The Nursing Shortage: Qui Bono?
Conventional wisdom has it that correctly defining
the problem will bring you halfway to the solution.
Mileage might be gained, then, by presenting the
nursing shortage not as a problem for nurses or for
nursing, but rather as a problem for the employer; that
is, for hospitals and physicians. Reverby's history tells
us that, at least for the years between 1850 and 1945,
nurses were clear about what they wanted - a humane
system for both patients and employees, one that al-
lowed dignity and integrity and respected the nurse's
individuality and autonomy, one that allowed people
to care for each other. Today, as economic imperatives
become ever more insistent, nurses are clearer and
more forceful about what it would take to keep them.
Hospitals refuse to hear or to heed. And so we have a
nursing shortage.
Or do we? Since more nurses are working now than
ever before, the problem seems more one of increased
demand than inadequate supply. In other words, it's
not that nurses are refusing to work, it's that the hospi-
tals want more of them - both literally and figuratively.
The question then becomes: " To do what? "
As a challenge to the currently popular analysis that
we are in the midst of a nursing shortage, Dr. Nancy
Greenleaf, Dean of the School of Nursing at the
University of Southern Maine, has argued that 1.8 mil-
lion nurses ought to be sufficient to meet the health
needs of a nation with a population of about 250 mil-
lion. She suggests that the roughly 1 150: ratio is only
inadequate relative to the needs of a health care sys-
tem designed for profit, and that the " shortage "
reflects the needs of the employer for more workers,
not necessarily the needs of people for more health
services. Greenleaf poses two questions that lead to
entirely different discussions about the " nursing cri-
sis " and entirely different solutions: " How have the
benefits of the nurse supply been distributed? " and,
" For whose benefit are those nurses working? "
To read Reverby is to find the answers to these two
questions: The nursing supply has been controlled by
physicians and hospitals for the benefit of physicians
and hospitals. She tells us that in 1878, " The demands
of the hospital for a work force often overcame the
nursing schools'abilities to educate their students. " In
1910, " admissions to nursing schools were determined
by hospital needs rather than educational standards. "
Between 1920 and the mid 1930s -
, the growth of hos-
pitals in the United States was dependent on student
nurses to adequately staff the institutions. Reverby
reveals that although graduate nurses achieved some
degree of independence through private duty, the
Depression forced them to bow, bitterly, to the pres-
sures of physicians and hospitals and to accept the
otherwise unacceptable working conditions offered to
staff nurses in return for the security of steady, how-
ever meager, income.
Proposed solutions to the
nursing shortage lay the
blame on the nurse who
chooses not to be
humiliated and overworked.
Although Reverby's work stops at 1945, the attempts
by organized medicine to control the education and
supply of nurses have not. By crying " nursing short-
age, " medicine justifies its latest efforts to dominate
and exploit. As a recent internal memo of the AMA's
board of trustees reveals, organized medicine is so
panicked or blinded by self interest -
that it can on one
hand acknowledge that " nursing has developed pro-
fessional independence and authority over its own
affairs, " and on the other presume to interfere in
this independent profession by recommending that
the AMA set up nursing education programs and
methods to accredit them. For these physicians,
nurses are neither workers nor independent practi-
tioners, but rather a " critical medical resource " in such
short supply that critical care and medical surgical
beds are being closed - and profits are being lost - in
many parts of the country.
Nurses'Dilemma, Whose Failure?
Through this history of American nursing, Reverby
makes several points about work, caring activities, and
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
17
'
When nurses engage either of these struggles with-
out engaging the other, and when they engage them
alone, their efforts are confused and confusing. Their
difficulties in advancing either their own or the pa-
tient's interests become the failures of individuals and
evidence of the conservative nature of nurses. There is
more opportunity for progressive social change when
nurses look beyond their boundaries for either analy-
sis or praxis. As Reverby says, " the dilemma of nursing
is too tied into the broader problems of gender and
class in our society to be solved solely by the political
efforts of one occupational group. " This re framing -
of
the nursing crisis is perhaps the greatest contribution
of the book.
Heland
Phyllis < --
the position of women in society. Because of a society
structured in such a way that human relations are dis-
torted in the interests of efficiency and domination,
the activities of nurturing and caring for each other are
similarly distorted. As nursing work has traditionally
been seen as women's work, its value reflects that of
women in a patriarchy. How then can nurses and oth-
er women in such a position care for others without
caring for themselves?
Popular arguments divert
attention prom those who
benefit from an
under educated, divided,
and subservient labor force.
Though the voices of nurses are missing from this
history, Reverby is aware of their value. She ac-
knowledges her debt to nurses Sondra Clark, Nancy
Greenleaf, and Karen Wolf for their willingness to
share their experience of nursing with an outsider. Her
gratitude is also evident in the degree of sensitivity
and respect with which she treats her subjects. As
nurses increasingly find and use their own progres-
sive voices, they in turn will acknowledge their debt to
Susan Reverby for this and other works. *
18
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
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TE
Nursing and
Caring: Lessons
from History
Interview with Susan Reverby
The author of Ordered to Care, Susan M. Reverby, now
associate professor and director of the Women's Studies Pro-
gram at Wellesley College, was a staff member at Health / PAC
from 1970 to 1973. Until then, her only involvement with
health care, aside from family dinner conversation (her fa-
ther is a physician and her mother teaches human biology
and medical technology), was a few weeks as a counselor in
an abortion clinic. Health / PAC, she says, gave her an in-
stant education. " I learned an enormous amount very, very
fast about how the health care system works, about how to
be a speaker, about how to think through issues, how to be
an organizer, and I'm very grateful. " The Bulletin recently
Stewart
Martha
asked her to comment on the nursing shortage, nursing his-
tory, and her experience with Health / PAC. -Ellen Bilofsky
Health / PAC: You're a historian. How did you get involved
with nursing? Did Health / PAC have something to do
with it?
Reverby: Yes. I was hired in 1970 because of my interest.
in the abortion movement. When the person on staff
who covered nursing left, it was a natural desk for me
to take over, since I was the one with a degree in labor
history and an interest in women. And I got fascinated,
because I was a historian, by the history. I just fell in
love. You couldn't not like them, and you couldn't not
be interested in what they tried to do.
Eventually, I left Health / PAC because I was becom-
ing the kind of academic intellectual who needed to
have more of a grounding in the complexities of a top-
ic. I was frustrated by what the kind of journalistic
writing we were doing required me to do, which was
to become an instant expert on some topic I knew
nothing about in about three weeks. Frankly, we were
often so rhetorical because we were trying to create a
movement, and we didn't have the time to be careful
sometimes about the complexities of historical change.
That's a tension between intellectuals and activists. If
you're faced with a problem here and now, you don't
have the luxury of trying to figure out the niceties of
the past. I felt then, and I certainly feel now, that it also
led to a kind of screwed up politics, because if you
don't really understand the complexities of the past
then you really make political mistakes in the present.
I spent a year after I left Health / PAC trying to decide
whether to go on for graduate training in health or
whether I wanted to do history, and I decided I didn't
want to go to my grave wishing I'd become a historian.
So I completed my PhD in American Studies.
Class so divided nurses
historically that gender
couldn't unite mem.
Health / PAC: Ordered to Care stops in 1945. Why didn't
you bring it up to the present?
Reverby: I knew the end of the story, because at
Health / PAC I'd written about what had happened
from 1945 on. And also because, like most historians,
I made the argument that the seeds of the difficulty
had been planted in the early years.
I end by talking about nursing's need to develop a
language of rights around caring. I say two sets of
things. One is that nurses have to develop a language
about rights that doesn't mean just what you individu-
20
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
Tr News
T
......
FLES
BRAT
INTERNATIONAL COMEN'S DAY.
WHAT ARE GIRLS M
to
wan
a
na
Above, Susan Reverby at her Health / PAC desk in 1973, and
(on opposite page) in a 1988 photo taken at Weiiesiey College.
ally need but what we collectively need what a com-
munal set of rights would look like for nurses as a
group to be able to care properly.
The second is that because the problems of nursing
are so tied into the issues of women and of caring more
broadly in the culture, nursing cannot solve the prob-
lem by itself. The only hope lies in a kind of alliance
with other people concerned about what's happening
to women and to caring issues in the culture more
broadly. There have to be linkages in nursing school
programs with women's studies, there have to be links
in hospitals and with health consumers and with peo-
ple concerned about what's going to happen in the
hospitals to their loved ones. People have to under-
stand what's wrong with the way the health system is
set up now and what's wrong with the way in which
nursing has been oppressed.
Health / PAC: Do you consider nurses to be " professionals "
rather than " workers "?
Reverby: I think that the dichotimization of profes-
sionals and workers is arcane at this point, at least
around nursing. It's an ahistorical question, because
whether or not in the objective world you want to label
nurses " semiprofessionals " or " workers, " in terms of
the way they're being educated and in terms of their
consciousness, they consider themselves profession-
als. But what that means may have a worker con-
sciousness to it. I don't mean to suggest that there's
not a difference between being an aide and being a
nurse. I just think you have to avoid a definition that
has some academic sociological and political science
meaning. You have to look at what meaning people
give to the word themselves. There are different ways
to act professionally. There are ways to be professional
that also take into account what we would consider
traditional worker consciousness. Being a professional
does not negate organizing, or caring about anybody
else in the hospital. It doesn't have to.
One of the things I tried to say in the book is where
the limits of professionalization have been. But that
doesn't mean I don't think some of that's important.
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
21
I've shifted some ground on the BSN issue over the
years. I think that's probably where we went wrong in
criticizing nursing when I was at Health / PAC. In 1972
I wrote against the BSN degree as a requirement for
entry into nursing practice because the line was that it
was anti working -
class. Then a friend of mine said to
me, " Do you think women shouldn't go to college? "
And I thought, what a position for a feminist to take,
that women who want to learn something should not
go to college!
There is a cultural crisis in
caring, for which women,
rather than the structures
that created the crisis, are
being blamed.
Health / PAC: But there's a difference between helping
women to go to college and requiring a college degree to be-
come a nurse.
Reverby: Right. But there are ways in which you could
build ladders in nursing that would give them that.
There have to be ways in which college programs are
brought to the hospital to give people the kind of
broad base that a college education gives.
One of the things I argue in the book is that class so
divided nurses historically that gender couldn't unite
them. I think that the whole issue of class and race as
dividers, as in any women's community, has to be
dealt with politically by nurses. We have to acknowl-
edge what it means to help other women move from
diploma degrees to BSNs. The health system is only
very slowly learning to really value increased clinical
skills. We mainly reward people who move out, from
the bedside into teaching or into administration. But
that's true of any kind of service work in this society.
At the university we don't reward people for being
good teachers, we only reward them if they write a lot
of books.
Health / PAC: Then you're suggesting that we reward people
adequately just for being good nurses?
Reverby: Oh, absolutely. That's the first step. If nurses '
starting salaries were $ 40,000 and went up to $ 80,000,
you'd have no nursing shortage tomorrow. But it's not
just money, and that's certainly clear when you talk to
nurses. One of the things that's important has to do
with what kind of control people have over the job,
how they're perceived, whether they're taken serious-
ly as professional colleagues in the hospital. Those is-
sues sometimes speak louder than the money.
Health / PAC: What's creating the nursing shortage? Is
there really a shortage?
Reverby: I think it's complicated. I don't follow the
current numbers enough to argue whether the bodies
are actually missing or not. I think there's what I call
a cultural crisis in caring in general, for which women,
rather than the structures that created the crisis, are
being blamed. We are being blamed for not caring
enough, or for not being willing to sacrifice ourselves.
The culture has created a crisis in caring by not reward-
ing caring work in emotional, financial, and status.
ways. That's causing the crisis, not because women
have abandoned their caring role.
Health / PAC: You wrote in one of your Health / PAC articles
in 1972 that the " disproportionate number of women [in
nursing and other health care positions] reflects the fact
that women have few other choices. " Well, women now
have a lot of other choices. Is that helping to cause the
nursing shortage?
Reverby: Oh, sure. I think you'd be naive to not admit
that. I'm a health professions advisor at Wellesley, and
I've only seen one student who said she wanted to go
to nursing school. The problem often is that many stu-
dents think the only way to make it is to become a cor-
porate vice president, that somehow being a nurse is
not something valuable.
Health / PAC: Since nursing has traditionally been a work-
ing class profession, are the women who traditionally went
into nursing really going into law and medicine?
Reverby: Some. And some are going into banking.
jobs, real estate, social work. We know that there's a
decline in nursing school enrollments. They're going.
elsewhere. Some. Not all. But that's always been true.
Historically, in the twenties lots of women went else-
where, other than nursing, into secretarial jobs be-
cause they paid better.
Our society will have to
really think through what
counts as caring.
Health / PAC: Do you think that bringing in men will help
the profession?
Reverby: No, I don't, because I think it's a gendered
profession. It's not a question of the bodies and their
genitalia in the profession, it's a question of how the
culture perceives the work. So more men in it are not
going to matter, and in fact more men in it means they
just become the administrators. Men tend to rise faster
and push faster for the administrative jobs, and they
get them. It's the type of work that's an issue, and how
the culture links caring work to women's work and as-
sumes it to be natural that women do it.
When the media talks about the shortage, all it does
is bemoan the problem, but it doesn't really talk about
solutions, or it ends up blaming women for the prob-
22
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
lem. The subtext is, " Gee, women shouldn't do this.
Women shouldn't be abandoning us. Mommy didn't
do it right. " Rather than, " Why isn't Mommy doing it? "
Health / PAC: Let's talk about solutions.
Reverby: There ought to be joint education between.
doctors and nurses. Doctors ought to be required to
take an introductory nursing theory course, so that
they have some sense of the profession and what its
history and demands and needs are. It would help a
lot if they knew something about it other than what
they see on the hospital floor. There have to be real
linkages between women's studies programs and
nursing schools. There have to be real linkages be-
tween women's groups and organizations of con-
cerned consumers and groups of older people with
nursing. If you think about who gets sick, in the end.
it's older women who are in the hospital. There have
to be those kind of linkages. I don't think nursing can
do it alone. We all have something to gain. We all get
sick and die, every single bloody one of us, and at
some point, we're going to come in contact with
nursing.
Health / PAC: What about unionization?
Reverby: I think it helps. I don't think it's the only an-
swer. Bread and butter issues are important, but if the
unions don't bargain over control of the work process,
there are still a lot of problems. Because it isn't just
money that's the issue in nursing.
I think a way to go is to increasingly value the nurse
clinician and to reward people for increasing clinical
skills on the hospital floor. But it will also take giving
nurses at all levels more control over their workplace.
They need to have a say over pace, scheduling, and
what they're allowed to do.
Health / PAC: Can nurses continue to become more special-
ized and increase their knowledge and their technical skills
and still give good bedside care?
Reverby: That's always been the tension. Yes, I think
so. I think that it has to be thought through and it has
to be rewarded.
Health / PAC: What's your prognosis? Is the nursing short-
age going to change the status of the profession?
Reverby: It's actually quite a crucial time for nursing.
In the past, medicine has often pushed for an in-
creased division of labor, so that you get more practical
nurses, more aides, more technicians. And whether
nursing is going to be able to hold on to the need to
have more highly educated people, I don't know. The
latest AMA language about what they think will be the
solution sounds just like what Charles Mayo proposed
in 1921. What the AMA proposed is that we should
train more " subnurses, " in the term Mayo used. Back
to the hospital, technicians, people who come in and
all they do is give shots. People to give out meds, as if
there was nothing else involved except handing some-
body a bunch of pills to swallow. There has to be some
long, hard thinking between groups of consumers and
nursing leadership and medicine in the hospitals. It's
starting to go on, but it's not going on enough yet. And
that's why starting by changing some of the thinking
in the medical and health administration schools is
really crucial.
Otherwise, you'll see the hospital looking more and
more like a nursing home; that is, one or two highly
trained RNs at the top and then lots and lots and lots
of LPNs and aides running it. And I think we will all
suffer. It doesn't mean aides and LPNs don't often give
very good bedside care. But there's a special knowl-
edge that comes from a broader education that nurses
bring as well.
One of the other things we'll probably end up seeing
is a real two class -
system - a lot of very highly paid
technical people on one end and lots and lots of
temps, lots and lots of foreign nurses, and lots of
confusion in the hospital. And we all have a lot to lose
by it.
Nurses have to develop a
language about rights that
doesn't mean just what you
individually need but what
we collectively need.
Health / PAC: How would health care have to change before
nurses could be rewarded for caring?
Reverby: I think our society will have to really think
through what counts as caring. We need more studies
on how caring and good nursing care really change
things that could show how patient recovery is better.
But it's going to be a long, difficult, political struggle.
It isn't now, nor has it ever been, merely a question of
not knowing how to do it. It's about having the politi-
cal clout to make change.
Health / PAC: Can the highly skilled RNs, the " profession-
als, " can they make alliances with the aides, the temps, the
foreign nurses?
Reverby: I think they've got to learn that if they
don't they won't survive. That seems to be what the
history teaches. *
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
23
People Power vs. the Almighty Dollar
How Democratic Managment Can Help Transform the HMO's
HARRY KRULEWITCH
have spent over ten years working as a physician in
J
democratically managed health care clinics in the
Midwest and on the West Coast, and two years
working for a large HMO in Minneapolis; in short, I
have been exposed to the extremes of health care
delivery available in this country.
My experiences in Minnesota have shown me that
HMO's have little to do with health, are not interested
in illness prevention and health maintenance, and are
poorly organized. Their goal is to maximize enroll-
ment and invest profits. I have seen HMO's systemati-
cally cut back on health education because it is not
immediately profitable, sabotage independent com-
munity programs, and avoid any position on critical
health care conflicts within the community. I have
seen them refuse to either reduce premiums or pay bo-
nuses to physicians at the end of fiscal years in which
they reported handsome surpluses.
Many people consider Minneapolis to be the center
of the HMO movement. Indeed, our ten HMO's con-
trol 41 percent of the health care market in the Twin
Cities. Physicians in private practice can also partici-
pate in so called -
preferred provider organizations
(PPO's), in which physicians provide services for
reduced fees in return for a steady source of patients.
Private physicians in the area depend on referrals from
HMO's and PPO's for 60 percent of their practice.
Ninety - five percent of all Twin City physicians belong
to at least one of these organizations.
It's hard to convey the full impact of this system on
our community. Every day our newspapers and televi-
sion and radio stations deliver a barrage of advertising
for HMO's. For profit -
hospital systems compete
throughout the metropolitan region, and all but one
hospital has merged or been sold to one of these na-
tional chains. Rural hospitals are closing.
The impact on physicians would have been unim-
aginable ten years ago. The physician who contracts
with an HMO, PPO, or independent practice associa-
tion (IPA) agrees to let the organization temporarily
withhold a portion of his or her fees. Holdbacks for
primary care are typically from 10 to 20 percent;
specialists must tolerate holdbacks of between 40 and
Harry Krulewitch, a family physician, worked in participa-
tory health centers from 1969 to 1982. He is currently a fellow
in the University of Minnesota's Department of Family
Practice and Community Health.
50 percent. Theoretically, most or all of this money is
returned to providers at the end of the year, but if the
company did poorly, much of it can vanish with the
year - end accounting reports from the central HMO of-
fice. In 1986, 40 percent of physicians in the Twin Cities
saw their income decline at least 10 percent in this way.
Some saw their income cut in half.3
In the Belly of the Beast
How has the HMO system affected me personally?
I worked for two years for an HMO organized around
a staff model, where physicians are employees. Dur-
ing that time I was often told to do my work and go
home and not ask questions about management. I saw
physicians presented with 10 to 25 percent salary cuts
and was then told that such contract violations con-
stituted an incentive program. During a fiscal quarter
when the HMO was running at a deficit, I saw an en-
tire department of nurse practitioners laid off without
warning on the day before they were to begin a
citywide prevention program, essentially because
they were the least organized group of providers. I was
told my own pay raise would be withheld because I
had organized a meeting of nurses, physicians, and
clerical workers to discuss morale. The meeting, I was
told, was critical of management and circumvented
the standard channels of communication.
There was little flexibility or innovation where I
worked, and little understanding of how to run a good
clinic or build a health team. Despite a huge number
of managers, morale was low and staff turnover high.
Physicians felt captive. They had traded control over
office and practice for benefits, repayment of their
medical school loans, time off, and a secure income.
When management began to consider laying off work-
ers and cutting salaries, physicians were unable to or-
ganize themselves or confront management directly.
Physicians are recognizing that a transformation is
underway. As cost containment fails, premiums rise,
and income drops, it becomes apparent that the cor-
porate system is generating huge profits at the expense
of both the patient and provider. Some physicians are
organizing challenges to the IPA's to question the legal-
ity of their management structure and obtain access to
their books. Some are investigating the possibility of
unionizing. Others are trying to lobby the legislature
to pass laws that would enable physicians to engage in
collective bargaining without violating antitrust laws.
24
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
Many are merging their practices so that solo and
small groups are disappearing. Some doctors are
dropping out, bitter and frustrated.
No one can say for certain whether for profit -
corpo-
rations will succeeed in taking control of our health
care. What's already clear, though, is that the struggle
between providers and corporations is transforming a
cottage industry into a corporate system. We can de-
bate the quality of care that's resulting, but HMO's are
clearly much more effective at managing money and
generating profits than the old provider system, and
any health planner who does not appreciate this trans-
formation is making a big mistake.
In this struggle over who should control our health
care system, only two alternatives are ever presented:
providers or corporations. 415167 But there is a third
choice, although no significant policy currently being
put into practice gives any legitimacy to it. The public
is capable of and has the right to own and manage its
own health care resources, and it is this alternative
that we must fight for.
Health and Empowerment
It was my experience, in 11 years of work in par-
ticipatory systems, that democratic ownership and
participation can encourage community members to
make fundamentally different choices about the use of
their health care resources. I have seen democratic
groups use resources for education, prevention serv-
ices, home care, and community economic develop-
ment, to establish neighborhood councils, and even to
support a local nursing strike. The combination of per-
sonal self care -, community self reliance -
, and worker
self determination -
can turn a health clinic into an
agent for social change.
The goal of HMO's is to
maximize enrollment and
invest profits.
Democratic ownership is a complex issue, and dear
to me personally. Despite its failures and problems,
democratic management was the structure that most
helped me to change my idea about what good care is
and how a management system determines the quality
of care. Collective work helped me to develop skills in
communicating, sharing, listening, and cooperating. I
learned to respect the contributions of others, and I
could then apply those skills when working with pa-
tients. I continue to provide traditional clinical skills
and diagnoses, but by using even a few learning skills
and promoting a few prevention concepts, I can begin
to change my role as a physician. I find the transition
from authority to facilitator personally rewarding.
In the late 1970's I worked in a community - owned,
worker managed -
clinic in Oregon, which delivered in-
tegrated, holistic care. There, rather than making
decisions for patients and controlling the course of
their visits, the staff spent time educating them. By
validating their concerns, exploring what physical,
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
25
nutritional, socioeconomic, and emotional factors
were involved in their illnesses, and which of these
they could be responsible for, we attempted to em-
power them. We helped patients use cooperative
skills respect, communication - in interacting with
their families, teaching them the power of those skills
to affect their health and, ultimately, their community.
In this way family medicine can be a model for larger
social change.
Prevention services and self care - advocacy were im-
portant allies in this process: we supplemented our
care with an outreach program to local communities
and business. We formed a Health Action Council to
bring health issues to the attention of local govern-
ment. We trained block workers in leadership and self-
care, devising procedures through which these work-
ers could represent their communities in raising issues
with the clinic's board.
Surviving the Lean Years
Of course, the maintainance of our democratically
controlled clinic took an incredible amount of energy
from its members. As the clinic grew more successful,
democratic management became more and more diffi-
cult. When professionals were brought in to provide
some business skills, conflicts arose between them
and the original members, from whom they had very
different values and perceptions of the role of manage-
ment. Had we been able to orient the newcomers to
our style of democratic management, we might have
been able to work things out. Instead, the conflicts,
coupled with cuts in funding, led to the clinic's even-
tual decline.
Democratic health systems
need to be nurtured
through unions, citizens '
groups, and legislation.
I see now that any democratic group that wishes to
survive needs to commit itself to ongoing analysis of
economic and political conditions. I have seen other
democratically managed systems dissolve under the
complexity of today's sophisticated health care deliv-
ery system, unable to make fiscal projections or coor-
dinate complex billing reimbursements. The inability
to accept clear lines of authority and establish effective
business plans has destroyed them. But more than the
lack of skilled fiscal and technical managers, the inabil-
ity of people to cooperate and work for each other be-
came insurmountable during difficult financial times.
The bottom line for the health planner, and particu-
larly one who supports democratic control, is: Will the
care be better in a democratic system? When the pa-
tient goes out the door of a clinic in our democratic
health system, will she or he have had better medical
care?
Redefining the Doctor's Role
The physician has a crucial role in answering these
questions. At the heart of the medical system is the in-
teraction between two people: patient and provider.
The quality of that interaction is how we will measure
that system; beyond any bureaucratic reorganization
or national policy, it is in that setting that our efforts
will be judged. That interaction, in workplace and in
examining room, can be the place where we begin to
create a new model of health care. Will it be oppressive
or liberating? Insensitive or compassionate?
Some doctors are dropping
out, bitter and frustrated.
Today, the doctor patient -
relationship is forged in
our medical schools and residency centers, where the
training is highly structured and extremely rigid. Doc-
tors train in multimillion dollar institutions amidst
great poverty and suffering. The work is hard, often
violent, chaotic, depressing, and frustrating. The glar-
ing contradictions involved force many physicians to
set their own survival above anything else. Distrust,
isolation, cynicism, and arrogance are rampant. The
authority physicians are taught to assume helps them
remain insulated from their surroundings during
these difficult years, but leaves them incapable of
working in a cooperative setting. Physicians trained in
such traditional systems are not likely to be interested
in sharing control with patients. Where trust, intu-
ition, communication, and caring are not valued, phy-
sicians are unlikely to empower others through their
efforts to heal.
Democratic systems create new problems. The phy-
sician's is not a rotating position that is easily shared.
Patients expect and need continuity of service. Yet
physicians in democratic management systems face
hostility from their professional peers and animosity
from their own co workers -
still dealing with repressed
anger from previous encounters. The challenge is to
build a system that can allow physicians to retain their
proper sphere of responsibility without leaving them
or others in the system unaccountable.
Change from Within
There are great obstacles to building any system of
democratic ownership or management. These include
the powerful, who will fight for the perpetuation of
their privilege and profits; the complexity of the
system itself, with its numerous reimbursement,
therapeutic, and management modalities; and the
communities that feel threatened when cultural stan-
dards are questioned by democratic initiatives and
26
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
Phyllis Helland
consequently will not give their support to them. Most
of all, though, the obstacles lie within us, because we
have little skill in nurturing or cooperating with and
trusting each other.
But as public dissatisfaction with corporate medi-
cine grows, as physician - patient interaction is reduced
to a product - and - sales approach, patients will realize
that their physicians have also lost control. There will
be more opportunity for change. That change could be
democratically driven, or it might come through mas-
sive federal reform, or worse, through support for
greater subsidy of the privatization of the industry.
I do not know how we will get to a democratic sys-
tem. But there is a lesson to be learned from dance
therapy: support precedes movement. Democratic
strategies need to be nurtured at many different levels,
and in many regions, through citizens'groups,
unions, coalitions, networks, and legislation. We need
health providers, health planners, managers, and ad-
ministrators who have studied and worked in well-
organized research centers dedicated to studying the
issue of democratic control. University and graduate
schools need to develop programs around such a cur-
riculum, and we need working models to challenge
our imagination.
Physicians need to justify their leadership by
promoting alliances with their patients and the com-
munities they serve, not by fighting for a return to the
days of provider control, and not by accepting cor-
porate control as the only other option. The kinds of
physicians who will do that are most likely to come
from those communities that have encouraged demo-
cratic programs to grow. If democratic health systems
are to evolve, they will emerge from personal, local,
and regional efforts that give credibility to the idea of
public ownership of resources. *
1. Miller, M. " Minnesota Health Care Markets: Cost Containment
and Other Public Policy Goals, " 1984 Report to Legislature, Minnesota
Department of Health. Reported in the Minneapolis Star and Tribune,
11/28/84, Section IB.
2. Reece Report, Vol. 1, No. 3, June / July 1986, p. 11.
3. Ibid., Vol. 1, No. 2, May 1986, p. 6.
4. Murray, J. " A Comparison of Patient Satisfaction Among Prepaid
and Fee for Service Patients, " The Journal of Family Practice, February
1987, p. 203.
5. Kennedy, L. " The Losses in Profits How Proprietaries Affect
Public and Voluntary Hospitals, " Health / PAC Bulletin, Vol. 15,
No. 6, Nov./Dec. 1984, p. 5.
6. " Medical Discord: Some Doctors Assail Quality of Treatment
Provided by HMO's, " The Wall Street Journal, Vol. 67, No. 235,
9/10/86, p. 1.
7. " Doctors Will Review HMO's Effect on Care. " Minnesota Medical
Association Annual Report, 1986. Reported in the Minneapolis Star
and Tribune, 5/3/86, Section IB.
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
27
South Africa's Reign of Terror
MERVYN SUSSER
TM TM Since 1982 South African destabilization
* * k had an increasingly devastating effect
TM on the health of the Mozambican people.
The displacement of millions of people and
the deliberate destruction of health facilities
has caused immeasurable suffering and the loss of
hundreds of thousands of lives, mostly of children.
... By Dec. 1987 an estimated 4,500,000 people of the
total population of 14,000,000 were in need of urgent
food aid owing to the combined effects of war,
displacement and natural disasters. The primary
health care system built up so successfully over the
years since independence was under attack. "
heroic job of creating primary care in the Crossroads
shantytown outside Capetown, before the authorities
bulldozed it - was given a 21 month -
prison sentence for
refusing to serve in the armed forces. Of course, the
armed forces are now the agents of internal as well as
external oppression.
At Baragwanath Hospital, the largest hospital for
blacks in the country, 101 doctors who protested on be-
ANC lawyer Albie Sachs following bomb attack by
South African agents.
hese words by A.R. Noormahomed and Julie
T
Cliff introduced a detailed 1987 report from the
Mozambican Ministry of Health on the des-
truction wrought in Mozambique by the
forces of Renamo, an organization renounced even by
the Reagan administration. Renamo is a South African
cats paw -, one aspect of a program to create a military
firebreak at the borders. Perhaps more important, the
program aims to destroy any model of social and politi-
cal development that might inspire or build confidence
in black South Africans.
Health and social services personnel are a primary tar-
get, in a manner learned, directly or indirectly, from the
CIA in Central America. Under the program, South Afri-
can proxies lead " civil wars " in the region, making use
of assassination - witness the killing of the ANC's
Dulcie September in Paris; the killing of others in
Lesotho, Botswana, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Zambia, An-
gola, and London; and the near death, by car bombing -
,
of ANC attorney Albie Sachs in Mozambique.
External terror is the twin of internal desperation. The
country is on the rack; repression is tightening. South
Africa has by now assured its leading place as the most
severe censor in the world of news and information.
Naturally, all this is reflected in health and social affairs.
For example, last March, Ivan Toms - known for his
Visuals
/ Impact
Bueche
Mervyn Susser is Sergievsky Professor of Epidemiology at"
Columbia University and Director of its Gertrude H. Sergievsky
Alfredo
Center. He is a co founder -
of the Committee for Health in
Southern Africa.
28
Visuals
Impact /
Afrapix
/ Tilim
Guy
An armed policeman arrests a student during an
anti apartheid -
protest at the University of Cape Town.
half of their patients were reprimanded and required to
apologize on pain of dismissal. " Facilities are complete-
ly inadequate. Many patients have no beds and sleep
on the floor at night and sit on chairs during the day, '
physicians wrote in the March 1988 newsletter of the ,a-
tional Medical and Dental Association. " The overcrowd-
ing is horrendous, " they continued. " Ethical standards
are undoubtedly compromised. "
As social and political conditions deteriorate under
repression, no relief is to be expected for the deplorable
health conditions. The South African Department of Na-
tional Health and Population itself reported that in 1987
more than one third -
of rural black children under the
age of 5 were malnourished (1.8 percent wasted, 25.4 per-
cent stunted, 8.4 percent low in weight for their age).
Yet we should take heart. Despite all, the struggle for
a post apartheid -
state continues.
Readers of the Bulletin should be reminded that their
protests are heard and responded to by both the oppres-
sors and the oppressed. Evidently the authorities were
reluctant to bring Ivan Toms to trial because he was
known abroad. And the 40 or more doctors at Barag-
wanath Hospital who did not apologize have not been
dismissed; the issue is apparently being papered over.
After a firestorm of outrage abroad, the proportion of
children under 18 who are among those detained without
trial has declined. Children accounted for approximate-
ly 40 percent of an estimated 10,000 people who were
held after the emergency was declared in June of 1986;
according to the New York Times, children now account
for about 10 percent of the 3,000 people still in deten-
tion. In the intensely protested matter of the Sharpe-
ville Six, who were sentenced to death for guilt by as-
sociation in the killing of a suspected collaborator, the
judge uncharacteristically stayed the execution. All of
these developments owe much to international protest.
But we must not let up. Besides the manifest inequities
in health, torture by the security police, already well
documented, continues.
The South African government - still not put at arm's
length by the Reagan administratio- n
has much to
hide. It should come as no surprise that the members
of a delegation to South Africa sponsored by the Asso-
cation for the Advancement of Science, the Institute of
Medicine, the American Psychiatric Association, and the
American Public Health Association were denied visas
on the day they had proposed to leave. The group had
intended to examine the effect of the law and the emer-
gency on health services for the population, including
those in detention. For the regime in Pretoria, the mes-
sage to a concerned world continues to be that the malig-
nity beneath the stones is not to be revealed.D
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
29
Choice Pro - for Teens
Endangered
Is " family communication " pro-
moted when a young woman must
obtain the legal consent of her par-
ents if she wants an abortion? This
is the asserted goal of parental con-
sent or notification laws, which exist
in various forms in 25 states and re-
strict access to abortion for women
under the age of 18.
This summer, a federal appeals
court upheld a Minnesota law re-
quiring women under 18 to obtain
parental or judicial consent before
having an abortion. A similar law
was struck down in Ohio.
Though such laws are considered
constitutional only if they include a
judicial bypass (an alternative and
intimidating procedure in which
minors must go to court to circum-
vent their parents'veto), they not
only invade the woman's privacy,
but they increase the risks to her
health by complicating, lengthen-
ing, and slowing down the process
of getting an abortion.
Proponents of these laws overlook
the mental health implications of
compelling teens to secure parental
consent or making it all but impos-
sible for young women to end un-
wanted pregnancies. The push for
consent laws is taking ^ place against
a national background in which one
out of nine pregnant women under
age 20 receives little or no prenatal
care, thus decreasing the chances of
the baby's surviving its first year
of life.
As one might expect, the laws are
frustrating but otherwise failing to
deter teenagers from seeking abor-
tions. Many teens face the added
burden of crossing state lines to get
abortions, points out Asta Kenney,
a policy analyst at the Guttmacher
Institute in Washington. According
to Randy Frank, Director of Devel-
opment at the National Abortion
Rights Action League in New York,
parental consent laws are meant " to
intimidate teenagers and clog up the
court system. "
The presidential election has fo-
l
cused attention on a flurry of activ-
ity concerning abortion rights. The
l right wing has exhumed another re-
| ^ lated " family " issue: spousal con-
sent. Ruled unconstitutional and
put to rest 12 years ago, it has now
risen from the ashes. In a Bush-
ruled America, a husband might go
to court to seek custody of the un-
born fetus of a wife who desires an
abortion.
Is spousal consent merely another
attention grabbing -
variation on an
old theme, or do we have good rea-
son to worry? Though Randy Frank
of NARAL dismisses spousal consent
as a " hot media issue, a ridiculous
talk show -
issue, " she recognizes the
precariousness of the situation.
" We're afraid to bring these issues
to the Supreme Court, " Frank says.
While newly appointed Justice
Anthony Kennedy has yet to rule on
abortion, he has upheld a law that
gave money to religious groups to
advise young girls against it. The
four justices who have been pro-
choice in the past are all about to
retire or die, and a Republican vic-
tory in the fall could further alter the
balance. *
-Anna Reisman
Good News At Last
from the NLRB
A proposed ruling by the National
Labor Relations Board on appropri-
ate bargaining units for health care
workers has the potential for revi-
talizing union organizing efforts that
have become bogged down in the la-
bor board's bureaucracy.
Until now, the board has had no
fixed policy on which groups had to
be included when health care work-
ers attempted to unionize. Instead,
the board decided the issue for each
organizing drive on a case case - by -
basis. For example, nurses'aides
who wanted to join a union would
not know ahead of time whether
they might also be required to or-
ganize and bargain for all the LPN's
and dietary technicians in their
hospital, or perhaps would have to
add the maintenance and clerical
workers to their bargaining unit.
Obviously, the necessity of signing
up such large and disparate groups
of workers, along with the inability
of organizers to plan their cam-
paigns in advance, put a damper on
unionizing efforts. (See " Foxes in the
Henhouse, " Health / PAC Bulletin, Vol.
18, No. 2.)
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
The current version of the pro-
posed rules, expected to be promul-
gated sometime this fall, sets up
eight different categories of bargain-
ing units, with separate units for
registered nurses, physicians, and
all other professional employees, as
well as for technical employees,
skilled maintenance workers, busi-
ness office clericals, guards, and
other nonprofessional employees.
Once approved, the rules will apply
to all pending cases, although unions
may still petition for combined units.
Labor leaders anticipate that many
new organizing opportunities will
open up - as a result of this decision.
What led the board to open the is-
sue of bargaining units for rule-
making? Embarrassment, says Gerry
Shea, head of the Health Care Divi-
sion of the Service Employees Inter-
national Union. " Even the Reagan
appointees on the board became
acutely embarrassed about the in-
ability of the board to operate with
any continuity, " he explained.
The new rules represent an enor-
mous victory for health care workers
following years of litigation over
each organizing attempt, according
to Bob Muehlenkamp, director of
organizing for the National Hospi-
tal Union / 1199. " The facts were on
our side. This decision fits the work-
ers'conditions, " he said. " How
strong our case must have been for
the Reagan dominated -
board to
hand us the whole decision! " *
-Ellen Bilofsky
uates with 2 to 18 months of train-
ing, would be hired to perform such
duties as taking temperatures,
changing bed pans, and administer-
ing some medications under super-
vision.
Unlike nurses aides and licensed
practical nurses, who currently per-
form these tasks under the supervi-
sion of registered nurses, the RCT's
would be registered and certified by
the state medical boards. " This
profession is not going to tolerate
not having people at the bedsides to
take care of their patients, " said
AMA Executive Vice President -
Dr.
James H. Sammons.
The plan follows the long medical
tradition of attempting to divide and
conquer the hospital work force.
" Adding a new kind of worker
would be costly and further frag-
ment health care delivery, " said an
ANA spokesperson. The ANA and
other nursing organizations argue
that higher pay and improved
working conditions, including relief
from administrative tasks, are the
best way to alleviate the nursing
shortage.
-Tammy Pittman
The RCTFlap: Nurses
Fight AMA
A recent membership - approved
proposal by the American Medical
Association once again pits nurses
against doctors in a power struggle
over patient care. The ostensible is-
sue is how to fill the nation's 300,000
vacant nursing slots. The AMA pro-
posal calls for legions of MD super- -
vised " technologists " to provide
routine bedside care. The American
Nurses'Association has charged
that the proposal shows " an appall-
ing lack of concern for consumer
safety. "
Heland
Phyl is
Minimally trained " registered care
technologists, " high school grad-
Fall 1988
eG
tS ue aes. Ee a,
Sant
Health / PAC Bulletin
Watching
Washington
Recycling:
A Sane Approach
To Garbage
Barbara Berney
fi
he trouble with garbage
is that you can't get rid
T
of it. In its unsorted
form, nobody wants it.
You can bury it in land-
fills, but sooner or later it leaks out
and poisons the water. You can burn
it, but that releases emissions and
leaves a residue of ash. Some of
those emissions poison the air; the
ash can be buried, but sooner or later
it leaks out and poisons the water.
Garbage, like other matter, cannot be
destroyed, only transformed. We can
either purposefully recycle it into
useful products, or bury it now and
be forced to deal with it later when
its toxic components find their way
into the water, air, or soil.
For the last two decades, Ameri-
cans have dealt with their garbage
mostly by burying it. Now all our
landfills are either filling up or have
turned into Superfund sites. (Under
the Superfund legislation, the EPA
is required to identify hazardous
waste sites and clean them up.) Dur-
ing the next seven years, 50 percent
of these will be forced to close. Al-
ready, in the Northeast and other
parts of the country, no new sites are
available. In many places where
potential sites exist, the NIMBY
phenomenon _ " not in my back-
yard " - precludes their use. After
all, we pay taxes or private hauling
fees to get our own garbage out of
our backyards. We certainly don't
want other people's brought in.
So municipalities are turning to the
burning option _ in
cineration. In-
cinerators appeal to local govern-
Heland
Phylis
ment as the obvious high - tech, low-
change solution. With incinerators,
garbage trucks still haul the same
trash to the same site; the only differ-
ence is where they put it when they
get there.
Despite their high cost and capital
requirements, incinerators are ap-
pealing to cities because much of
their cost is hidden from casual in-
spection and comes from sources
other than the local budget. Their
construction is often financed with
tax exempt -
bonds, transferring costs
to the federal taxpayer. People who
pay electricity bills pick up part of the
price tag when their utility purchases
the energy an incinerator generates,
sometimes at inflated prices. Some
costs are covered by the hikes in
garbage - hauling fees that inevitably
occur if everytiking doesn't go as
promised - and with incinerators, it
generally doesn't. Costs end up be-
ing higher than expected, energy
production lower. Plants get shut
down for expensive repairs while
garbage must be handled elsewhere.
A trash steam - to -
plant in Tuscaloo-
sa, Ala., which opened in 1984, lost
$ 3 million in its first three years of
operation. A plant in Tampa, Fla.,
lost $ 6 million in 1986.
Incinerators come in a variety of
sizes and models. Most are now
designed to produce energy - either
as heat or as electricit- y
and so are
called " resource recovery opera-
tions. " All have two things in com-
mon: they all spew toxins into the air
(called " fly ash ") and they all gener-
ate waste residue that must be di-
sposed of (bottom "
ash "). The poi-
sons include dioxins, of Agent
Orange and Love Canal fame; lead,
cadmium, and other heavy metals;
acid gases; particulates; carbon
monoxide; and PCB's.
Exactly what and how much is
emitted by a given incinerator de-
pends on the content and tempera-
ture of the burning garbage and on
the devices the plant uses to control
air pollution. Some, such as the one
opened recently in Alexandria, Va.,
have virtually none. There are, in
fact, no federal regulations requiring
the use of pollution - control equip-
ment by incinerators, nor are most
of the toxins that incinerators
produce regulated under the Clean
Air Act.
32
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
Even if incinerators were required
to install scrubbers and other devices
to trap fly ash instead of releasing it
into the air, the problem of dispos-
ing of it would remain. Ry ash is
quite toxic; whenever it's been test-
ed, in fact, it has qualified as a
hazardous waste. The EPA has
nevertheless determined that it can
be mixed with bottom ash and safe-
ly disposed of as municipal waste -
sent back to the dump, in other
words, to start life as garbage again.
You Can Go Home Again
So if it's no good to bury garbage
or burn it, what else can we do?
Produce less of it (that's called
" source reduction ") and reuse it
(recycling "")
. First of all, let's look
at what's in garbage. The composi-
tion of a representative sample of
American trash is as follows: paper
and paperboard, 37 percent; yard
waste, 18 percent; glass, 10 percent;
metals, 10 percent; food waste, 8
percent; plastics, 7 percent; other
components, 10 percent.
Much of this material is easily reco-
vered. Glass can be ground up,
shipped back to glassmakers, and re-
used. Aluminum and steel can be
melted down and reused. Newsprint
and corrugated cardboard can be
made back into pulp and reused.
Clean white office paper can also be
pulped and made into paper again.
Yard wastes can be composted and
used as fertilizer or mulch. That takes
care of 60 percent of the waste, and
it's the easy stuff to recycle. Pro-
grams already implemented in a
number of cities have netted a 15 to
35 percent reduction in waste.
Not only does recycling reduce the
amount of waste that must be dis-
carded, it saves a great deal of ener-
gy - more than that produced by in-
cinerators. Using recycled materials
for paper production, for example,
consumes 60 percent less energy
than using virgin materials; the sav-
ings in glass production is 25 per-
cent. Burning a pound of paper
generates 500 BTU's of steam;
recyling it saves 2,000 BTU's.
Methods are being rapidly deve-
loped for recycling plastics as well.
The best solution, though, would be
to ban most plastic packaging, the
volume of which increased 40 per-
cent from 1980 to 1985. We once
managed with paper grocery bags,
and Europeans use string bags. We
were able to get milk home before
the invention of the plastic jug.
Many localities have already re-
stricted the use of plastic containers.
Packaging in all its forms
represents 35 to 50 percent of the
waste we produce and its volume
has increased 80 percent since 1960;
it is an excellent candidate for source
reduction. Perhaps if everyone left
excess packaging on the checkout
counter, retailers and manufacturers
would get the idea. Removing plas-
tics and metals from incinerated gar-
bage also cuts emissions of toxic or-
ganic compounds and heavy metals.
Lawn wastes, which compose up
to 30 percent of the waste in large ci-
ties during fall and spring, could be
shredded in place and given back to
homeowners for use as compost or
mulch. Imagine a city saving money
for itself and its citizens at the same
time.
Some countries in Africa -
Mozambique, for example - suffer
from severe paper shortages.
Perhaps the Agency for Internation-
al Development could provide pul-
pers, machines that turn paper back
into pulp and then into paper again,
through a sister - city, or even sister-
school, program, while offices could
provide the necessary raw material
- used white paper and corrugated
cardboard. Wastepaper is already
New York's leading export by
volume. Perhaps our garbage can
help cut the trade gap.
While some incinerators work
hand in hand with recycling, most
require a guaranteed flow of garbage
to be cost efficient -
and so preclude
such reuse. Some also need plastics
and paper in order to burn hot
enough to operate properly. If the
United States actually constructs the
more than 200 incinerators planned
for the next four years, we will have
lost an important opportunity to
make recycling and source reduction
a major part of the solution to the
current garbage crisis. Many years
may go by, and much air and water
may get poisoned, before such a
chance presents itself again.
City officials tend to worry that
recycling, which requires some par-
ticipation from everyone, would be
difficult to carry out, anger voters,
and provoke opposition - in short,
that it would prove a logistical and
political nightmare. Grassroots action
now can force them to recalculate
this algebra of waste. The current cri-
sis represents an important opportu-
nity for immediate and long term -
public education about the impact of
decisions about production on our
life, our health, and our communi-
ty. It also provides the chance to
raise our awareness of the conse-
quences of our choices about what
we comsume and how we dispose
of the by products -
of our consump-
tion.D
Barbara Berney is a consultant on health
care and occupational health in Washing-
ton, D.C.
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
33
Peer Review
provide for adequate health
care for American Indians
should be taken just as seri-
ously as that of paying in-
terest on Treasury bills. To
do otherwise is as irrespon-
sible as it is immoral.
JOSEPH LURIO, MD
Bronx, NY
Poor Funding for
Indian Health
It was with great interest
that I read the article by
Joshua Lipsman on the con-
tinuing crisis at the Pine
Ridge reservation (Vol. 18,
No. 2). My experience from
1983 to 1986 as a family
practitioner on the Gila
River Indian Reservation
(one year as clinical direc-
tor) confirms the frustra-
tions that Dr. Lipsman has
documented. Although the
problems that I encoun-
tered were not quite as
severe, I also had to deal
with an aging facility (con-
structed in 1941 with addi-
tions made with trailers)
and a very ill, constantly
growing indigent popula-
tion. We were also severely
understaffed and actually
experienced the loss of our
full time - diabetologist while
I was there (in a community
where type II diabetes af-
fects 50 percent of the peo-
ple over 30). In spite of all
this, I counted myself lucky
to have not been stationed
in the Aberdeen Area,
where conditions were so
poor that the IHS had diffi-
culty retaining physicians
even for one year -
tours of
duty. At a national confer-
ence of clinical directors, I
heard stories even worse
than those related by Dr.
Lipsman.
In 1986, an effort was
made by the IHS to address
the serious deficiencies in
funding and staffing, but
after a few years this effort
appears to have run out of
steam. The new facility that
Dr. Lipsman is waiting to
see constructed has been
repeatedly sidelined. I fear
that it may happen again if
funding is not assured prior
to the next election.
The problems that Pine
Ridge has been experienc-
ing are part and parcel of
what the entire Aberdeen
Area of the IHS has had to
deal with over the past 20
years. This is to be con-
trasted with the relatively
well funded - operations in
the newer hospitals in the
Albuquerque, Phoenix,
Navajo, and Alaska Areas.
The innovative programs of
Zuni mentioned in Bill
Deresiewicz's article are
only possible because the
basic medical needs (emer-
gency and acute care) of the
The editors welcome letters from
readers. Letters should be typewritten
and double spaced -
, and are subject to
editing for clarity and space.
community are being met
in a new, well staffed -
and
well funded - hospital. That
such inequities should oc-
cur within the IHS is a
result of confused and irra-
tional funding and priori-
ties as set by Congress.
Funding for various re-
gions of the IHS has been
traditionally directed ac-
cording to the political clout
of a region's congress-
men women /
rather than ac-
cording to any rational
needs assessment. Some
way must be found to in-
sure the federal govern-
ment's adequate funding of
the IHS and to distribute it
according to need. If Con-
gress fulfilled its obligations
to Wall Street the way it
does those to Native Ameri-
cans, the U.S. would have
become bankrupt long ago.
Our financial obligation to
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34
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
We congratulate the Home Health Care workers who fought
so hard for our contract victory.
w. thank all our friends who aided the struggle.
w extend solidarity to Home Health Care Workers fighting
for Union recognition.
And we Pledge to continue the struggle until full
JUSTICE IS WON
wi cam, wi COUNT.
DCfTOT
Bettye Roberts
President
Odessa Powell
President, Home Care Local 389
Robert McEnroe
Executive Director
District Council 1707, AFSCME, AFLCIO
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
35
ES B ^ ^ B Drug, Hospital & Health
Q
IjSI v fl% m care Employees'Union
HUHRWDSU HUHRWDSU HUHRWDSU HUHRWDSU / AFL - CIO
IN UNITY &
SOLIDARITY
with
Home Care Woricers
Everywhere
195
HOME
EMP
36
Health / PAC Bulletin
Fall 1988
< r
SS =
A
IN SOLIDARITY
THE COMMITTEE OF
INTERNS AND RESIDENTS
OF NEW YORK, NEW JERSEY AND
WASHINGTON, D.G
Founded 1957
ROBERT SCHWARTZ, M.D.
President
ROBERT BOORSTEIN, M.D.
First Vice President -
ERIC LARSEN, M.D.
Second Vice President -
MARTHA MASO, M.D.
Officer - at - Large
JONATHAN HOUSE, M.D.
Executive Director
SHELLY FALIK, M.D.
Secretory - Treasury
DAVID KERRISON, M.D.
Third Vice President -
JOSEPH SACHTER, M.D.
Officer - at - Large
V
Fall 1988
CIR
386 PARK AVENUE SOUTH
NEW YORK, NY 10016
UNION OFFICE: 725-5500
Health / PAC Bulletin
<
37
Once again, HEALTH / PAC focuses attention on an
issue of vital importance to all who care and struggle
for appropriate health services for anyone and everyone
in need.
We salute you.
DISTRICT COUNCIL 37, AFSCME, AFL - CIO
Frank Morelli, President Arthur Tibaldi, Treasurer
Elaine Espeut, Secretary Stanley Hill, Executive Director
Martin Lubin, Associate Director
Donald Afflick
James Butler
Albert Diop
Andrew Holman
Bessie Jamison
Eliot Reif
Shiekie Snyder
Executive Board:
Louis G. Albano
James Carosella
Charles Ensley
Charles Hughes
Ruth Levine
Robert Schmidt
Jessica Williams
Francine Autovino
Tom DiNardo
Victor Guadalupe
Sylvia Hutchins
Vincent Parisi
Edward Simon
Reginald Wing
ARE
EES
87
-87
JOBS
WITH
ISTICE
GIVE
HOME WORKERS CARF MU
HEALTH
HOME CARE
BENEFITS
NOW!
EMPLOYEES
Locul
1. Alicante b
S
'
07
37.
SOME
SAYS
JOBS
WITH
JUSTICE
SAYS
ARE
EES
Cole
George
38
Health / PAC Bulletin
T
Fall 1988
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DARING TO CARE
The Wage for Talk in Surb Am Am
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JAITH - PAC BIJLLEIjfJ
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m 16, # 6
Women's Health Issues
Baby Doe debate
Assessing the prejudice
against mid - life
childbearing
The cervical cap: test
case for U.S.
regulatory policies
Vol. 17, m
How Prospective Payment
is transforming
hospital care (Part 1
of 3 on PPS)
Health care under fire:
interview with Dr.
Myrna Cunningham of
Nicaragua
Public health roulette
in Nevada
Vol. 17, 02
How the Reagan
administration failed
on AIDS
Quality - of - care
problems under
Prospective Payment
(Part 2 of 3 on PPS)
The crack scare
Vol. 17, # 3
" Health care is sick in
St. Louis ": the
privatization of a
city's system
Professional Review
Organizations and
Prospective Payment
Massachusetts '
successful referendum
on national health
Vol. 17, 06
The fight over
MASSCARE
Labor's safety and
health movement
Anatomy of a
national health
program
Anti quackery -
legislation
Fall 1988
Health / PAC Bulletin
39
AINT
SVINGER
GONNA TAKE Where is is
NO MORE
NURSES
UNITED
FOR FAIR
SCHEDULING
B
PRACTICES
J
Y
1199
5 '
Inside: Transforming the HMO's page 24
Nursing's dilemma: Review of'Ordered to Card page 15
Interview with Susan Reverby on nursing page 20
Health Policy Advisory Center
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New York, New York 10007
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