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Sep 13
2009
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Doctors for Healthcare ReformPosted by Bruce Robinson in Santa Rosa , poverty , politics , medicine , legislation , healthcare , Health , government , events , economy , activism |
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Another voice in support of public healthcare reform is coming from family practice residents in Santa Rosa.
America's current health care system is deeply flawed in its capacity to deliver care to the patients who need it, says Dr. Rachel Friedman (left), which is the fundamental reason she is advocating for systemic reforms.
Those inequities in care, which are driven by disparities in health insurance coverage, tend to give doctors a narrower range of patients to work with, observes Dr. Veronica Jordan (right), while her ideal would be to see a more fully representative spectrum of people in her daily practrice.
The activism that Drs. Friedman and Jordan are engaged in is not unusual, Friedman adds. Most of their residency classmates have joined in, and they have many counterparts across the country.

Employees at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital are one step closer to a union representation vote, something that could come within a matter of a few weeks.
Steve Sidawi, a volunteer organizer with the National Union of Healthcare Workers, traces the history of the unionization effort at Memorial Hospital.
Public support for a government-run “public option” health care plan is growing, says 

Local activists are urging customers to boycott Whole Foods to protest the company ownership’s opposition to health care reform and organized labor.
Ben Boyce (left), director of the Living Wage Coalition, contends that while John Mackey is certainly entitled to his own personal beliefs, others who do not share those beliefs have a responsibility not to provide the financial support to perpetuate them.
