Women and Equity (Page 59)

By Geri Katz

MNA Healthcare Reform Specialist

Geri Katz
Geri Katz
MNA Healthcare Reform Specialist

While we all suffer from a lack of access in our fragmented, expensive, inefficient healthcare system, women at even greater disadvantage than American men. Healthcare’s high costs and drive for profits makes women, especially women of color, at a higher risk of unbearable medical bills and poorer health outcomes.

Women are much more likely experience periods of unemployment (and often a loss of health insurance) to care for family. At the same time, women’s specific health issues cause them to seek medical care more frequently, including pregnancy, childbirth, and higher rates of many chronic diseases.

Didn’t Obamacare Fix This?

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) has addressed a number of issues regarding health insurance coverage for women. Women now have complete coverage of preventive services with no cost-sharing. Maternity care is now required in marketplace health plans. Insurers can no longer deny coverage for gender-related reasons, nor can they charge women more than men for identical health plans.

Obamacare addressed some of the most egregious injustices toward women in our health insurance industry, and as a result, millions of women have gained access to health insurance. But the high cost of healthcare still denies access to care for many women. The ACA hasn’t done enough to address increasing healthcare costs, and the expense on consumers who support hundreds of different payors with thousands of different benefit sets.

The Current Health Insurance System Leaves Too Many Women Out

Those suffering the most are uninsured women. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation in 2014, 13 percent of women aged 19-64 were still uninsured. In Minnesota, 7 percent of women 19-64 were uninsured.

However, even women who do have insurance still face burdensome costs that cause them to delay or skip needed care. Compared with women in 10 other industrialized countries, U.S. women had the highest rates of going without needed health care because of cost, having serious problems paying their medical bills, high out-of-pocket health care spending, and experiencing problems with their health insurance.[i]

Almost half, 43 percent, of American women reported going without recommended care, skipped seeing a doctor or failed to fill prescriptions because of cost or medical debt.

Women’s Jobs Make Them More Vulnerable

Women’s jobs play a major role in their vulnerability to the health insurance system. Women are less likely than men to be insured through their own job (34 percent vs. 43 percent respectively) and more likely to be covered as a dependent (24 percent vs. 16 percent). [ii] Women make up the majority of low-wage workers, and only 23 percent of those jobs offer health insurance. Jobs like child care workers and personal care attendants are overwhelmingly held by women, most often women of color, but the women who hold them rarely have access to health insurance through their employer.

Health is, of course, more than insurance. 40 percent of women workers do not have access to paid sick time, and fear losing their livelihoods when they stay home sick or to care for a family member. 80 percent of low-wage workers – two-thirds of whom are women – don’t have sick time. As a result, many workers go to work sick and send sick kids to school, and these people come into close contact with people like patients, children, and restaurant diners because they can’t stay home.

Women who can stay home and take paid leave experience a lower rate of infant mortality, better likelihood of infants receiving well-baby care and vaccinations, and an increase in the rate and duration of breastfeeding. In the US, only those who work for companies of 50 or more employees have access to 12 weeks of unpaid leave under the Family Medical Leave Act.

Gender Disparities in Health Outcomes

The majority of adult women in Minnesota are obese or overweight, putting them at risk for diabetes, cancer, heart disease, and stroke.[iii] According to the American Heart Association, since 1984, the number of cardiovascular disease deaths for women has exceeded those of males, and death rates for black women are much higher than those for white women.[iv]

What is MNA doing?

Minneapolis and St. Paul are currently working on creating Earned Safe and Sick Time policies for all workers, something considered a basic right in most industrialized nations, but in the United States it is still a privilege for a large proportion of working women. MNA is supporting these initiatives.

MNA nurses have advocated for universal single-payer healthcare for years, and continue to work to build a grassroots movement demanding healthcare for all. If you’d like to get more involved, please contact Geri Katz at geri.katz@mnnurses.org.

[i] Oceans Apart: The Higher Health Costs of Women in the U.S. Compared to Other Nations, and How Reform is Helping, The Commonwealth Fund, 2012. http://www.commonwealthfund.org/~/media/files/publications/issue-brief/2012/jul/1606_robertson_oceans_apart_reform_brief.pdf

[ii] Women’s Health Insurance Coverage, The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, 2016. http://kff.org/womens-health-policy/fact-sheet/womens-health-insurance-coverage-fact-sheet/

[iii] Status of Women and Girls in Minnesota, Women’s Foundation of Minnesota and University of Minnesota Humphrey School’s Center on Women and Public Policy, 2014. http://www.wfmn.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Economic-Report-Feb12-WEB.pdf

[iv] Women and Cardiovascular Diseases, American Heart Association, 2013. https://www.heart.org/idc/groups/heart-public/@wcm/@sop/@smd/documents/downloadable/ucm_319576.pdf

By Geri Katz

MNA Healthcare Reform Specialist

While we all suffer from a lack of access in our fragmented, expensive, inefficient healthcare system, women at even greater disadvantage than American men. Healthcare’s high costs and drive for profits makes women, especially women of color, at a higher risk of unbearable medical bills and poorer health outcomes.

Women are much more likely experience periods of unemployment (and often a loss of health insurance) to care for family. At the same time, women’s specific health issues cause them to seek medical care more frequently, including pregnancy, childbirth, and higher rates of many chronic diseases.
… Read more about: Women and Equity  »

nurses week open house

By Barb Brady

MNA Communications Specialist

May 6-12 is a time to celebrate nurses and all nurses do for patients and their communities.

Nurses Week celebrations are planned throughout Minnesota, including an open house at the MNA office in St. Paul.

MNA nurses are sponsoring a wide variety of events, and businesses in some communities have special offers just for nurses.

MNA is holding an open house at the St. Paul office on May 11. . Enjoy exciting education sessions, food, and drawings – and meet other MNA nurses!
… Read more about: Honor and celebrate nurses during Nurses Week  »

By Megan Gavin

MNA Education Specialist

On April 7, we welcomed 430 student nurses and faculty members from thirteen different colleges and universities to the MNA Student Nurses Day on the Hill. The event began with a social hour giving students an opportunity to network with MNA member leaders representing diverse nursing areas such as mental health, psychiatric nursing, surgery, PACU, oncology, and pediatrics. MNA committee and commission members hosted tables on Governmental Affairs, Nursing Practice, and Education Commissions as well as the MNA Foundation, Universal Healthcare, and the Nurses Peer-to-Peer Support Network.

President Mary Turner gave a welcome and shared her personal journey of becoming a politically active nurse.
… Read more about: Student Nurses Day on the Hill 2016 Is A Smashing Success  »

 

 

By Mathew J. Keller, RN JD

Regulatory and Policy Nursing Specialist

When patients are at risk, nurses are the first line of defense. But what happens when hospital leadership isn’t listening to its nurses? That’s the dilemma Clinical Nurse Specialist and 2015 MNA “Social Justice” Award winner Niki Gjere faced in reporting her concerns of unethical and dangerous research practices to Fairview-Riverside leaders (a site for recruitment of research subjects for the U’s psychiatric department) and University administrators, as detailed in Part I.

I believe this unassuming nurse leader is not only credible but courageous.
… Read more about: Nurse Whistleblower Stays the Course in the Face of Increasing Pressure—Part II  »

Niki Gere

By Mathew J. Keller, RN JD

Regulatory and Policy Nursing Specialist

Clinical research is undoubtedly necessary to advance the field of medicine, but one would never expect that research to come at the cost of patients’ lives. The Minnesota Nurses Association is proud to support Clinical Nurse Specialist Niki Gjere, who continues to shine a light on unethical and even immoral psychiatric research practices at the University of Minnesota. Former Governor Arne Carlson calls this “the worst scandal I’ve seen since I’ve been in Minnesota.” Granted, this story has made the rounds in the news media, but, even so, nothing’s changed.
… Read more about: Nurse Whistleblower Stays the Course in the Face of Increasing Pressure—Part I  »

By Jon Tollefson

MNA Governmental Affairs Specialist

The 2016 Legislative Session has been underway for a little over one month now, and we are already close to the final stage: budget negotiations. With one of the shortest sessions in many years, the House and Senate have been moving quickly to finish work from last year on transportation and taxes, adjust government spending for this two-year period, and put together a bonding bill for major projects around the state.

 

When it comes to healthcare issues, the two political parties are putting forward two very different visions, and the Minnesota Nurses Association has something to say about it.
… Read more about: One Capitol, Two Views on How to Treat Patients  »

By Barb Brady

MNA Communications Specialist

MNA nurses in more than half of our bargaining units are presenting a united front as they negotiate contracts this year.

Nurses are fighting management attempts to cut hard-earned wages and benefits in communities throughout Minnesota, Wisconsin, North Dakota, and Iowa. We are seeing hospital management in many hospitals seeking to cut or dismantle health insurance plans for our nurses.

Several bargaining units have agreed on new contracts, including Cook Hospital in Cook, Sanford Bagley Medical Center in Bagley, Chippewa County Montevideo Hospital and Medical Clinic in Montevideo, and Methodist Jennie Edmundson Hospital in Council Bluffs, IA.
… Read more about: MNA Nurses Stand United During Contract Negotiations  »

By Mathew J. Keller, RN JDDSC_8097
MNA Regulatory and Policy Nursing Specialist

Those of us who collaborate with LPNs on a daily basis have come to respect their knowledge and experience in caring for patients. We know that LPNs are an important part of the patient care team. In fact, many MNA RNs started out as LPNs. That vital experience has proven to them that while both roles are valuable, they’re not interchangeable. Any facility that’s thinking of weathering any kind of storm by just staffing more LPNs will be inviting trouble and risk.

There are several differences in LPN vs.
… Read more about: Can LPNs Replace RNs?  »

By Rick Fuentes

MNA Communications Specialist

There’s been a lot of scare tactics lately about the Cadillac Tax. Recently, one of the big Twin Cities hospital chains even produced a video for its employees where a cartoon employee drives her old Cadillac into a car dealer to get a newer, cheaper car. Make no mistake, however, the Cadillac Tax isn’t about to run over middle-class workers. At least not yet.

The “Cadillac Tax” or excise tax is part of the Affordable Care Act, which set a 40 percent tax on insurance plans valued over $10,200 for an individual and $27,500 for families.
… Read more about: The Truth About the Cadillac Tax  »

Contact:  Rick Fuentes

(o) 651-414-2863
(c) 612-741-0662
rick.fuentes@mnnurses.org

Barbara Brady

(o) 651-414-2849
(c) 651-202-0845
barbara.brady@mnnurses.org

(Baudette) – March 24, 2016 – LakeWood Health Center employees will detail how the hospital violated their rights to unionize during a hearing conducted by the National Labor Relations Board in Baudette April 5-8.

The hearing follows a complaint the National Labor Relations Board issued in February that found LakeWood “interfered with, restrained or coerced employees in the exercise of their rights” to unionize.

The complaint was in response to Unfair Labor Practice charges filed by the Minnesota Nurses Association after LakeWood illegally withdrew recognition of the union in the middle of bargaining a first contract.
… Read more about: Press Release: National Labor Relations Board hears charges against LakeWood Health Center at April 5-8 public hearing  »