What Americans agree on when it comes to health | Rebecca Onie

50,230 views ・ 2018-10-31

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00:12
Today, we are a country divided,
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or at least that's what we're told.
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We are torn apart by immigration, education, guns
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and health care.
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Health care is ugly and it is loud,
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so loud that it threatens to drown out everything else.
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(Voice-over) Protesters: Health care is a human right! Fight, fight, fight!
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Protesters: Hey hey! Ho ho! Obamacare has got to go!
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Rebecca Onie: But what if underneath all the noise,
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we're not divided?
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What if the things that we don't ask about
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are the things that we most agree upon?
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It turns out that when we ask the right questions,
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the answers are startling,
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because we agree, not on health care, but on something more important:
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we agree on health.
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For 20 years, I've been obsessed with one question:
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What do we, what do all of us need in order to be healthy?
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As a college student in 1995,
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I spent months talking to physicians at a chaotic hospital in Boston,
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asking them, "What's the one thing your patients most need to be healthy?"
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They shared the same story again and again,
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one that I've heard hundreds of variations of since.
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They say, "Every day I see a patient with an asthma exacerbation,
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and I prescribe a controller medication.
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But I know she is living in a mold-infested apartment.
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Or I see a kid with an ear infection, and I prescribe antibiotics,
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but I know there is no food at home.
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And I don't ask about those issues, because there's nothing I can do."
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Now, it seemed that it shouldn't be so complicated
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to design a doctor's visit around what people actually need to be healthy.
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So I created Health Leads,
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an organization enabling thousands of physicians and other caregivers
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to ask their patients,
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"What do you need to be healthy?"
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and then prescribe those things --
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fruits and vegetables, heat in the winter,
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electricity to refrigerate their medication --
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and we then navigated patients to those resources
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in their communities.
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The model works.
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A Mass General Hospital study found that navigating patients to essential resources
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is associated with improvements in blood pressure and cholesterol levels
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similar to introducing a new drug,
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but without all the side effects.
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So two decades later, what's changed?
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It's now widely recognized that just 20 percent of health outcomes
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are tied to medical care,
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whereas up to 70 percent are tied to healthy behaviors
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and what's called the social determinants of health --
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basically, everything that happens to us for that vast majority of time
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when we're not in the doctor's office
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or the hospital.
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Health care executives now routinely remind us
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that our zip code matters more than our genetic code.
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And one health care publication even recently had the audacity
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to describe the social determinants of health
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as "the feel-good buzzword of the year."
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Now, there's been some action, too.
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Over the past decade, six major health care providers and insurers
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have committed over 600 million dollars
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to affordable housing,
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recognizing that it reduces infant mortality
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and increases life expectancy.
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But let's be honest.
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Is our 3.5 trillion dollar health care system
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fundamentally designed to create health?
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Absolutely not.
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Take access to healthy food.
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Not long ago, a teenage boy shows up at a hospital in Baltimore,
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losing weight.
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Just as his doctors are huddled up figuring out which metabolic panels
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and blood tests to run,
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one of my colleagues asks out loud,
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"Do you think he might be hungry?"
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It turned out that this kid had been kicked out of his housing
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and literally hadn't had a meal in weeks.
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He said he was "... so relieved that somebody finally asked me."
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Somehow, we've created a health care system
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where asking a patient "Are you hungry?"
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is so far outside the bounds of what counts as health care
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that we mostly fail or forget to ask altogether;
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where doctors lament a hospital's "no third sandwich policy,"
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meaning that if you're a hungry patient in the ER,
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you can have only two free sandwiches,
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but as many MRIs as the doctor orders;
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where, in 2016 in the state of Texas,
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they spent 1.2 billion dollars on the medical costs of malnutrition
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instead of on access to healthy food;
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where a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services program
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stratifies hungry patients,
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so that some get access to food and some get information about food,
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with the justification that doing nothing for hungry patients
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is standard and usual care in this country.
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And that's just food.
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The same is true for housing, electricity ...
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The bottom line is, health care may be changing,
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but not by enough and certainly not fast enough.
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We ask the wrong questions of our doctors, of our patients,
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but also of our citizens.
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We ask about and argue about health care,
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but how do voters think about health?
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No one could tell us the answer to that question,
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so we launched a new initiative
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and hired a polling firm to ask voters across the country:
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What do you need to be healthy?
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What was so striking about this was that no one has any clue
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what we are talking about in health care.
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Voters do not think the social determinants of health
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is a feel-good phrase.
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They actually hate it.
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"What uneducated person came up with that language?"
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one of the voters said.
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Or my favorite was the guy who said,
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"You're killing me."
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But when you strip away all the ridiculousness
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of our language in health care,
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we know exactly what creates health.
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So take Charlotte, North Carolina.
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We had two focus groups,
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one of African American Democratic women and one of white Republican women.
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And we asked them, "If you had a hundred dollars,
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how would you spend it to buy health in your community?
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Turns out, they agree nearly to the last percentage point.
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First, they agree that health care only sort of impacts health.
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So they choose to spend the majority of their dollars
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outside of hospitals and clinics.
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And second, they agree on what creates health,
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spending 19 percent on affordable housing
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and about 25 percent on access to healthy food.
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So I am sure you are thinking, "This has got to be a fluke."
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But it's not.
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White and Latino male swing voters in Seattle,
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white and African American Democratic voters in Cleveland,
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white male Republicans in Dallas,
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low-income white Democrats in Hendersonville, North Carolina:
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their answers are strikingly similar,
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with all of them choosing to spend more money
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on healthy food and safe housing
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than they would on hospitals and health centers.
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When you ask the right questions,
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it becomes pretty clear:
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we may be fractured on health care in this country,
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but we are unified on health.
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The thing that I've been struggling with is why.
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Why do we agree on health?
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We agree on health because it is common sense.
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We all know that the things we need to get healthy --
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medicine and medical care --
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are not the things we need to be healthy,
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to not get sick in the first place.
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But we also agree because of common experience.
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In a study of 5,000 patients,
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24 percent of the patients with commercial health insurance --
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meaning, they had a job --
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still ran out of food or struggled to find housing or transportation
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or other essential resources.
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Twenty-four percent.
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And we saw the same thing in our focus groups.
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Nearly every voter knew what it meant to struggle,
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either themselves or their families
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or their neighbors.
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One of those white Republican women in Charlotte was a waitress
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struggling to stay awake with an enormous Big Gulp soda.
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She just looked exhausted.
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And she was.
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She told us that she worked two jobs
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but still could not afford a membership to the Y,
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but it was OK that she couldn't go to the gym, she said,
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because she also could not afford gas
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and walked 10 miles to and from work
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every single day.
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Listening to her, I felt this familiar panic rise in me,
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the residue of my own childhood.
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When I was 10 years old,
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my father lay on the living room floor
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in the grips of one of his many depressions.
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As I crouched next to him, he told me that he wanted to kill himself.
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My father lived,
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but he struggled to work.
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And my family survived,
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but we teetered,
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down one paycheck,
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relying on my mom's schoolteacher salary.
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Even as a little kid, I knew we lived in the shadow
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of financial and emotional collapse.
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This is really hard to say,
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because it's taken me 25 years to be honest with myself
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that this is why I do this work:
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knowing that my father needed health care to recover,
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but to be healthy, my family needed something else,
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we needed a decent income;
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and knowing, as so many do more than I,
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that panic when the basics threaten to slip away.
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To the voters in our focus groups, the solutions were straightforward.
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As one of those white Republican women in Charlotte said,
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"Instead of putting all this money into health care,
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put it into affordable housing.
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You know, like, take it and distribute it differently."
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It turns out that when you have the right language
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and you ask the right questions,
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the answers become remarkably clear
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and unanimous.
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What we know is that, despite all the noise,
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the plan for health care in this country
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is that there is no plan.
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But we have something more powerful than any politician's bill,
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any candidate's platform,
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any think tank's policy statement.
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We have our common sense and our common experience.
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So I ask, if you are a health care executive:
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Do you know how many of your patients run out of food
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or struggle to pay the rent at the end of the month?
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Is that data on your scorecard,
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shaping your business and your bonuses?
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If you are a politician:
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Will you continue to fight on the scorched earth of health care,
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or will you act on what your voters,
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what Democratic and Republican voters alike,
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already know,
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which is that good wages, healthy food and safe housing
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are health?
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And for the rest of us, for the citizens of this country:
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Will we demand accountability to what we know to be true,
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which is that our common sense,
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our common experience,
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makes us the experts in what it takes to be healthy?
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This moment, as it turns out,
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is not about changing minds.
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It is about something more powerful.
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It is about changing the questions we ask
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and quieting the noise to hear each other's answers.
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It is about the radical possibility that we the patients,
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we the physicians, we the caregivers,
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we the health care executives
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and yes, even we the people,
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that we agree.
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And it is now time --
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in fact, long overdue --
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for us to marshal the courage
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to hear those answers and to act upon them.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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