| 06.17.2004
As Health Care System Fails More Americans…
MNA/Nurses to
Participate in June 19th Bridge Demonstration for
Affordable Health Care for All
Thousands expected
for symbolic Longfellow Bridge Walk and Rally on Boston Common
[Click
here for fliers for distirbution]
CANTON, Mass. — On June 19,
2004, the Massachusetts Nurses Association will join more than 80
other community and labor organizations from across the Commonwealth
in a march from Cambridge to Boston across the Longfellow Bridge
to call for health care justice in America. Citizens across the
country will march by the tens of thousands in additional regional
demonstrations to join the Boston demonstration in their symbolic
bridge walk as part of a nationally coordinated “Bridge the
Gap March for Health Care for All” day of action.
The demonstration is designed to highlight a growing
crisis in health care, where 44 million Americans and more than
600,000 Massachusetts residents lack insurance and millions more
are underinsured. Under President Bush, 4 million more Americans
lost their coverage, average health care costs have risen nearly
50 percent, and premiums have increased more than three times faster
than average wages.
Russ Davis, the director of Jamaica Plain’s
Jobs with Justice, which is organizing the local march, explains
that the event has attracted an impressive range of people from
80 area organizations, including labor, women's, immigrants', veterans',
and seniors' groups. "It's a people’s movement,"
Davis says. "This issue affects literally every segment of
society except the extremely rich. People feel like there's a failure
to recognize this as a major crisis."
"For nurses, walking that bridge and standing
up for reform of the health care system is our moral obligation.
Nurses will be marching because we are tired of witnessing the needless
suffering of too many patients who are under our care simply because
they lack adequate insurance and access to preventive care. They
are in the hospital because they have had to delay treatment until
it is too late. They are there because they lack adequate prescription
drug coverage and their conditions have deteriorated for lack of
basic medications; and once they are there, they are receiving substandard
care because of poor staffing conditions caused by failed health
care policies," said Barbara Cooke, RN, a frontline nurse at
Brockton Hospital and member of the Board of Directors of the MNA
who will speak at the rally.
Organizers hope the march will mark the first step
in a movement for fundamental American health-care reform. The Bridge
the Gap March for Health Care for All kicks off at Kendall Square
in Cambridge at 11 a.m. on Saturday, June 19 and will culminate
with a rally on the Boston Common at 12 noon. For more information,
contact Jobs with Justice at 617.524.8778, or visit its Web site
at www.massjwj.net.
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