2024 Fall Newsletter
Healthcare for All Ohioans/SPAN Ohio
Fall 2024 Newsletter
Director’s Report
Regional Reports
Committee Reports
Recommended
Reading
- Health
care comes up again as a defining issue for Ohio voters in November
election - Ohio State’s new $2
billion medical tower will pilfer small businesses - Mirror, Mirror
2024: A Portrait of the Failing U.S. Health System - Healthcare for All
Isn’t on the Ballot This November, But It Should Be - Sanders Rips Pharma
Giant for Charging $900+ for Drug That Could Be Sold for $100 - Why I Left The
Network
Of Interest
- Prepare Now
for 2025 — Read, Vote, Join, by Linda Brown
Director’s Report
Since I was installed as HCFAO/SPAN State Director in April 2024, necessary
actions have since been accomplished in the intervening months. The bank accounts have been transferred. Treasurer Bob Kemp
and I will be the signatories. I am just a backup. Bob has the checks. We are
ready now, and need, our Fund Raising and Business Committees to meet.
A
meeting has been scheduled with legislators who will introduce the
Healthcare for All Ohioans Act in the next session. We will talk about the bill and try to set a
date for introduction.
I am
scheduling a meeting with the executive committee to discuss SPAN’S five-year
plan. The previous one is expiring or has expired.
For
our Labor Committee, Tune in to: Labor Campaign for Single Payer, chaired by Rose Roach.
I recommend everyone check out One Payer States: onepayerstates.org Chuck
Pennacchio, who had a presentation at our state conference, is the founder of
One Payer States. He is lobbying congress
for M4A.
I am
expecting a busy 2025. Our committees
need to be organized, primed, and prepared.
—
Kendall MaysHCFAO/SPAN State Director
|
Regional Reports
Regional Coordinators, with their contact information, are noted. Please contact the Coordinator for your region if you would be interested in joining. If you would consider filling an open position, please contact span@spanohio.org. (A Regional Coordinator is currently needed in Region 6 [Akron, Canton, and East Central Ohio]) |
Region
1 (Cleveland, Northeast Ohio) Coordinator: Cathe Caraway (310-749-6111) cathe@carawaylaw.com |
We have been meeting over the summer. Some of our
speakers include Greg Coleridge of Move to Amend, and Deb Kline of
Cleveland Jobs with Justice, talking about so-called “Crisis Pregnancy
Centers”.
We distributed literature at the Lakewood Arts Festival and the
Tremont Arts and Cultural Festival. (see picture below) Also a group of our members and
friends have been holding a monthly book club. This month, we are
reading and discussing the Ohio Health Care Plan.

We
will probably no have more activities before the election, but we are
looking forward to a holiday party in early December. To get details,
please contact clevelandspan@spanohio.org.
We
are also supporting our partner organization Cleveland Jobs with
Justice, which will be holding its annual celebration/fundraiser on
Thursday, October 24 at 6:30 PM via Zoom. Labor activist and author, Phil Cohen, will be the
keynote speaker at the Annual Celebration. Phil will discuss his latest
book, The Jackson Project: War in the American Workplace, and his ongoing War Stories series, featured on Work-Bites, an online labor news outlet. For more information, contact Deb Kline at 216-310-7657 or by email at dkline@clevelandjwj.org. To donate and register for the Zoom: https://secure.givelively.org/…/2024-annual-celebration…
Region 4 (Cincinnati, Southwest Ohio)
Coordinator: Deliah (Dee) Chavez (513-413-1178) dee49@fuse.net
Region 4 members tabled at the first ever Lebanon, Ohio Pride Festival. Many showed interest in our message and signed up to support us!
We
continue to work collaboratively with the Cincinnati chapter of PNHP (Physicians for a National Health Program)
which has been recognized as an active chapter nationally.
One issue being addressed is recruitment and membership drives. All of those recruited have joined both PNHP and Healthcare for All Ohioans/SPAN.
The second issue being addressed is fighting privatization of Medicare, by educating on the disadvantages of Medicare Advantage. A national webinar in June on that issue was attended by several HCFAO/SPAN members.
Region 4 will meet next on Wednesday, December 4th at 7PM. If you are interested in attending, please contact me.
Dee Chavez, Coordinator Region 4
|
Committee Reports
Equity Committee Report |
The
Health Equity Committee is working on planning our next and final equity
workshop of the year. Topic and speaker with be announced, so stay
tuned! We are excited that you can now reach us at
healthequity@healthcareforallohioans.org.
With this email, we are establishing monthly Equity Outreach emails to
persons who have registered for our events in the past. In total, we
have reached
nearly 300 unique persons at our events! These are brief emails
that will contain upcoming HCFAO events, relevant DEI news, and connect
current events to HCFAO’s work through a DEI lens. With these emails we
hope to engage those who have briefly connected
with us.
We also continue to update the Social Justice Contact Sheet for our Regional Coordinators, which can be found in the toolbox
here. As a reminder, continue to share your “why” stories, connect
at cross-cultural events, and add your regional events to the calendar.
All the best,
Amber Prater, MPH, CHES®
Lobby Committee Report
Members of SPAN Ohio have met with 12 candidates running for the first time for the Ohio House and 1 running for the Ohio Senate. The purpose is to inform and educate them in our work with current legislators. Most
of them have expressed support and a desire to work for a universal,
equitable, publicly funded health care system in Ohio when elected.
We have also met with 4 first time candidates for the U.S. Congress who have all expressed support.
Some of the candidates have joined our organization!
We
are scheduled to meet with 3 of the 4 joint sponsors of The Ohio Health
Care Act in the House and Senate on Friday November 15 to become more educated
on the details of the bill.
All Ohio legislators and Healthcare for All Ohioans/SPAN activists will be encouraged to attend.The next meeting of the Lobby Committee is Wednesday, October 23 at 7 PM. If you wish to attend, and are not already on the Lobby Committee, please contact me
Dee Chavez,Chair SPAN Ohio Lobby Committee
Phone: 513-413-1178 dee49@fuse.net
Membership Committee Report
Help Healthcare for All Ohioans and SPAN Ohio grow and be successful.
Does your employer match charitable contributions?Do you belong to a union or club that would support SPAN with an
organizational membership? We’d be happy to speak to your group on the
benefits of Healthcare for All Ohioans.We appreciate the generosity of our members and other donors.
Many are hesitant to help raise funds to operate Healthcare for All
Ohioans and the Single Payer Action Network Ohio. Fundraisers take time
and energy for planning, execution and follow-up. That’s among the
reasons our state council decided to create paid memberships: to provide
a steady flow of funds to facilitate budgeting. If you have attended a
state-wide conference, you’ve seen all the printed matter, t-shirts,
buttons, stickers, etc. on display for people to take home to help
deliver the SPAN Ohio message. It all takes money. As we have been
refocusing our use of Healthcare for All Ohioans as a primary name in
marketing, regional coordinators all have updated kits for tabling at
events to spread our message across Ohio.
After offering paid memberships for years, we have found that while
many have joined and renewed their membership, a minority is steady at
responding to emails. Consequently, I follow-up with a postcard which
costs time and money with hopes of getting more renewals, especially with the rising cost of postage. If you would
like to support our organizations, you could save volunteer time and
expense of supplies by checking for the emails we send and responding
on-line to renew your membership.
When membership is not a stretch, we
have members who also make a monthly gift. Some use the amount given to
HCFAO as a charitable tax deduction. Others apply to their employers
to match their contributions.
Please add HCFAO/SPAN to contacts so calls, texts and emails are not blocked.
If you would like us to remove you from our Membership list, please let
me know and we can do that. We can remove you entirely or continue
sending newsletters and announcements.
Universal Healthcare is UP TO
US. We The People will only win the human rights we are entitled to if
we grow our movement and organize sufficiently to be heard.
In Solidarity!
Bill Davis – wndavis@acm.org – 937-264-0377
Recommended Reading
Health care comes up again as a defining issue for Ohio voters in November election
A new poll of Ohio voters finds health care as one of the issues determining who they will support in the November general election. More than 8 in 10 Ohio voters polled in a survey conducted as part of the American Cancer Society (ACS) Cancer Action Network’s “Cancer Votes” campaign said where a candidate stands on “access to affordable, comprehensive health coverage” stands out to them, with 51% saying the position is very important as they head to the ballots, according to the survey’s key findings.“
Majorities of Republicans (78%), Independents (89%) and Democrats (97%) say a candidate’s position on access to affordable, comprehensive health care is an important factor in their vote decision,” the study stated. Many of the 600 registered voters polled in the study expressed disappointment in the current health care system, and even the state itself. Researchers found that 60% of Ohio voters polled say the state “has gotten off on the wrong track,” and 59% of voters said the health care system is not “meeting the needs of most Ohio residents.”“
Ohio voters clearly understand the importance of affordable health coverage and want their lawmakers to improve access to care and reduce debt,” ACS Cancer Action Network government relations director Leo Almedia said in a statement announcing the study. “Every Ohioan should learn more about these critical health care issues and find out where their candidates stand.” For full article, go to: https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2024/09/03/health-care-comes-up-again-as-a-defining-issue-for-ohio-voters-in-november-election/Ohio State’s new $2 billion medical tower will pilfer small businesses
The vast majority of these increased costs will
be borne by Ohio’s business community, which offer the majority of
health benefits for Ohioans.
By, Julie Wilkes,
Guest columnist, August 14, 2024
For full article, go to:
https://www.dispatch.com/story/opinion/columns/guest/2024/08/14/wexner-center-ohio-businesses-increased-health-cost-buckeye-institiute/74781660007/Mirror, Mirror 2024: A Portrait of the Failing U.S. Health System
Comparing Performance in 10 NationsAbstract
- Goal:
Compare health system performance in 10 countries, including the
United States, to glean insights for U.S. improvement. - Methods:
Analysis of 70 health system performance measures in five areas:
access to care, care process, administrative efficiency, equity, and
health outcomes. - Key
Findings:
The top three countries are Australia, the Netherlands, and the
United Kingdom, although differences in overall performance between
most countries are relatively small. The only clear outlier is the
U.S., where health system performance is dramatically lower. - Conclusion:
The U.S. continues to be in a class by itself in the
underperformance of its health care sector. While the other nine
countries differ in the details of their systems and in their
performance on domains, unlike the U.S., they all have found a way
to meet their residents’ most basic health care needs, including
universal coverage.
https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/fund-reports/2024/sep/mirror-mirror-2024
EXHIBIT 2 — Overall Performance RankingThe United States lags its international peers considerably on health system performance.
Medical debt and exorbitant costs regularly keep people from seeking necessary care, with a growing population of “underinsured” Americans—those who have health insurance but still aren’t getting the care they desperately need.
This for-profit system leads to higher rates of death and disease and lower life expectancies—all while Americans spend more and more trying to get the care they need. In the richest nation on the planet, this simply should not and cannot be the case.
We need a system with comprehensive care for all, regardless of employment status, with no copays, deductibles, or private insurance premiums. A system where the [government] provides your insurance and doesn’t allow private companies to override what your own doctor says you need. . . .
I’m so proud to be the lead sponsor of the Medicare for All Act, and I won’t stop fighting until everyone can get quality healthcare without having to worry about what it might cost. Thank you so much to the 100+ members who have cosponsored our bill, H.R. 3421! It’s time for a healthcare system that actually works. Let’s get Medicare for All done.
Healthcare for All Isn’t on the Ballot This November, But It Should Be
. . .Vice President Kamala Harris , who previously co-sponsored Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) single payer bill in 2019, will avoid promoting the plan this year. Nor has Harris adopted the more modest idea she endorsed in 2019: a publicly funded health plan that people could opt into, known as the “public option.” Instead, Harris has chosen to campaign on tinkering around the edges of our complicated patchwork system by lowering a handful of prescription drug prices for Medicare recipients. While it is an incredible achievement on the part of the Biden-Harris administration to regulate drug prices for the first time in decades, the changes are modest. They’re limited to only 10 drugs this year (with more drugs to be regulated each year) and only apply to people already enrolled in Medicare. . . .

Harris still has time to back
healthcare for all, but it will take a massive public push from
below. In spite of the enormous amount
of pro-corporatepropaganda against
universal healthcare, a majority of
Americans have historically supported single-payer healthcare. A May
2024 Data
for Progress poll found that two-thirds of Americans
support expanding Medicare to all. . .
Sanders Rips Pharma Giant for Charging $900+ for Drug That Could Be Sold for $100
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders called out the pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk on Tuesday for charging American patients more than $900 a month for the increasingly popular diabetes drug Ozempic, even though generic manufacturers are willing to sell the medication for significantly less.During a panel discussion with experts, Sanders (I-Vt.) said he and his staff have been in contact with the top executives of major drug makers who say they could sell a generic version of Ozempic for less than $100 a month—and still turn a profit. A recent study found that the drug can be manufactured for less than $5 a month.
[Graphic]

“Novo Nordisk, which has made nearly $50 billion in sales off of Ozempic and Wegovy, charges Americans almost $1,000 a month—the highest prices in the world,” Sanders, the chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, said Tuesday. “Why? Excessive corporate greed.” Ozempic and Wegovy are part of a class of treatments known as GLP-1s. Wegovy, a weight-loss drug that Novo Nordisk sells for $1,349 a month in the U.S., contains the same active ingredient as Ozempic, which is approved only for people with Type 2 diabetes. The drugs’ growing popularity in the U.S. has drawn greater scrutiny to Novo Nordisk’s pricing. Sanders’ office noted Tuesday that the company’s price tag for Wegovy is $186 in Denmark, $140 in Germany, and $92 in the United Kingdom. . . .
For Full article, go to:Why I Left The Network
They studied, honed their skills and opened practices, joining health insurance networks that put them within reach of people who couldn’t afford to pay for sessions out of pocket.So did more than 500 other psychologists, psychiatrists and therapists who shared their experiences with ProPublica. But one after another, they confronted a system set up to squeeze them out. Although federal law requires insurers to provide the same access to mental and physical health care, these companies have been caught, time and again, shortchanging customers with mental illness — restricting coverage and delaying or denying treatment. These patients — whose disorders can be chronic and costly — are bad for business, industry insiders told ProPublica. “The way to look at mental health care from an insurance perspective is: I don’t want to attract those people. I am never going to make money on them,” said Ron Howrigon, a consultant who used to manage contracts with providers for major insurers. “One way to get rid of those people or not get them is to not have a great network.” There are nowhere near enough available therapists in insurance networks to serve all of the people seeking care. And although almost all Americans are insured, about half of people with mental illness are unable to access treatment. The consequences can be devastating. To understand the forces that drive even the most well-intentioned therapists from insurance networks, ProPublica plunged into a problem most often explored in statistics and one-off perspectives. Reporters spoke to hundreds of providers in nearly all 50 states, from rural communities to big cities.
. . . .
For full article, go to: https://projects.propublica.org/why-i-left-the-network/Of Interest
Prepare Now for 2025 — Read, Vote, Join
by Linda Brown
Footnotes:
- What
is the ACA Subsidy Cliff?;
Carly Plemons; Well, Individual and Family; eHealth; September 06,
2024. At
https://www.ehealthinsurance.com/resources/individual-and-family/what-is-the-subsidy-cliff - Inflation
Reduction Act Health Insurance Subsidies: What is Their Impact and
What Would Happen if They Expire?;
Jared Ortaliza, Anna Cord, Matt McGough, Justin Lo, and Cynthia Cox;
KFF; July 26, 2024. AT
https://www.kff.org/affordable-care-act/issue-brief/inflation-reduction-act-health-insurance-subsidies-what-is-their-impact-and-what-would-happen-if-they-expire/)
These two indicators are
measuring progress towards Universal Healthcare. The theme of the
2025 HLPF is “Advancing sustainable, inclusive, science- and
evidence-based solutions for the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development and its Sustainable Development Goals for leaving no one
behind” – therefore, factual evidence should be presented.
Preparations and publicity for this event will likewise amplify
America’s healthcare debate and discussion.
HCFAO/SPAN OHIO LINKS |
Healthcare For All Ohioans/SPAN Ohio
HCFAO/SPAN Ohio: http://spanohio.org/
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/groups/21284681577/ref=bookmarks
To
send articles, events, letters, or comments to this newsletter,
please email them to the Communications
Committee
Linda Brown, Brian Houlehan, Cindy Bamford, and Bob Parker (Chair) at clevelandspan@spanohio.org This newsletter is posted under Resources on the HFCAO/SPAN web site |
HCFAO/SPAN
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