Universal health coverage may be one of the big issues of the 2008 election, but people have been whining and wheezing about their lack of insurance for more than 90 years.
First, from today’s Times:
Albany: Proposal for Universal Health Insurance
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A state lawmaker proposed yesterday that New York create a $59 billion health insurance program that would cover everyone in the state and would probably be paid for through a tax increase. The plan, from Assemblyman Richard N. Gottfried, would generally replace the private health plans that now provide coverage to many people through their jobs. Assemblyman Gottfried, a Manhattan Democrat who is chairman of the Health Committee, said the program would have to be paid for by new taxes, but he said that state residents would pay less than they now pay in premiums and deductibles. Critics said there was little evidence that the state could afford the program, or that it could do better than the current system.
In 1916, state legislators proposed a similar idea.
January 30, 1916
HEALTH INSURANCE FOR NEW YORK’S WORKERS
New York State is facing one of the most radical proposals in the interests of the wage earner ever made in this country—a compulsory health insurance bill. The measure was introduced in the Legislature on Jan. 24 by Senator Ogden L. Mills.
Although its promoters, members of the Social Insurance Committee of the American Association for Labor Legislation, have been working on the project for more than three years and have distributed over 13,000 copies of the tentative bill, the plan comes as a surprise to many people, and a wave of inquiry is sweeping through associations of employers…
“Paternalism,” “socialism,” are slogans of the foes of this measure, which is bound to arouse discussion in every direction. It means in general terms an effort to introduce into the United States the compulsory health insurance of Great Britain or the sickness insurance of Germany, so that every manual worker and every wage earner whose income does not exceed $100 a month will, when he becomes ill, have the services of a physician, attendance, and even medicine and surgical appliances, and that for at least half a year, if his disability continues, he will receive a weekly allowance for the support of himself and his family. Death and funeral benefits are included.
Naturally this was deemed “un-American,” and the bill was scorned and later vastly watered down by doctors, employers, and insurers:
Continue reading "Still uninsured after all these years" »
Anonymity is sacred in New York. Millions wander the streets each day happily oblivious to the lives around them. But every once in a while, we are reminded of the dark side to this blindness.
Today's Times tells the story of Christina Copeman, who was discovered in her Brooklyn home -- two years after she died.
Neighbors Reflect on a Death No One Noticed
By ANDY NEWMAN
For the last years of her life, Christina Copeman kept to herself.
She stopped answering the door shortly after her estranged husband died in 1990. She turned away from her friends and neighbors in East Flatbush, Brooklyn, ignoring their hellos.
So when Ms. Copeman dropped out of sight altogether, people were not immediately suspicious. Perhaps she had gone back to Trinidad for a vacation, they said. Maybe she had gotten sick there, or decided to stay.
That was nearly two years ago.
There have been countless incidents like this, though few in which the deceased managed to elude discovery for quite so long. In 1871, Margaret Mannisan had a fate similar to Coperman's:
August 8, 1871
A SHOCKING DEATH -- TERRIBLE FATE OF A FEMALE RECLUSE
Yesterday morning the occupants of a lower room at no. 5 King street noticed blood upon the ceiling, and called in Patrolman McAuley, of the Twenty-eighth precinct. The policeman went to the room overhead and knocked at the door. It was fastened on the inside, and the policeman, after waiting a sufficient time for it to be opened, forced it open. The occupant of the room was MARGARET MANNISAN, a native of Ireland, sixty-five years of age, unmarried. Upon a pile of rags upon the floor lay her dead body, swollen and decomposed almost beyond recognition.
Coroner Young, upon making an investigation later in the day, found that the woman had lived alone in this attic room for the last five years, and had not been seen alive since Friday night. Upon an examination of the body Dr. marsh was of the opinion that the woman had died in convulsions, in which she had ruptured a blood vessel.
The deceased was spoken of by those who knew her as a sober, industrious woman of eccentric habits, who, however, hated the male sex with almost unnatural malignity, and would never speak to any of the gender.
Yes, it was all because she hated men.
A few years later, a man died leaning on the window sill of his apartment, which overlooked the elevated train tracks. Note one of the great all time subheads..
Continue reading "Gone and forgotten" »