[getsmart-l] Portraits of the Near Poor in America" (Beacon Press)
23skidoo
23skidoo at ica.net
Thu Sep 6 23:24:24 EDT 2007
Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
Alternet - Sep 6, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/56543/
The following is an excerpt from Chapter 5 of "The Missing Class:
Portraits of the Near Poor in America" (Beacon Press)
The Missing Class: Portraits of the Near Poor in America
By Katherine S. Newman and Victor Tan Chen
"While the uninsured are most at risk, researchers estimate that about a
fifth of insured individuals are underinsured and face limits on
coverage or substantial financial costs if faced with an illness."
-Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, 2002
THE HALL FAMILY
Gloria Hall is angry. She is angry at the board of her co-op, who
refused to get her a parking space in the building even though her car
mirrors have been smashed twice and there are plenty of unused spaces
in the lot. Gloria will even get up and agitate about it at the co-op
meetings, so much so that her neighbors routinely boo her off the floor.
She's upset at her bank, which charged her huge fees for bounced checks
and never told her about them, until she noticed her savings account
was a few hundred dollars short. In a fit of fury she closed her
account -- and then found herself struggling to open a new one, having
lost the citizenship papers a new account required.
Come to think of it, Gloria is angry at America. She came here as a
teenager from Panama, just one more descendant of slaves hoping for an
opportunity up north, but soon enough she had her fill of the word
"nigger," the rude stares, and the constant harping about how people
from other countries were lazy and degenerate and uncultured -- when
she knew for a fact that wealthy, powerful America couldn't even care
for its own.
She is truly furious with her ex-husband, the father of her three
children. When she first met him he was a responsible black man, a
supervisor at the factory where she worked, who eventually got hired by
a construction company. But after the two were married, Samuel went
"off the deep end." He started drinking; he drank so much that he would
collapse and get robbed as he stumbled back home. He got hooked on
drugs and began hanging out in crack houses.
Samuel went to live with his sister in Jersey and supposedly cleaned up
his act, but when he came back to Brooklyn nothing had changed. He
became a deadbeat dad, too busy drinking to attend when Mallory, their
eldest son, graduated from junior high. Samuel barely noticed when
Mallory went off to a boarding school in Massachusetts at the age of
thirteen, and he seemed too busy to care when Mallory graduated and
joined the army.
Gloria divorced him. Wounded by this turn of events, Samuel found his
way into a treatment program, recovered fully, and -- wonder of wonders
-- found a well-paying, white-collar job. Gloria's wrath did not die;
he was still a good-for-nothing man who had time for a girlfriend and
Saturday overtime at the firm but couldn't manage to pick up the two
younger kids for the weekend -- his court-mandated weekend -- and
couldn't be bothered to pay his full share of child support. Yet he had
the nerve to tell their sons that Gloria was greedy for asking.
She is fed up, too, with those sons of hers, thirteen-year-old Stephen
and nine-year-old Terrell, who expect the world of her -- to play catch
even though she's sick, to take them to the movies even though she's
tired, to pay for a school trip to Spain even though she can barely
save a dollar, to make them into men even though she doesn't know how
-- and yet expect nothing from their father. Is she the only one who
notices? He's the one who shuts them up in their rooms with Game Boys
while he goes off to his weekend shift at work. He was the one who kept
promising to take Terrell fishing but never did. He was the one who
said he'd accompany Stephen to a play but decided at the last minute he
wasn't "properly dressed" and bailed. She is angry that they are not
angry.
And then eighteen-year-old Mallory goes off to the military and signs
an insurance policy that will give the money 50-50 to his father and
mother -- 50-50! -- when she was the one who raised him, was there for
him when his own dad was off giving a bad name to fatherhood everywhere.
But what makes Gloria angriest of all -- what sinks her into long bouts
of depression and suicidal thinking, pushes her onto the very edge of
her sanity -- is that she is dying.
She has been diagnosed with thymoma, a rare cancer of the thymus. It
started in that small vestigial gland behind her breastbone, then
spread to her bloodstream, and then into her diaphragm, requiring the
removal of part of her lungs. Gloria went through chemotherapy. The
cancer went into remission -- only to come back several years later. A
few years ago, things reached a point where she felt the need to
approach her ex-husband about her health. She needed to make sure he
would take care of Terrell and Stephen if she died. Her expectations of
Samuel were so low that she wanted him to either commit himself to the
arrangement or relinquish his rights as a father so that her own family
could take custody when the time came.
After hesitating, Samuel told her he'd take care of the boys. Gloria
was not convinced.
Perhaps fate wouldn't seem so spiteful, or her life so awry, if it had
not been so good before. Once, she was a unionized city employee. She
wasn't rich, but she was far from poor. Her days of pressing and
labeling pants on a factory assembly line seemed to be behind her. In
fact, when they were married, Samuel wasn't so sure he liked having a
wife who made more money than he did. It was one of the reasons for
their breakup. In spite of Samuel's objections, Gloria insisted on
making her own living. "I don't like to depend on people to take care
of me," she says.
So it upsets her to think of how little freedom she has left. Now she
must make do on a fixed income from SSI and her ex-husband's alimony.
The total comes to about $1,200 a month. Her body, meanwhile, is
breaking down. Gloria was always on the heavy side, but now she can
barely walk. Her dusky skin is puffy, her rounded face drawn; her eyes
register the ache in her body as she moves, carefully, as if measuring
each step. Walking two blocks down the street leaves her gasping for
breath. Her older sister, Amelia, who is retired and suffers from
breast cancer, once had to accompany Gloria to the supermarket. Amelia
left her there to shop, but then came back because she feared Gloria
wouldn't be able to make it home. "And I was in the same spot where she
left me," Gloria says. "So she just took the bags. And I said, 'Oh,
man, I can't believe this is happening to me.' ... I should be the one
that's helping her."
At night Gloria cloisters herself in her room and puts on some gospel
music. Her stern mask falls away, and her eyes, habitually slit with
pain, relax. Gospel does that. "Why you playing the same song over and
over?" her son Stephen asks, exasperated. Gloria just ignores him. She
feels good when the music is playing. She feels like herself again. She
remembers how much she loves her children, how much she wants to be
there for them in the years to come.
The frustration dissipates. But following behind, always, is regret. If
she does not have that fury to propel her forward, onward, then her
memories pull her back -- to bad decisions, to failed relationships, to
lost friends. The children -- where did she go wrong with them? Why are
they so unruly and argumentative? "Was it my fault?" she asks herself.
"Did I do this right? Did I do that right? Could I have done it better?"
But it's no use. "Sometimes I just think that no matter what I do, it's
not enough. It's just not enough."
Much attention has been paid -- justifiably so -- to the plight of
uninsured Americans, who numbered more than forty-six million in 2006,
a disproportionate number of them poor or near poor. Recent studies
have also examined the predicament of working families saddled with
responsibilities for caring for sick children and elderly parents. But
what happens when the working caregiver becomes the sick patient? The
story of Gloria Hall is the story of many Missing Class Americans who
find their lives, in public health expert Jody Heymann's apt phrase,
"predictably unpredictable." They may be fortunate enough to have
health insurance and decent-paying jobs, but once illness strikes their
households, uncertainty and anxiety set in. There is, in the forefront,
the frightening prospect of impending death or physical disability. But
there is also the psychological trauma of greatly diminished abilities
and the fear of no longer being able to provide for loved ones -- fear
that can express itself in depression, anger, or both, as Gloria Hall
has discovered.
Gloria had health insurance from her job as an officer in the city's
health department police, where she worked the night shift out of one
of their Brooklyn facilities. The job was a good one -- public sector,
with plenty of benefits and a decent pension if she stayed long enough.
With that reliable paycheck, Gloria rose beyond her family's humble
beginnings in Panama and said a final good-bye to her days as a
low-wage worker in New York. But the job's health coverage, she soon
learned, was less than adequate. For one thing, her cancer remained
undetected for years because her doctors didn't listen to her and her
HMO refused at first to pay for a test.
Gloria had started complaining to her doctor in 1989. "I feel like
something is growing in my chest," she told him. One X-ray showed an
abnormality. "Maybe you didn't hold your breath," the hospital staff
told her. This state of affairs went on, with Gloria insisting there
was something wrong and the physicians doubting her. Finally, a
physician's assistant told her, "Either you're crazy or something is
really physically [wrong with you]. I'm going to set you up for this
test." The results of the CAT scan did not look good. Gloria needed an
MRI, they said. Yet Gloria's insurer wouldn't pay for it.
Finally, after some wrangling, the MRI was done, and in 1993 Gloria was
diagnosed with thymoma. Chemotherapy treatments sent the cancer into
remission but damaged her heart.
The next round of problems cropped up when Gloria's doctor told her
that her chances would improve if she could see doctors who specialized
in this unusual form of cancer and recommended she visit Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, a world-class cancer treatment and
research center in Manhattan. Her HMO refused to pay for it. "The only
time they approve [it] is like when somebody's dying already," Gloria
says. "When it's too late, that's when they'll approve." Gloria dropped
her HMO and got on Medicaid, the government's health insurance for the
poor. Sloan-Kettering accepted Medicaid.
Like many working Americans faced with life-altering illnesses, Gloria
was learning the limits of the nation's health-care system. Yes, she
was insured, but only weakly so. Unlike many Americans, Gloria was a
member of a union. Even so, she lacked the generous health benefits
enjoyed by the nation's wealthier workers, who can command such
largesse. Her health insurance didn't want to pay for expensive
diagnostic tests. It didn't want to pay for a state-of-the-art
treatment center. Fortunately for Gloria, she was quickly descending
into the ranks of the poor and publicly insured. Once she was too sick
to work, she began to live on monthly SSI payments of $768 and child
support of $500. The low income meant that Gloria now qualified for
Medicaid.
After her cancer was diagnosed, Gloria became a regular visitor to the
Brooklyn Hospital Center, what she calls her "home away from home," a
nonprofit teaching hospital a short distance from her apartment in Fort
Greene. She liked her doctor, an Indian man who was a pulmonary
specialist. When the doctor learned Gloria didn't have a prescription
drug plan, he handed her several dozen samples of heart medication -- a
costly drug -- so she wouldn't go without it. Gloria's other
interactions at the hospital, however, left a lot to be desired.
Emergency-room doctors had no bedside manners. (It didn't help that
many of them had never heard of thymoma, a rare cancer seen mainly in
populations from tropical areas; one doctor confessed she didn't even
know how to spell it.) The nurses, with some exceptions, tried her
patience. It pained Gloria to hear elderly patients crying out in pain,
only to be ignored. "Unbelievable," Gloria says. "My sister went there
once, and she called and called. Nobody paid any attention. She had to
[urinate] on herself." Meanwhile, the hospital technicians, many of
them Russian immigrants, were hurried and brusque. Do they dislike
black people? she wondered.
What Gloria encountered at Brooklyn Hospital Center will fail to shock
anyone familiar with the grim frontlines of America's health-care
system, where chronically understaffed hospitals struggle to serve low
income communities. Patients often receive half-hearted bedside
attention from physicians and other hospital staff, even when they are
-- like Gloria -- insured. The treatment they are given telegraphs a
message: You think you deserve better? Guess what? You don't. True, the
care at Brooklyn Hospital Center was better than nothing -- it sure
beat waiting in the emergency room for hours for someone to treat her
-- but sometimes, after hours of being shuttled from one surly hospital
worker to another, Gloria felt like she was being treated in a
destitute Latin American country again, rather than in the world's
richest nation.
B) 2007 Independent Media Institute.
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