This is episode 48, “Covid and Racial Inequities.”
My guest, Susan Rogers, MD, FACP, is the president of Physicians for a National Health Program. She is recently retired, but continues helping people as a volunteer attending hospitalist and internist at the John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County, Illinois. She is an assistant professor of medicine at Rush University, and previously was the co-director of medical student programs for the Department of Medicine at Stroger Hospital. She has received numerous teaching awards from Stroger Hospital and Rush University.
Dr. Rogers is a member and Fellow of the American College of Physicians (FACP), a member of the Society of General Internal Medicine and the National Medical Association.
Do not miss this episode as Dr. Rogers describes the racial inequities revealed by the pandemic in our current healthcare system and what can be done to address them.
Public Option, Unions, Obligation, Part 1
A Local Resolution Supporting Medicare For All
The U.S. Pandemic Response and How to Improve It
Medicaid Is Helpful; Medicare for All Would Be Better
Falling Back in Love With Clinical Practice
Why We Need the Medicare for All Act
Disaster Preparedness and COVID-19
State Level Medicare for All: Is It Possible?
Racism, Health Care, and Medicare for All
Join the Fight
How Medicare Integrated Hospitals
Health Inequality and Physical Structure
A Living Wage Home Cleaning Company and COVID-19
We don’t have a health care system in the United States
Racial Inequities: COVID-19 has essentially ripped the cover off of some of the deepest cracks in our current healthcare system
An Ongoing Issue: Drug Prices and Supplies Before and During the Pandemic
Patients Are Just Pawns in the Game
If There's an Argument for Medicare for All That Ought to Convince Everyone, It's This Epidemic
The Tremendous Good a Publicly Sponsored Insurance System Can Do
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