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Cathy Levine leaving after 20 years with consumer health care group

Cathy Levine leaving after 20 years with consumer health care group

New UHCAN Ohio Board Member Profile: Susan Rogers Submitted by achenault on Wed, 02/17/2016 – 3:06pm

UHCAN Ohio is excited to welcome our four new board members! We’ll be profiling each of them in our newsletter so that you can get to know them.

Susan Rogers has been a leader in Southeastern Ohio for more than three decades. For 19 years, Susan has served as Director of RSVP of the Ohio Valley with the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development. Volunteers serving with RSVP tutor children, model parenting skills to teen parents, plan community gardens, and deliver meals.

Susan became involved with UHCAN Ohio through her work advocating for the people of Appalachia. “Living in a low-income area where many people struggle to have affordable health care, access is critically important to those we serve. We have seen families nearly bankrupted by health care costs; people go without care because of the costs; people having to travel great distances (that they can’t afford) to find top quality health care,” Susan said, explaining her interest in bringing attention to the needs of low-income Ohioans living in rural areas.

In addition to her work with UHCAN Ohio, Susan serves on the steering committee for Advocates for Ohio’s Future and as Board Chair of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction, & Mental Health Services. She has also previously served as Board Chair or President for numerous other organizations, including the Ohio Commission on Service and Volunteerism, the Ohio RSVP Association, and the Jackson County Board of Developmental Disabilities, among others. Susan’s extensive experience leading the boards of community organizations will be a valuable asset in her work with the board of UHCAN Ohio.

Please join UHCAN Ohio in welcoming Susan and thanking her for her commitment to helping UHCAN Ohio make health care work for all Ohioans!

Are You a Consumer?

Submitted by achenault on Wed, 04/06/2016 – 12:24pm
In any given day you consume any number of things – lunch, information, energy. But are you a “consumer”? I’m sure you’ve heard the term, but when you think about your health care, do you consider yourself a consumer?

For almost 20 years, UHCAN Ohio has been the voice of the consumer – people like you – advocating for affordable, accessible, and quality health care. UHCAN Ohio and advocates across the country use the word “consumer” to mean regular people: not doctors, insurance companies, or the government, but rather your neighbor, your child’s teacher, the person in your choir, or your brother who lost his job and insurance.

But when we say “consumer,” do you know we’re talking about you and that we want to hear your experiences so we can carry your voice to decision makers?

There are many associations and lobbyists that represent and protect the views of doctors, insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies, and all other interests in the health care system. If regular people like you are going to have a place at the health care decision-making table, we need to describe you in a way that aligns with how you think about yourself. So when we need to call on you for feedback on how affordable your health care costs are or to make a call to your senator, you know that we’re talking to you.

There are other words that speak to the personal nature of health, like “patient.” Typically, people use the word “patient” to describe the relationship they have with a doctor or nurse that cares for them. However, people don’t generally think of themselves as patients when they are healthy and working to keep themselves that way. How do you think of yourself when your diabetes is well controlled? Who are you when you are healthy but have a family history of early breast cancer? Who are you when you are deciding whether you can afford a visit to the doctor?

More commonly, you think of yourself as a parent, brother, or sister. But do you consider yourself a health care consumer?

Let me know how you would describe your role in the health care system. Do you consider yourself a consumer? Please send your thoughts to me at swagner@uhcanohio.org.