- Playing
- HUMANKIND: Universal Health Care
- From
- David Freudberg
A human profile and an important perspective on the ongoing debate over health care reform. Dr. Steffi Woolhandler and Dr. David Himmelstein lead a campaign by doctors to reform health care which they see as needlessly expensive and corrupt. Together they founded Physicians for a National Health Program in 1987 which aims for a system where everyone is covered. They decry the soaring costs of health care – and how that hurts poor people who are uninsured -- and many in the middle class who are under-insured. The doctors pull no punches in describing what they see as enormous waste and unconscionable greed in health care expenditures. The second segment features American doctors who have visited other nations to learn of workable alternative systems.
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Piece Description
A human profile and an important perspective on the ongoing debate over health care reform. Dr. Steffi Woolhandler and Dr. David Himmelstein lead a campaign by doctors to reform health care which they see as needlessly expensive and corrupt. Together they founded Physicians for a National Health Program in 1987 which aims for a system where everyone is covered. They decry the soaring costs of health care – and how that hurts poor people who are uninsured -- and many in the middle class who are under-insured. The doctors pull no punches in describing what they see as enormous waste and unconscionable greed in health care expenditures. The second segment features American doctors who have visited other nations to learn of workable alternative systems.
2 Comments
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Powerful, vital program.This program should be broadcast until every American hears it. |
Timing and Cues
FORMAT DETAILS
***For stations preferring to air this as a FULL-HOUR program:
The end of the first 29-minute segment flows into a billboard for the second half-hour, concluding with the phrase, "when Humankind continues in a moment." This is followed immediately by a :30 music bed for local ID, etc. The bed begins at 29:30. Second half of the program begins at 30:00 and concludes at 58:55 with the PRI audio logo.
***For stations preferring to air it as two HALF-HOUR segments:
Each half-hour segment can be aired as a stand-alone program. Stations are entitled to air either or both half-hours. The first half-hour runs 29:00 and concludes with "PRI, Public Radio International". The second segment is a 1-minute billboard of which the last thirty seconds are a music bed for local ID. The third segment contains the final half-hour and runs 28:55, concluding with the PRI audio logo.
RIGHTS: any half-hour segment of Humankind must be aired in its entirety; no excerpting is permitted. Stations may stream the program on their website simultaneous with radio broadcast. Questions? Please contact David Freudberg at
dfreudberg@humanmedia.org
phone: 617-489-5130
Intro and Outro
INTRO:Segment 1 "Support for this program..."
Segment 2 music fade in
Segment 3 "Support for this prpgram..."
Segment 1 "...radio international."
Segment 2 piano flourish
Segment 3 Pri Audio Logo





Rekha Murthy
Posted on December 12, 2009 at 11:19 AM | Permalink
An excellent, multidimensional survey of our healthcare problems.
For anyone who doesn't understand what all the fuss is over healthcare, have them listen to this. The two doctors who are interviewed are clear and passionate - though they remain calm, you can hear the anger and frustration in their voices, which adds to the power of what they're saying. My father has been a doctor for 45 years; my mother has managed his practice for much of that time. I can relate when the doctors say their children get to hear their frustrations all the time. I did, too, and this interview supports so much of what I heard.
When people talk about waste and corruption in the system, they generally focus on the exorbitant cost of unnecessary procedures, as did the doctors here. There's also the cost of missed time from work, and the human cost - even a "minor" procedure can cause anxiety, pain/discomfort, and time to recover. While that was implied or mentioned throughout, I wouldn't have minded it being more explicit. But that's a minor quibble with an otherwise powerful program.