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Why California women of color need universal health care [calmatters.org]

 

A mother holds her child in her apartment in Redding on Sept. 20, 2022. Photo by Larry Valenzuela, CalMatters/CatchLight Local

By Indira D'Souza, Cal Matters, March 15, 2023

Addressing racial and economic inequality in California requires policies that improve the material circumstances of those groups in our society who face the greatest hardship. One such group is women of color, and one such policy would be the introduction of universal health care coverage.

The experiences of women of color are highly racialized and tied to the institutional legacies of American slavery, Jim Crow and discriminatory social policies that limit their access to benefits and incarcerate them at higher rates.

Women of color are also subject to disparities when it comes to health care. For example, infant mortality rates are highest for African-American women across all education levels. As annual pregnancy-related deaths increase across the U.S., it is low-income, minority women who face the highest maternal mortality rates.

[Please click here to read more.]

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While people of color are harmed more, all America (or at least 85%) is under insured. Our medical system is largely privatized on a commercial market model designed to suck money from those that can pay and from taxpayers and do just enough for everyone else to keep them from dying on the streets. (Even this goal failed during the first months of COVID.) Medical services are a huge corporate profit center. Caring has nothing to do with it.

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