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So, health insurance is in the news. And so is Americans' feelings about it. I got to wondering how we ended up with this terrible health insurance system in the United States. I uncovered a fascinating story about the marketing campaign that sunk Truman's national health insurance program in the 1940s. I also discovered some interesting parallels to popular marketing messages among today's influencers, gurus, and marketers.
Today's episode is a little trip through history that will hopefully put some of our current issues in perspective.
Footnotes:
- Gallup's survey data on healthcare
- "The Lie Factory" by Jill Lepore, in The New Yorker
- Interview with Leone Baxter in the American Archive of Public Broadcasting
- "Campaigns, Inc." via the California State Archives
- "The deprofessionalization of medicine. Causes, effects, and responses." by RR Reed and D Evans
- "Professional Identity Misformation and Burnout: A Call for Graduate Medical Education to Reject “Provider” by Deborah Ehrlich and Joseph Gravel
- "White Privilege and Professionalization: A Decolonial and Critical Feminist Perspective on Professional Nursing" by Natalie Stake-Doucet
- "Why Doesn’t the United States Have National Health Insurance? The Role of the American Medical Association" by Marcella Alsan and Yousra Neberai
- "Oli London & the Right Wing Grift" by Matt Bernstein
Find an essay version of this episode at whatworks.fyi!
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