{"id":8219,"date":"2015-12-17T11:00:18","date_gmt":"2015-12-17T16:00:18","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=8219"},"modified":"2019-04-01T11:02:29","modified_gmt":"2019-04-01T15:02:29","slug":"u-s-womens-movements-and-health-care-reform-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2015\/12\/17\/u-s-womens-movements-and-health-care-reform-2\/","title":{"rendered":"U.S. Women\u2019s Movements and Health Care Reform"},"content":{"rendered":"

Circulating Now welcomes guest blogger Beatrix Hoffman<\/a>. Dr. Hoffman is Professor of History at Northern Illinois University and guest curator of NLM\u2019s most recent exhibition, For All the People: A Century of Citizen Action in Health Care Reform<\/a><\/em>.\u00a0 With the extension to open enrollment at HealthCare.gov<\/a> in the news, <\/i>here is the first of two posts<\/a> exploring key themes from the exhibition.<\/em><\/p>\n

Feminist activists and women\u2019s organizations have been involved in health care reform debates in the U.S. for over a century. While the struggle for reproductive rights is the most familiar part of this history, women have also advocated for other fundamental changes<\/a> in the health care system, including maternity protection, preventive medicine and primary care, home care, and racial equality.<\/p>\n

In 1893, nurse activists Lillian Wald and Mary Brewster founded the Henry Street Visiting Nurse Service in New York City. Wald, through her passionate writings and speeches, insisted that poverty and sickness were connected problems. The Visiting Nurse Service provided free or low-cost nursing care to the poor and immigrant population of the surrounding neighborhoods, and continues to exist today. Wald was also a leader of the women\u2019s suffrage movement, whose first legislative victory after winning the vote in 1920 was the creation of the Sheppard-Towner Act to provide health education and home nursing to poor and rural mothers and babies. (Unfortunately, Congress cancelled the program in 1929).<\/p>\n