Striking Kaiser nurses back bill requiring health plans that receive state subsidies to disclose investments
Briefly

Striking Kaiser nurses back bill requiring health plans that receive state subsidies to disclose investments
"On Tuesday, California State Assemblymember Liz Ortega (D-San Leandro) introduced AB 1799, a bill that would require nonprofit health plans that receive significant state subsidies like Kaiser Permanente to disclose direct and indirect investments, including holdings tied to for-profit prisons and immigrant detention corporations. Nonprofit health care plans benefit from public subsidies and taxpayer support because of their obligation to put patients and community health first, a statement by United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals said."
"Californians pay premiums and fund Medi-Cal and other public programs, and they deserve to have confidence that their dollars are being used to improve care, expand access, and strengthen safety nets not quietly routed through investment portfolios in ways that undermine public health and harm the very communities these nonprofits are meant to serve."
"We came to Kaiser dreaming of healing patients, supporting families, and being there in the hardest moments of people's lives, said Iris Henderson, a registered nurse at Kaiser Panorama City. What we didn't dream about was being exhausted, burned out, misused, and disrespected working unsafe shifts, filing thousands of staffing reports, and watching preventable crises happen every single day."
United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals continue an Unfair Labor Practice strike against Kaiser Permanente for the third week. California Assemblymember Liz Ortega introduced AB 1799 to require nonprofit health plans that receive significant state subsidies to disclose direct and indirect investments, including holdings tied to for-profit prisons and immigrant detention corporations. Nonprofit health plans receive public subsidies and taxpayer support and have an obligation to prioritize patients and community health. Californians pay premiums and fund public programs and deserve assurance that dollars strengthen care and safety nets rather than support investments that harm public health. Nurses report exhaustion, burnout, unsafe shifts, and frequent preventable crises.
Read at www.timesheraldonline.com
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