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Archive for November 18th, 2008

Trigger happy finger…

7:03 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · VivirLatino · No Comments

18 Nov 2008

Due to my trigger happy finger, I have accidentally deleted a whole page of comments that the lovely VLatin@ crowd have left here at VL recently. I think I got all the comments recovered except two–if you don’t see your comment posted and you have left one with the past three or four hours, please feel free to leave your comment again, and accept my apologies for deleting your original comment!

Much love,
La Macha

Texas and Florida Face Physican Shortages

2:12 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Health · No Comments

18 Nov 2008

doctors.jpgPointing to at least one reason why Latin@s are inclined to head in the direction of non-Western medicine, the Kaiser Foundation released a study detailing an extreme shortage of physicians in the Texas and Florida areas:

Access to care is a particularly “dire” issue for Hispanics, who have limited access to physicians because they are mostly employed by small businesses and are uninsured, the Express-News reports. Hispanics make up the largest group of uninsured people in Texas border cities. About 66% of Hispanic workers are employed by companies that provide employer-sponsored health insurance, Roland Angel, professor of sociology at the University of Texas-Austin, said. In comparison, more than 80% of blacks and whites have employer-sponsored health insurance (Poling, San Antonio Express-News, 11/14).

I wondered two things while reading this report. First, why are there scare quotes around “dire”? Is the situation not really “dire”? Is “dire” really just code word for “rolling eyes at stupid panicky brown people” (ala John McCain’s scare quotes around “health” when referencing women’s health exceptions for abortion)?

The second thing I wondered is why does the solution that many hospitals have found to this shortage problem seem to be a sort of scary “oh nos!” sort of scenario?

As Central Florida faces a physician shortage, some hospitals are recruiting physicians directly from Puerto Rico “because Puerto Rican doctors know Spanish” and “they are a good cultural fit for Metro Orlando,” which has a large Hispanic population, the Orlando Sentinel reports. According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, an estimated 455,592 Hispanics live in the area.

Jorge Lopez — president of Florida Emergency Physicians, who recruits physicians for the Florida Hospital System — has traveled many times to Puerto Rico to recruit physicians. He said, “What we try to do is identify those who have already decided to leave. And when we go, we’re lucky if we can recruit one or two because there are so many other hospitals competing for them.” He added, “They are very competent doctors with fantastic hands-on experience. They are American citizens and bilingual. It’s one of our favorite places to recruit”

After I finished reading this, I felt like screaming “oh nos, the ricans are stealing all our jobs!” Not sure why–there’s nothing implicitly anti-Latin@ in this passage. Maybe it’s just the way “dire” in quotes framed how I read the rest of the article.

What do you think? Are we all supposed to be scared to death of Latin@s stealing all the good jobs? Or does this article really care?

Latin@s Like Homeopathic Medicine

1:49 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Health · No Comments

18 Nov 2008

doctors.jpgIt was not a surprise to me to find out that Latin@s mesh very well with homeopathic medicine. I don’t know too many Chican@s out there who don’t have stories of their Abuela’s healing ear aches (or any other number of problems) with a little cigar smoke and deep prayers. And this article affirms that connection between home healing and ‘modern’ practices:

But Robinson’s philosophy of using herbs and natural cures is one that many people from Latin America are quick to embrace, said Ingrid Fallaque, Robinson’s translator and intermediary with the Hispanic community. Many Hispanics are familiar with natural remedies from their own countries and feel more safe using them than taking pills, said Fallaque, who is from Peru.

“When I talk to people, that’s the most important thing for them,” Fallaque said. “They grew up with it. Even my own mother used to give me herbs for everything.”

I love that there is this service available to working class Latin@s–where I live, homeopathic healing is something reserved almost exclusively for rich white folks. Nobody else can afford it.

But even as I am so glad to see this wonderful practice, it also kinda makes me mad–healing of this type didn’t just pop out of nowhere. It comes from our mothers and their mothers. Why are our mothers not recognized for the healers that they are (and I am speaking generally here, not of the woman that this story highlights)–specifically through monetary/economic recognition? Why is it that major companies (because believe me, homeopathic healing is a heeeuge business!) can ‘patent’ the knowledge of healing so that we are paying *them* for the knowledge that we supplied them with?

138923996_ed471b7c94.jpgWhen rescuing people from the proverbial sinking ship, it used to be women and children first. Pero, as we struggle to survive in the wounded battleship that is the United States, immigrant women and children are the first to be thrown overboard.

A study released last week by the Center for Public Policy Priorities (CPPP) found that:

…more than 43,000 undocumented, unaccompanied children have been mistreated while in custody and denied access to representation by Customs and Border Protection (Border Patrol) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and then transported home unsafely.

The treatment of children reported is downright criminal and abusive. Pero since they are “illegals”, “aliens” , and potential criminals they don’t deserve basics like water, food, or a blanket to keep warm.

In clear violation of international and U.S. child welfare standards, our interviews with the Mexican and Honduran children uncovered troubling claims of child abuse and maltreatment by U.S. Border Patrol officers, including:
• Inattention to repeated requests for medical attention;
• No access to water while in the border patrol station;
• Having to sleep on the floor without a blanket in a heavily air conditioned cell;
• Not being given any or enough food;
• Not being allowed to contact family;
• Being struck and knocked down by agents;
• Being handcuffed; and
• Being transported “like dogs,” in kennel like compartments.

Read more…

Cuz it’s cold outside and we need to move the caderas to keep warm.

Via / Remolacha

2008_11_hrcbho.jpgThat’s what the British newspaper the Guardian reports.

Hillary Clinton plans to accept the job of secretary of state offered by Barack Obama, who is reaching out to former rivals to build a broad coalition administration.

Read more…

superobamaworld.jpgIt was only a matter of time, pero someone took the time to create Super Obama World, a Mario Brothers lookalike game where Obama jumps on lipstick wearing pigs and gets super stylish power by eating apple pie.

I tried playing it for a little while pero was bored quickly.

Tell me what you think. Play Super Obama world.

Via / Boing Boing


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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.

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