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Partners in Health & Wholeness

Partners in Health & Wholeness

An initiative of the NC Council of Churches

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Healthcare Reform

Better Choices, Better Health

May 12, 2011 By Willona Stallings, Former Program Coordinator – Partners in Health & Wholeness

Our friends at the Living Healthy Chronic Disease Self Management Program (CDSMP) would like to invite members of your congregation to take advantage of their FREE online workshop – Better Choices, Better Health™ – which is designed to help individuals self-manage their chronic conditions (e.g., diabetes, arthritis, high blood pressure, chronic pain, anxiety, etc.). Specifically, the workshop can help you and the people you care about

Better Choices, Better Health

May 12, 2011 · by Willona Stallings, Former Program Coordinator – Partners in Health & Wholeness

Our friends at the Living Healthy Chronic Disease Self Management Program (CDSMP) would like to invite members of your congregation to take advantage of their FREE online workshop – Better Choices, Better Health™ – which is designed to help individuals self-manage their chronic conditions (e.g., diabetes, arthritis, high blood pressure, chronic pain, anxiety, etc.). Specifically, the workshop can help you and the people you care about

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Health, Healthcare Reform

Raleigh Report – April 26, 2011

April 28, 2011 By Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

State Deadline Passes and Most New Bills Introduced

Raleigh Report – April 26, 2011

April 28, 2011 · by Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

State Deadline Passes and Most New Bills Introduced

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Children & Youth, Criminal Justice, Environment, Good Government, Gun Violence, Health, Healthcare Reform, Human Rights, Immigration, Public Education

Raleigh Report – April 4, 2011

April 4, 2011 By Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

The drumbeat of bad bills continues. Suffice it to say that it’s a tough year for those of us who have advocated for public policy decisions promoting social justice, protecting vulnerable people, and caring for God’s creation. We can’t respond to every bad idea or bad bill. On many of these issues, we feel like we are butting our heads against a wall. Our tendency may be to throw up our hands in despair.

Raleigh Report – April 4, 2011

April 4, 2011 · by Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

The drumbeat of bad bills continues. Suffice it to say that it’s a tough year for those of us who have advocated for public policy decisions promoting social justice, protecting vulnerable people, and caring for God’s creation. We can’t respond to every bad idea or bad bill. On many of these issues, we feel like we are butting our heads against a wall. Our tendency may be to throw up our hands in despair.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Children & Youth, Environment, Equality & Reconciliation, Farmworkers, Good Government, Gun Violence, Health, Healthcare Reform, Immigration, LGBTQ, People with Disabilities, Rural Life

Raleigh Report – March 21, 2011

March 23, 2011 By Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

New bills on the budget, care of creation, criminal justice, election and campaign law, gambling, guns, health and health care, immigration, mental health, developmental disabilities, substance abuse services, public eduction, and taxes.

Raleigh Report – March 21, 2011

March 23, 2011 · by Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

New bills on the budget, care of creation, criminal justice, election and campaign law, gambling, guns, health and health care, immigration, mental health, developmental disabilities, substance abuse services, public eduction, and taxes.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Criminal Justice, Death Penalty, Environment, Farmworkers, Good Government, Gun Violence, Health, Healthcare Reform, Immigration, Mental Health, People with Disabilities, Public Education, Substance Abuse

Raleigh Report – March 7, 2011

March 17, 2011 By Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

Governor Bev Perdue on Saturday vetoed H 2, the misnamed “Protect Health Care Freedom” bill. (It should be called the “Freedom to be Uninsured and Unable to Get Health Care” bill.) The bill was an attack on federal health care reform and purported to remove North Carolinians from the mandated purchase of health insurance, which is the basis of federal reform which will move millions of uninsured Americans into the ranks of the insured.

Raleigh Report – March 7, 2011

March 17, 2011 · by Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

Governor Bev Perdue on Saturday vetoed H 2, the misnamed “Protect Health Care Freedom” bill. (It should be called the “Freedom to be Uninsured and Unable to Get Health Care” bill.) The bill was an attack on federal health care reform and purported to remove North Carolinians from the mandated purchase of health insurance, which is the basis of federal reform which will move millions of uninsured Americans into the ranks of the insured.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Children & Youth, Farmworkers, Good Government, Gun Violence, Health, Healthcare Reform, Immigration, Public Education, Rural Life, State Budget

Raleigh Report – February 18, 2011

February 22, 2011 By Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

Health Benefit Exchange Bills Introduced; Other New Bills; Updates on already introduced bills.

Raleigh Report – February 18, 2011

February 22, 2011 · by Rose Gurkin, Former Program Associate for Administration

Health Benefit Exchange Bills Introduced; Other New Bills; Updates on already introduced bills.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Environment, Good Government, Gun Violence, Health, Healthcare Reform

As We Enter A New Year

January 4, 2011 By Aleta Payne, Former Deputy Executive Director

Friends, We look ahead to 2011 knowing we face many challenges and that our commitment to the work we believe in must be fortified and renewed. The environment in which […]

As We Enter A New Year

January 4, 2011 · by Aleta Payne, Former Deputy Executive Director

Friends, We look ahead to 2011 knowing we face many challenges and that our commitment to the work we believe in must be fortified and renewed. The environment in which […]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Children & Youth, Civil Discourse, Economic Justice, Environment, Farmworkers, Good Government, Health, Healthcare Reform, Immigration, Public Education, Religion & Society

Moving Forward with the NCCC

December 2, 2010 By Aleta Payne, Former Deputy Executive Director

As December begins, we make the transition from a time of thanksgiving to a season of anticipation. The Council has much to be grateful for this year. Talented and dynamic […]

Moving Forward with the NCCC

December 2, 2010 · by Aleta Payne, Former Deputy Executive Director

As December begins, we make the transition from a time of thanksgiving to a season of anticipation. The Council has much to be grateful for this year. Talented and dynamic […]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Christian Unity, Environment, Farmworkers, Health, Healthcare Reform, Peace, State Budget

Health Disparities: A Moral Issue

August 2, 2010 By Willona Stallings, Former Program Coordinator – Partners in Health & Wholeness

Disparities in health often mean earlier death and increased morbidity for one group of people versus another.  Groups can be defined by race, ethnicity, age, sex, disability status, geography (urban […]

Health Disparities: A Moral Issue

August 2, 2010 · by Willona Stallings, Former Program Coordinator – Partners in Health & Wholeness

Disparities in health often mean earlier death and increased morbidity for one group of people versus another.  Groups can be defined by race, ethnicity, age, sex, disability status, geography (urban […]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Health, Healthcare Reform, Race/Ethnicity

Justice, rights, faith

March 24, 2010 By Chris Pernell, Director, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Raleigh News & Observer

As followers of Jesus Christ, a healer known as the Great Physician, as believers in a God who loves and cares for all of his children equally, we at the N.C. Council of Churches are profoundly grateful for passage of health care reform legislation by the U.S. House of Representatives.

Justice, rights, faith

March 24, 2010 · by Chris Pernell, Director, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Raleigh News & Observer

As followers of Jesus Christ, a healer known as the Great Physician, as believers in a God who loves and cares for all of his children equally, we at the N.C. Council of Churches are profoundly grateful for passage of health care reform legislation by the U.S. House of Representatives.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Health, Healthcare Reform

Russell: Faith groups back universal care

March 9, 2010 By Chris Pernell, Director, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Durham Herald-Sun

Opinion: Many of the noisy detractors who rail against universal access to affordable health care are the same folks who loudly proclaim a pious faith and claim ethical superiority on other issues. Maybe they should listen to other religious voices on faith and ethics, voices of those who spend their lives studying the scriptures and serving people seriously impacted by our current health-care system.

Russell: Faith groups back universal care

March 9, 2010 · by Chris Pernell, Director, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Durham Herald-Sun

Opinion: Many of the noisy detractors who rail against universal access to affordable health care are the same folks who loudly proclaim a pious faith and claim ethical superiority on other issues. Maybe they should listen to other religious voices on faith and ethics, voices of those who spend their lives studying the scriptures and serving people seriously impacted by our current health-care system.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Health, Healthcare Reform

No Joy For You

October 16, 2009 By Chris Pernell, Director, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Rev. Deborah Patterson

Babylonian captivity. I believe we are there again, both literally and figuratively. We are literally in Babylon as American troops serve in an unending war in Iraq, the new name for that land. And, working with parish nurses, daily I hear stories which attest that we are figuratively being held captive by a health system that excludes millions, bankrupts millions, and keeps millions in jobs they despise but need for health insurance. Doctors are held captive by reimbursement plans that penalize them for spending more than 7 or 8 minutes with patients. Nurses are held captive by staffing patterns that keep them working longer shifts, with more and sicker and patients to care for. Churches are being held captive by health insurance costs that prevent them from being able to call full-time pastors.

No Joy For You

October 16, 2009 · by Chris Pernell, Director, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Rev. Deborah Patterson

Babylonian captivity. I believe we are there again, both literally and figuratively. We are literally in Babylon as American troops serve in an unending war in Iraq, the new name for that land. And, working with parish nurses, daily I hear stories which attest that we are figuratively being held captive by a health system that excludes millions, bankrupts millions, and keeps millions in jobs they despise but need for health insurance. Doctors are held captive by reimbursement plans that penalize them for spending more than 7 or 8 minutes with patients. Nurses are held captive by staffing patterns that keep them working longer shifts, with more and sicker and patients to care for. Churches are being held captive by health insurance costs that prevent them from being able to call full-time pastors.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Health, Healthcare Reform

Don’t You Care?

June 21, 2009 By Chris Pernell, Director, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Rev. Cliff Frasier, First Congregational Church, UCC (Washington, D.C.)

In the policy-making reform-world, we may talk about health care as a “right.” In the economic world we may talk about health care as a cost or even as a profit. [“p-r-o-f-i-t]. In the health-care-delivery world, the social-work-world, we may talk about health care as a need. But in our faith world, let us also talk about health care as a responsibility. As a moral responsibility. To care for God’s creation -- for ourselves, for each other. Let us talk about not-providing-health-care as a failure in the realm of moral-responsibility. In other words, to the degree we allow within moral reasoning the category of . . . . “sin” . . . let us allow the failure to provide healthcare to be understood in just that way.

Don’t You Care?

June 21, 2009 · by Chris Pernell, Director, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Rev. Cliff Frasier, First Congregational Church, UCC (Washington, D.C.)

In the policy-making reform-world, we may talk about health care as a “right.” In the economic world we may talk about health care as a cost or even as a profit. [“p-r-o-f-i-t]. In the health-care-delivery world, the social-work-world, we may talk about health care as a need. But in our faith world, let us also talk about health care as a responsibility. As a moral responsibility. To care for God’s creation — for ourselves, for each other. Let us talk about not-providing-health-care as a failure in the realm of moral-responsibility. In other words, to the degree we allow within moral reasoning the category of . . . . “sin” . . . let us allow the failure to provide healthcare to be understood in just that way.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Health, Healthcare Reform

A Policy Statement on Health Care

January 11, 1997 By North Carolina Council of Churches

Four years ago, the Council of Churches issued a policy statement on health care that expressed concern about the large number of North Carolinians without adequate health insurance and about the high and increasing cost of health care. Our concern is especially great for those most vulnerable in our society: the poor, children, people of color, and the elderly. At that time, we called for a national health plan that would guarantee universal coverage for health care, coupled with effective cost control, broad-based and equitable financing, and assured quality of services.

A Policy Statement on Health Care

January 11, 1997 · by North Carolina Council of Churches

Four years ago, the Council of Churches issued a policy statement on health care that expressed concern about the large number of North Carolinians without adequate health insurance and about the high and increasing cost of health care. Our concern is especially great for those most vulnerable in our society: the poor, children, people of color, and the elderly. At that time, we called for a national health plan that would guarantee universal coverage for health care, coupled with effective cost control, broad-based and equitable financing, and assured quality of services.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Health, Healthcare Reform

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27 Horne St.
Raleigh, NC 27607
(919) 828-6501
info@ncchurches.org

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