Call & Times

Doctors, hospitals launch voter drives

- By PHILIP MARCELO

BOSTON (AP) — An emergency room doctor in Boston is assembling thousands of voter registrati­on kits for distributi­on at hospitals and doctor’s offices.

Later this month, students at Harvard and Yale’s medical schools are planning a contest to see which of the Ivy League rivals can register the most voters.

And a Rhode Island physician has launched an effort to get emergency ballots into the hands of patients who find themselves unexpected­ly in the hospital around Election Day.

Amid the dual public health crises of COVID-19 and racism, some in the medical community are prescribin­g a somewhat nontraditi­onal remedy: voting.

Hospitals, doctors and healthcare institutio­ns across the country this month are committing to efforts to engage Americans in the election process as part of Civic Health Month, a nationwide campaign that kicked off Aug. 1.

Hospital networks in Arizona, Kansas, Missouri, Pennsylvan­ia, North Carolina, Wisconsin and elsewhere are among more than 60 institutio­ns participat­ing, along with thousands of individual physicians.

Benjamin Ruxin, a Stanford University graduate student who heads the campaign, said the coronaviru­s pandemic underscore­s the importance of ensuring everyone can vote and help shape healthcare policy for the challengin­g times ahead.

Voter registrati­on rates are down almost 70 in some states this election cycle because the traditiona­l ways of registerin­g voters have been curtailed by the pandemic, including DMVs and in-person registrati­on drives, he said.

Alister Martin, an emergency room doctor at Massachuse­tts General Hospital in Boston, said he founded

VotER to provide medical profession­als voter registrati­on resources after years of seeing patients struggling from the health consequenc­es of poverty, drug addiction, homelessne­ss and other social ills.

“We’ve been trained to solve these really complex health problems, but not everything we see can be treated with a prescripti­on,” he said. “The healthcare system does not work for vulnerable people ² full stop. We have to help them get involved in the political process if we hope to change any of this.”

The sheer number of organizati­ons and the range of efforts being proposed during the monthlong campaign shows that the medical community is increasing­ly shedding its reticence at civic engagement, said Kelly Wong, an emergency medicine resident at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.

Where prior generation­s may have seen the voter registrati­on and other nonpartisa­n election work as outside their purview or too overtly political, newer medical profession­als see civic engagement as a crucial part of “treating the whole patient,” she said.

Wong founded Patient Voting to get doctors and other hospital staff to commit to helping patients request, cast and submit emergency ballots when the time comes. The nearly three-year-old organizati­on’s website is also a repository of verified informatio­n about every state’s emergency ballot process.

Another effort, called Med Out the Vote, is focused on getting medical students registered to vote and encouragin­g them to organize voter registrati­on efforts on campus where possible.

Jonathan Kusner, a Harvard Medical School student who co-chairs the effort, said students at dozens of institutio­ns have expressed interest, with a number looking to host head-to-head voter registrati­on competitio­ns against rival schools.

Medical students at the 8niversity of North Carolina recently bested their counterpar­ts at Duke in a three-day contest that resulted in more than 500 total new voter registrati­ons and requests for mail ballots, he said. Harvard and

Martin, meanwhile, said VotER is struggling to keep up with more than 15,000 orders for its “Healthy Democracy Kits,” which include a badge and lanyard that doctors and other hospital staff can wear while on the job.

The badges have a 4R code that, when scanned by a person’s smartphone, will take them to TurboVote, an online tool that can guide them through the voter registrati­on process and send them reminders about election deadlines. A helpline is also available to field any questions, he said.

“We’re underwater and trying to get out these kits as fast as we can,” Martin said. “It’s a good problem to have, but at the same time, I wish this wasn’t something that had to be done. Being able to vote should be automatic for all citizens.”

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