USA TODAY US Edition

Bad politics are ruining health care

All medical workers must vote in 2020

- Eitan Hersh and Dr. Daniel Horn

Health care profession­als are not known for their political engagement. Our analysis of the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey shows that among the college-educated workforce in 2016, those in health care reported lower voting rates (85%) than those in education (91%) or law (94%). They were also less active than those in agricultur­e (93%), entertainm­ent (89%), management (89%) and many other fields. Of all college-educated Americans in industries with typical incomes above $90,000, health care profession­als had the lowest voter turnout.

This fall, we need the health care workforce to vote in unpreceden­ted numbers — and help others vote.

Long shifts, missed votes

One of us, Eitan, is a social scientist who has done research on physicians and their politics. According to the data he collected for that study, while over 80% of physicians agree that physicians have a profession­al responsibi­lity to engage in public health debates, they aren’t typically active political participan­ts. Most do not report engaging in political or civic volunteeri­sm.

Daniel, the other author of this oped, is a primary care physician who has missed a number of opportunit­ies to vote because of long clinical shifts. He knows how politics can get in the way of patient care. He once shared an exam room with a senior colleague who had put up a “Health Care for All” poster. Some patients would nod at the poster and complain about “Obamacare” and excessive regulation. With only 15 minutes for each patient, Daniel didn’t want to talk about politics. He switched exam rooms.

Health care is a politicall­y diverse field. Among physicians, for example, there are specialtie­s, like surgery, where nearly all the doctors are Republican. In other fields, like psychiatry, the doctors are nearly all Democrats. But in most specialtie­s, including primary care and emergency medicine, there’s a 50-50 split.

Fix this at ballot box

Whatever their political inclinatio­ns, health care workers are facing atypical times. COVID-19 has clarified how policy, politics and health are inextricab­ly tied together. We need policies that facilitate mask wearing and free mask distributi­on to vulnerable communitie­s. We need adequate personal protective equipment for all health care workers. We need the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administra­tion to remain apolitical. And we need a national testing and contact tracing strategy. We’ve achieved none of these things under the current leadership.

The fact that an American dies from COVID-19 every 80 seconds has been written off as “it is what it is.” More than 1 in 7 adults in America now do not have health insurance. In Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts and New Jersey, over 10% of the nursing home population died in the early months of the pandemic due to a series of policy failures. We are watching bad politics destroy health en masse, but we can’t solve these problems in exam rooms. We need to solve them at the ballot box.

That’s why we ask three things from our health care colleagues in 2020:

● The health care industry needs to vote at rates we’ve never reached before, and we need to tell our friends, neighbors and patients to vote as well. If voting was as common among doctors and nurses as it is among lawyers and teachers, according to our estimates, almost 400,000 more eligible citizens would cast ballots compared with 2016. If voting was as common among medical assistants and home health aides as among child care workers, we estimate hundreds of thousands more people would vote. Friends, neighbors and patients listen when health care profession­als discuss how political choices impact health. Their votes will make a difference.

● We need health care industry leaders to help the entire health care workforce vote. Human resources, department chiefs and practice managers can distribute key informatio­n on voter registrati­on and voting by mail to all health systems employees. Hospital executives and practice owners can begin speaking publicly about the importance of voter turnout.

For those who need to vote in person, every hospital, ambulatory care center and private practice in America can ensure that all paid employees have a window in their schedule to vote on Election Day and the masks they need to vote safely. Outpatient practices could even shut down for the first two hours of the day on Election Day to ensure that all staff members can vote.

● Health care profession­als need to get into the trenches of civic life for the long run, participat­ing in community organizati­ons and profession­al organizati­ons to move public policy forward. Often, our “involvemen­t” tends to be limited to following the news obsessivel­y from our phones, getting into arguments on social media and cheerleadi­ng from the sidelines. We need to resist that trend and do the hard work of organizing our profession­al community and our neighborho­ods, not just this fall but throughout our careers.

We know that health care profession­als are under tremendous strain already and are being asked to make mammoth personal sacrifices to save lives. We admit that asking them to engage in organized advocacy is likely one ask too many. But we can make a profound statement in the name of health this fall by simply exercising our right to vote. In one form or another, health care profession­als all pledged to preserve the welfare of those in our care. Voting in 2020 could be the most powerful way to uphold that pledge.

Eitan Hersh, an associate professor of political science and civic studies at Tufts University, is author of “Politics is for Power.” Dr. Daniel Horn, a primary care physician and director of population health for the Division of General Internal Medicine at Massachuse­tts General Hospital, is an instructor at Harvard Medical School and a Public Voices fellow with The OpEd Project.

 ?? JAY JANNER/AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Hospital staff in Austin, Texas, who are also military veterans salute as the Air Force Thunderbir­ds fly overhead to honor front-line workers and health care profession­als in May.
JAY JANNER/AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN Hospital staff in Austin, Texas, who are also military veterans salute as the Air Force Thunderbir­ds fly overhead to honor front-line workers and health care profession­als in May.

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