Initiative: Healthier approach to spending
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Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- He sat on a folding metal chair, waiting to have his teeth
pulled and dentures installed in the standing room-only lobby of the
area’s lone free medical clinic, Share Our Selves.
With his back slightly hunched, 69-year-old Paul Dimmick sat quietly
among 40 other sniffling, sneezing and snoring patients as names were
called and children played in the aisles.
He said he didn’t mind the wait -- the procedure will allow him to chew
his food.
Since he retired as a computer engineer, he has been without health
insurance. A veteran of the Korean War, Dimmick receives free medical
treatment at a Veterans Affairs hospital, but “they don’t do dental
there,” he said. And his only source of income, a monthly $613 Social
Security check, wouldn’t come close to covering the $4,500 procedure.
“I need this place,” said Dimmick, who lives in Santa Ana Heights.
There are many, many more like Dimmick, but Share Our Selves is forced to
turn away nearly half of the uninsured patients seeking dental care
there, and nearly as many seeking treatment for chronic illnesses such as
diabetes and asthma, said Jean Forbath, the clinic’s director.
“We’re scrounging and struggling all the time for funding and more
volunteers,” Forbath said.
Countywide, demand is high for free or affordable health care. As many as
425,000 residents lack health care, according to the results of a survey
of 5,000 county residents released a year ago.
So she and dozens of other local health-care providers, advocates for the
poor, and community leaders and activists are urging the Orange County
Board of Supervisors to throw more money their way.
In November, the supervisors voted to spend most of an estimated $765
million the county received in a settlement with tobacco companies on
jails and paying debts. Representatives from Los Angeles and San Diego
counties voted to spend most of their shares on expanding health
programs.
None of the supervisors were available for comment Friday.
Next week, the activists will begin campaigning for a ballot initiative
calling for the county to spend 80% of the tobacco money on community
health centers and anti-smoking education.
Last month, a countywide coalition turned in more than 120,000 signatures
to the county Registrar of Voters -- 40,000 more than the amount required
to put the measure on the November ballot.
Health-care activists said they gathered the signatures after
negotiations with the board on how to spend the money failed.
“I know a lot of people don’t like ballot initiatives,” said Dennis
Clark, president of the board of directors of the Health Care Council of
Orange County, a coalition of health-care providers. “But we tried to
negotiate and there was no alternative.”
Supervisor Cynthia Coad announced Thursday that she had a new proposal,
offering half of the tobacco money for specified health programs. But
Clark said the negotiations are over, the signatures are in and voters
will decide in November how the money should be spent.
In the Share Our Selves waiting room, 67-year-old Ernesto Garcia, wearing
a frayed cowboy hat and read a tattered Western novel, said he would cast
his vote in favor of the measure.
Garcia visits the clinic each month for insulin treatments, which he
would otherwise be unable to afford.
“No money, no honey,” he said. “This clinic helps me so much.”
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