County: Life, Death and Politics at Chicago’s Public Hospital

Published by: David Ansell on 7/6/2011 2:52:59 PM
 David Ansell

I wrote “County” (a memoir, social history of Cook County Hospital and a reflection on race, poverty and health care in America) because I am shocked by the gaps in health care that have only worsened in the past thirty years in the US. I wrote “County” because what keeps me up at night is the fact that African-American men on the south side of Chicago (it’s only slightly better in Detroit and Harlem) will die eight years earlier than a white man. And half of the premature deaths in these men are from heart disease and cancer- preventable and treatable. I wrote “County” because I am pained that African-American women in that city have twice the death rate from breast cancer than white women and it does not have to be. I wrote “County” because when one examines the problem of racial health disparity in America the chronic underfunding and lack of coordination of the public hospital and private safety net sector in the US is a clear contributing factor. I wrote “County” to make the case for a fair health care system, one that does not discriminate by race, ethnicity, insurance status or residence.

I went to Cook County Hospital as a 25 year old doctor-in-training to fight for the life and the rebuilding of this iconic public institution. It was a fight that brought young doctors and nurses head to head with a corrupt political establishment that would have preferred to have County close or remain in chronic dysfunction. In the course of this struggle we not only got a new hospital rebuilt, but developed a network of community health centers and innovative public health and treatment programs that became national models for the respectful delivery of care to the underserved. But it was not enough.

Despite these achievements, the chronic underfunding of our nation’s public hospitals and other safety net providers leave many out with disastrous health consequences. It’s just that the demand for services outstrips the capacity. I have come to believe that a system of care that sends the poor and uninsured to one set of institutions and the wealthy and insured to another is unfair, likely to provide unequal results and a contributing factor in the premature deaths our nation’s uninsured experience. Only a payment system such as “Medicare-for-all” that allows all US residents freedom to choose public or private institutions to receive their care has the chance to lessen the gaps between the insured and uninsured, rich and poor, white and non-whites.

“County” tells the story of young doctors like me who decided to take a stand for health equity by coming to this renowned public hospital and who stayed on to continue the fight for fairness that should have been available to patients as a simple condition of their humanity. I tell the story through my experiences, through the stories of my patients and through the stories of political fights and demonstrations for fair funding.

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David Ansell, MD, MPH is Chief Medical Officer at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago. From 1978 to 1995 he was a resident and attending physician in the Department of Internal Medicine at Cook County Hospital rising from intern to Chief of the Division of General Internal Medicine. He then served ten years as the Chairperson of the Department of Internal Medicine at Sinai Health Systems the largest private safety net provider in Chicago. Since 2008, he has served as a member of the Board of Directors of the Cook County Health and Hospital Systems.

Interested in more? Check out this NPR interview with Fresh Air's Terry Gross (includes a chapter from "County")

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  • I want to thank you David for writing about your experiences at Cook County. For those of us on the outside, it seems that the realities of Cook were actually much, much worse and even more challenging then we all imagined.

  • khawaja@uhc.edu
  • 7/20/2011 1:29:54 PM