4A - Wednesday, March 19, 2414 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Wednesday, March19, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MEGAN MCDONALD PETER SHAHIN and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. (Re)funding prenatal care Michigan should fund both roads and infant mortality prevention astweek,lawmakers approved asupplementalbudgetbillto allocate $215 million for improving Michigan roads. However, hidden in this bill is a clause that cuts funding for maternal-fetal medicine research-orperinatology-inhalf.Asastatewithaparticularlyhighinfant mortalityrate, Michiganshouldreworkthisbudgetarydecisionsothatroad conditions will still be improved but not at the expense of prenatal care. Moving toward community health I late January, my grandmother was hospitalized due to broken arm. But after the doctors saw her blood pressure wasn't at the correct level, it was discovered she needed heart a surgery. Now, halfway through March, she is DEREK finally able to WOLFE go home after spending the past seven weeks in the hospital and two rehabilitation facilities. However, she's leaving not because she's ready, but rather because her in-patient coverage has elapsed and the out-of-pocket cost - $130 a day - is exorbitant. But, this is no luxury hotel. She is cared for by underpaid and under- enthused nurses. Only half the facility is occupied and the food is atrocious. Dry chicken is served daily. No music is playingand asmile is hard to find. To put it simply, if I wasn't allowed to bring my dogs in to visit her, there'd be a severe deficiency in positive energy. There are certainly situations worse than hers, but health care doesn't have to be this way. Yes, being sick is painful, but the experience shouldn't be. For anyone. The patient. The nurse. The doctor. The administrator. The federal government has a goal of having 7 million health insurance signups by March 31 as part of the Affordable Care Act. As of March 1, that number stands at 4,242,325. I would be shocked if nearly 3 million Americans signed up in 30 days. Therefore, we have to ask ourselves why this is the case. Perhaps the lack of "care" in health care is why signingup for the ACA has been such a tough sell, especially for young Americans. While President Barack Obama's appearance on "Between Two Ferns" was hilarious, there is no escaping its desperate intent to reach the younger generation. So my first question is "What is there to look forward to?" What are we investing in? Why would anyone want to think proactively about a bad situation being made worse by inefficiencies? Not to mention, in the case of the most serious situations, most insurance plans don't even covereverything. It's expensive with health insurance or not, so the odds are worth playing. This is the case even though the United States spends more than 17 percent of its GDP on health care and it's only going up. Compare this to the approximately 11 percent that other industrial democracies spend. The 6-percent difference amounts to $1 trillion. Yet, I find it hard to believe the extra spending is justifiable. In fact, according to an article in the Huffington Post, Americans do not live longer than citizens of other countries whose healthcare expenditures are far less. That's cause for concern. What's also cause for concern is the ignorance of public figures. In response to U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on the March 10 episode of CNN's "Crossfire," former Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum said, "We've had guaranteed health care in this country for a long time. Anybody that shows up, whether you're a citizen or not, you come to a hospital and you need care, you get health care. So don't - don't say that people don't get health care." This is nothing to hang your hat on, Mr. Santorum. There are few things less efficient than having people show up at the hospital in only dire emergencies without any preventative medicine. Health care is an everyday process. Not just during emergencies with obvious symptoms. The system is too money-centric. Maintaining the function of my body should not be thought of as a business. We're talking about human life here, not the board game. In 2012, my dad had foot surgery. Afterwards, he requested a list of all the things they charged for. Turns out, they charge and keep track of literally everything, including 6-cent bandages. Sure, using a lot of bandages add up when doing thousands of surgeries a year, but nickel-and-diming patients just puts a bitter taste in their mouths. The sight of a $10,000 bill is overwhelming and no one should have to fear getting a necessary surgery because of the cost. That's just wrong. What unifies the democracies I spoke of previously is their universal healthcare system. It may not be perfect, but I feel confident in saying it's better for the country asa whole. Sure, this might mean longer waits for specialized care and doctors would be paid less, but I would bet that doubling down on preventative medicine by allowing everyone at the very least an annual physical would be highly beneficial. What it boils down to is that everyone deserves the health care that they require and should be able to receive it from professionals who are happy doing what they do in a positive work environment. Any avenue that would allow this to happen should be explored because as it stands, the ACA does not go far enough. Now, of course, the second half of the equation is not completely relying on the healthcare system to fix our problems. We need to invest in our ownhealth. However, Iwill let first lady Michelle Obama continue to share that message. I think it's for a good reason that this story and argument have been written time and time again. Implementing a more universal healthcare system is the solution that makes the most sense, whether that's in the form of a public option or total overhaul. We have to think rationally instead of maintaining a capitalism-or-bust mentality when it's simply not working. Because as I've learned from my grandmother and dad's situations, the status quo is insufficient and intimidating. It's time to move toward community health. We are the United States of America, after all. - Derek Wolfe can be reached at dewolfe@umich.edu. The legislature was praised by Republican Gov. Rick Snyder for "working together" in order to pass this bill. Yet concealed in the bill's political jargon, questionably earmarked road improvement funds and $7.2 million for improvements to National Guard armories, is an absurd reduction in funding for the National Institute of Health's Perinatology Research Branch at Detroit's Hutzel Hospital. This research branch is the NIH's only institution for improving the health of mothers and their babies. The funding reduction will deplete its previous subsidy from $7 million to less than $3.5 million. Since the federal government contributes two dollars for every one dollar that Michigan spends, this cut will result in a total loss of about $10.5 million. The branch has orchestrated groundbreaking research to improve the health of unborn infants - in 2010 they discovered a gel that drastically reduces premature births. Therefore, cutting the funding for this perinatology research will undoubtedly endanger the health of Michigan infants, as well as the robustness of this irreplaceable research branch. This year, road conditions appear to have taken greater precedence than our troubling infant mortality rate. About seven out of every 1,000 infants born in Michigan die before their first birthday, a number higher than the steadily declining national average of about six. Contrary to common belief, this isn't an issue particular to Detroit. Small rural counties also reported rates higherthanthe state average in 2009-2011. The lack of awareness and concern demonstrated by the Michigan legislature is disconcerting. This is a problem that should and must be at the forefront of Michigan's political agenda. Equally disturbing as the grave misallocation of state funding is the prevalence of secret agendas in the Michigan legislature. The legislature, in which Republicans currently hold a majority, shouldn't have the ability to surreptitiously push controversial changes within otherwise bipartisan legislation. Both parties need to communicate and work together in order to write proposals that will help all citizens inthestate - research thataids the prenatal health of mothers and infants must be prioritized. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Barry Belmont, Nivedita Karki, Jacob Karafa, Jordyn Kay, Kellie Halushka, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Allison Raeck, Linh Vu, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe MICAL HOLT AND TAYLOR JONES Putting the University on trial The little things in life Isee myself as a fairly habitual and organized person. I am quite fond of to-do lists. I make them multiple times a day, whether they're in my planner, on post-it notes or on anotepad. The most satisfying is checking something off at the end of a long day, knowing that I put in my hard work and it HARLEEN KAUR In 1970, the Black Action Movement won demands to end the racist climate on campus by taking the necessary actions to increase Black student enrollment to 10 percent by 1973 and significantly increase Latino@ student enrollment. For 40 years, our University has broken this promise. This discovery was the foundation for our decision to run with the Defend Affirmative Action Party for Central Student Government as representatives of the new student-led civil rights and immigrant rights movement growing on this campus and across the nation. We know we are not alone in our indignation. Many of you truly believe that as the leaders and best that we claim tobe, it's our duty to end any form of injustice. Since last fall, minority students - spearheaded by Black and Latin@ students - have been speaking louder and clearer than ever before about the hostile climate they face on this campus. In growing numbers, women students too are declaring that they are fed up with the extra burdens they face from sexual harassment and abuse. Arab and Muslim students are speaking out loudly and boldly against the racism and prejudice they face on this campus. We're sick and tired of being talked to death when we demand that the administration do something real to solve problems which have existed and been talked about for decades. We're sick and tired of the same methods the administration has used for more than 40 years to avoid really facing up to these problems: pious words, endless committees, token measures falling vastly short of what is needed, a few crumbs to co-opt a few leaders, intimidation of students who speak out and, of course, layers of bureaucracy to perpetuate the cycle of failure and cover-up. We're at a crucial time where our decisions will make history. The movement has spoken: to win the promise of 1970 we must lead through actions. In August 1963, in the "I Have a Dream" speech, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. declared that there could be no more "business as usual" in America until real racial justice was achieved. Join us this Thursday, March 20 in putting the University on trial for its broken promises, and deciding on a plan of action to stop business as usual on our campus until we win real justice and make this University what WE want it to be. At the University Board of Regents' meeting, we will demand the University keep its promises to all its students by doubling minority student enrollment, creating a UM Dream Scholarship to open the doors of this University to undocumented students and ending the policy of cover-up of rape and sexual assault on this campus. Then we will be holding a public tribunal and speak-out on the hostile climate on campus for minority, immigrant and women students. The tribunal is the next step in the struggle to end business as usual and make the promise of 1970 a reality. All students and organizations are welcome to come speak the plain truth about racism, sexism and injustice on this campus and in American society. No one will be discouraged from speaking out - everyone's experience is relevant. Detroit high school students will be among the featured speakers, to keep our campus com- munity anchored in the real world of struggle around us. The tribunal will be chaired by activ- ists, including Shanta Driver, BAMN national chair and attorney, who argued before the U.S. Supreme Court last Oct. 15 for the overturn of the Proposition 2 ban on affirmative action and for the defense of minority political rights. But we will not limit ourselves to speaking out. On the basis of the testimony of students, we will democratically discuss and vote on the next concrete actions to take in order to make real the long-broken promises of equal access, equal conditions, equal opportunity and equal dignity. Minority students should no longer have to accept the degradation of unequal treatment and racist slurs as a condition of being present on this campus. Women students should not have to live in constant fear and accept sexist abuse as a condition of getting an education and participation in ordinary campus life. The Regents' meeting will be Thursday at 3 p.m. in the Anderson room of the Michigan Union, followed by the Public Tribunal on Campus Climate at 7pm in Angell Hall Auditorium C. Mical Holt is an LSA sophomore and DAAP presidential candidate for CSG. Taylor Jones is an LSA freshman and DAAP vice presidential candidate for CSG. paid off. But a couple of weeks ago, I had an encounter that made me question mytask-oriented nature. Toward the beginning of Spring Break, a professor introduced me to a new initiative launched by LSA and its associate dean, Philip J. Deloria. The Power of 5, she told me, is a project launched to break students out of the competitive environment that we tend to have at the University. By passing out $5 bills in multiple large lecture halls and to faculty, LSA hoped to inspire a wave of giving across the college, and a whole new giving culture, too. As she handed me $5, she told me to treat myself and then give to someone else in a similar manner. To be honest, I was pretty taken aback. Multiple questions immediately began running through my head. Wouldn't it be awkward to just give someone $5? Who should I give it to? Should I explain why I'm giving it to them? Then, my realization of these questions launched a whole different series of questions. Why is it so hard for me to give back to someone? Is this really that far outside of my comfort zone? What kind of a person does that make me? The day-to-day rigor and non- stop schedule of an undergrad can be taxing. It causes time to both slow down so that a one-hour lecture can seem dreadfully long, but also make a semester or year seem like it went by in the blink of an eye. Something that I allowed to slip through the cracks during all of this is how I interact with others. Between running from class to class and hiding out in Hatcher for hours on end, I stopped looking out for my fellow Wolverines. Student orgs became tiring and classes were a chore. Even my wonderful job as an RA had turned into checking off interactions with my residents, even though they were always more than willing to engage in conversation and hang out. I didn't give away my $5 until this past Monday. As I sat in my room, chatting with a good friend, I saw the envelope sitting on my desk. I picked it up, flipped open the envelope to peek at the bill one more time - as if to make sure that it didn't magically give itself away - and then launched into a long explanation about what I was doing. As I saw the grin spread across her face, I realized that it was quite simple. By taking a few minutes to spread this message of giving, I had possibly brightened up her day. Not even 10 minutes later, I saw her passing on $5 to another friend of ours. Already, the message was spreading. It was contagious. The Power of 5 was a good wakeup call for me. I realized that not everything I do should be on my to-do list or scheduled into my Google calendar weeks in advance. Oftentimes, it's the unplanned moments - coffee with a friend, running into an old professor on the Diag or going to see a movie on a Tuesday night - that make your undergrad experience. I'm sure years downthe road I won'tbereminiscing about howI finished a 10-page paper a few days early or how great it felt to power through a difficult reading. Rather, I'll remember these special moments that I share in passing. One of my favorite childhood characters, Winnie the Pooh, said, "Sometimes, the smallest things take up the most room in your heart." Cheesy or not, these past few weeks I remembered to appreciate the smaller things, because they often slip by before you can enjoy them. So, I challenge you, next time you're walking through the Diag to class, or sitting down next to someone new in lecture, say hello, smile, introduce yourself. You never know the change you might start. - Harleen Kaur can be reached at harleen@umich.edu. Working forAmeriCorp TO THE DAILY: As a recent LSA graduate, I understand very well the anxieties and hopes of students looking for plans after graduation. I know how overwhelming it is to think about the options, lookingfor applications of academia and the skills picked up along the way in exchange for a salary, or other indications of success. The jobs and projects are the details, but I hope the bigger picture is not overlooked. The broader populations and larger societal influence are the recipients and benefactors. I hope that while soon-to-be graduates look ahead to their careers, they take into account their desires of impact and how SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@MICHIGANDAILY.COM their professions may contribute positively to the greater good. I urge students and future pro- fessionals to consider selection of careers and endeavors on the basis of whom they serve. When contem- plating "whom do we want our life's work to impact?" we think greater about the context of professions and the communities that are influenced and apply our skills to the better- ment of society. By doing this, we become aware of the effect of our individual contributions and can be of service to our communities. I am not suggesting that our work must be our life, but merely that work and society are not isolated. I amwriting to encourage students tolookmore closely atopportunities with AmeriCorps post-graduation. As the 20th anniversary of AmeriCorps approaches, there is no better time to dedicate ourselves to our communities and a mission of culturally sensitive service. Opportunities with AmeriCorps provide great exposure to a com- munity's true needs and spirit while serving them effectively, where members gain professional experience that compliments their outstanding University of Michi- gan education. While serving with AmeriCorps, members are served with an invaluable and incompa- rable foundation for any career. Mariah Van Ermen 2013 Alumni FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER Keep up with columnists, read Daily editorials, view cartoons and join in the debate. Check out @michigandaily to get updates on Daily content throughout the day. A A A.