Caregiving is Women’s Work

Caregiving is women’s work.

It is with that simple statement in mind that I went to the Raising Women’s Voices Conference last month, sponsored by the Avery Institute, Merger Watch, and the National Women’s Health Network.

I was invited to participate on the opening plenary panel to discuss voices that are traditionally left out of health care reform discussions. I talked about direct-care workers — and about Health Care for Health Care Workers and the broader work of PHI.

The conference brought together women’s health advocates, providers, and women in general to talk about health care issues and shape a women’s agenda for health care reform. There were the usual PowerPoint presentations and policy recommendations, but the way the organizers encouraged presenters to tell our stories made it clear from the start that this was no ordinary conference. Raising Women’s Voices lived up to its name, honoring the power of women’s voices and experiences as consumers and providers.

In my day-to-day work talking with policymakers, I have to show lots of facts and figures about direct-care workers not having health insurance and figure out how to “make the case” that this issue matters. At this conference, people listened intently when I opened my presentation with the story of Iya’ Negra, a direct-care worker in Maine. Iya’Negra was diagnosed with fast-growing fibroid tumors after she was kicked by a consumer with Alzheimer’s and the pain from the kicking did not subside. Because she had no health insurance, her health problem turned into a crisis for her whole family.

Sure, the fact that one in four direct-care workers is uninsured was a new and shocking statistic to many at the conference, but what struck them most was how that issue impacts the day-to-day lives of workers, the consumers they assist, and their families.