Group Health: An early voice for affordable care
Published 11:30 am Tuesday, September 5, 2017
Special to the Reporter
What happens when you bring together folks trying to get affordable health care? If you’re in 1945 Seattle, you get the creation of Group Health Cooperative and the beginning of what became one of the dominant health care systems in Washington State for 70 years.
It’s a history that includes a Lebanese-American doctor (Michael Shadid) who pioneered cooperative health care in the U.S., a woman (Hilde Birnbaum) who fled Nazi Germany and became Group Health’s first female president, a former Mercer Island mayor (Aubrey Davis) who served 38 years on the Group Health Board of Trustees, and countless others who contributed.
How it all came to be is the topic of the Redmond Historical Society’s Saturday Speaker Series program at 10:30 a.m. Sept. 9 at the Old Redmond Schoolhouse Community Center, located at 16600 N.E. 80th St.
Patricia Bailey, part of the public affairs team at Group Health, which last year merged with Kaiser Permanente, will look back at pivotal events like the 1949 lawsuit against King County Medical Society to break up what the co-op saw as monopolistic practices.
Group Health maintained “its progressive roots,” throughout its history, Bailey says, “for example helping Seattle and King County develop health care programs for low-income residents in 1968 and endorsing abortion reform, starting in January 1969.”
A key legacy was the co-op’s ability to remain “integrated—offering care and coverage together—despite market pressures over the years to separate the two,” Bailey says. “Being acquired by Kaiser Permanente ensures that care and coverage will be bound together in the future to the benefit of plan members and patients.”
Group Health’s long-term success, she adds, came from “an unrelenting commitment to the organization’s mission to provide affordable health care to as many as possible.”
“And I truly mean unrelenting on the part of everyone involved, regardless of disagreements or ups and downs or failures or successes. The belief that this was the right thing to do and worth fighting for never wavered … We owed it to the founders and original members who sacrificed, and even mortgaged their homes for a dream, to continue what they started and make sure that dream survived and endured.”
The Redmond Historical Society presents the Saturday Speaker Series on the second Saturday of the month with three programs each in the fall and spring. Topics range from local, state and Pacific Northwest historical interest. There is a suggested $5 donation for non-members.
The Redmond Historical Society is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization that receives support from the City of Redmond, 4 Culture, Nintendo, the Bellevue Collection, Happy Valley Grange, Microsoft and 501 Commons as well as from other donors and members.
