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Real ‘Norma Rae’ dead of cancer after battle with health insurer

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  • Real ‘Norma Rae’ dead of cancer after battle with health insurer

    Real ‘Norma Rae’ dead of cancer after battle with health insurer

    By Daniel Tencer

    Insurers’ delays are ‘almost … like murder,’ Sutton said
    The woman whose life inspired the 1979 film Norma Rae has died of cancer after struggling with her health insurance company, which had delayed her treatment.

    Crystal Lee Sutton was 68. She had struggled for several years with meningioma, a form of brain cancer.

    She became a hero to the labor movement in the 1970s, when she took on her employer, a North Carolina textile plant, and unionized the factory floor. Her story became famous nationwide in 1975 after New York Times reporter Hank Leiferman wrote Crystal Lee: A Woman of Inheritance.

    In 1979, her story was turned into the movie Norma Rae, a thinly-veiled fictional adaptation of Sutton’s struggle to unionize the J.P. Stevens plant in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. Sally Field won an Oscar for her portrayal of the character inspired by Sutton.

    As Daily Kos blogger hissyspit points out, last year Sutton gave an interview to the press where she described a struggle with her health insurer over treatment. The Times-News in Burlington, North Carolina, wrote in 2008:

    [Sutton] went two months without possible life-saving medications because her insurance wouldn’t cover it, another example of abusing the working poor, she said.

    “How in the world can it take so long to find out (whether they would cover the medicine or not) when it could be a matter of life or death,” she said. “It is almost like, in a way, committing murder.”

    She eventually received the medication, but the cancer is taking a toll on her strong will and solid frame.

    In 2008, the North Carolina branch of the AFL-CIO urged supporters to donate money to Sutton’s medical fund. On its Web site, the union had stated that “after initially being denied coverage by her insurance company for life saving treatment, Sutton is now on drug and chemo therapies and has undergone two surgeries.”

    In its obituary the Greensboro News-Record describes her now-legendary struggle to unionize the J.P. Stevens plant:

    In 1973, a 33-year-old Sutton was working at the J.P. Stevens plant in Roanoke Rapids, where she was making $2.65 an hour folding towels. The poor working conditions she and her fellow employees endured compelled her to join forces with Eli Zivkovich, a mill worker turned union organizer, and attempt to unionize the plant employees.

    Sutton eventually lost her job, but the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU) won the right to represent the workers at the plant and Sutton briefly became an organizer for the union.

    In 1977, she was awarded back wages and her job was reinstated by court order, although she chose to return to work for just two days.
    Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

  • #2
    That was a good movie about a very relevant situation.

    RIP
    Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
    "Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
    He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead

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    • #3
      Originally posted by chequita guevara View Post
      “How in the world can it take so long to find out (whether they would cover the medicine or not) when it could be a matter of life or death,” she said. “It is almost like, in a way, committing murder.”
      It's exactly like murder. And you can bet your boots, somewhere there's an insurance adjuster who got a higher bonus for saving the insurance company the money it was legally obligated to pay out for her medication.

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      • #4
        Per usual, we dont know the facts.

        Disregarding that trifle however, this is one of the areas of healthcare reform that I believe would recieve bipartisan support. Pity that the real healthcare issues that should be dealt with are lost amidst the liberal drive to socialize medicine in the USA.
        We need seperate human-only games for MP/PBEM that dont include the over-simplifications required to have a good AI
        If any man be thirsty, let him come unto me and drink. Vampire 7:37
        Just one old soldiers opinion. E Tenebris Lux. Pax quaeritur bello.

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        • #5
          There is no liberal drive to socialize medicine in the USA.

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