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Medical Committee for Human Rights

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advocated an official policy up until the late 1960s in which it allowed affiliate state groups to be racially segregated, African-American physicians being denied hospital privileges and other things. On the other hand, many notable public figures advocated on the side of the MCHR; one of them,
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limitations on access to medicine had fallen, leaving MCHR in a period of flux leading to its declining effectiveness during the 1970s and 1980s. The MCHR's ultimate failure to push the U.S. government to adopt either a
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notably addressed the 1966 MCHR convention. The organization remained active for years afterward in terms of fighting for disadvantaged Americans to have expanded access to health services, becoming a part of the
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that the civil rights workers themselves dealt with. Major governmental and non-governmental organizations did not approve of many of their methods. For example, the
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notably addressed the annual MCHR convention in 1966. He proclaimed, "Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane."
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professionals that initially organized in June 1964 to provide medical care for civil rights workers, community activists, and summer volunteers working in
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Over a hundred health care professionals, doctors joined with nurses, psychologists, and social workers, spent a week or more participating in the "
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care for all Americans, regardless of the ability to pay, demoralized members. The group did not survive the
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The Good Doctors: The Medical Committee for Human Rights and the Struggle for Social Justice in Health Care
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The MCHR ended up functioning as a model for organizations that succeeded it, such as
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In the wake of the civil rights movement in the late 1960s, most
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Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History
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Medical and health foundations in the United States
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Index


verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Medical Committee for Human Rights"
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message
health care
Mississippi
Freedom Summer
Civil Rights Movement
Martin Luther King Jr.
new left
Freedom Summer
bigotry
American Medical Association
Paul Dudley White
President
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Walter Lear
Aaron O. Wells
Martin Luther King Jr.
single-payer health care
subsidizes
Reagan administration
Physicians for Human Rights

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