Wagner-Murray-Dingell Bill

The Wagner-Murray-Dingell Bill was a 1945 proposal to institute a national medical and hospitalization program. Robert F. Wagner, Reid F. Murray, and John D. Dingell, Sr. introduced it to the 79th United States Congress on May 24, 1945. The bill was not passed. It is notable as an effort for health care reform in the United States.

History

A similar bill of the same name was introduced in 1943 but not enacted, and this 1945 attempt is distinct.[1]

Society and culture

Henry Kraus' book, In the City was a Garden, is about experiences of the resident's council of a WWII Garden Apartment (FHA) housing project for the war effort in San Pedro Ca. Chapter VI - Kaleidoscope of Change, gives an extended account of attempts to provide medical clinics in the projects and the California Medical Association response against what they called "government medicine". From an historical perspective it's an interesting read on that subject and others of the time period.

References

  1. Smith, Donald W. (November 1945). "The Wagner Murray Dingell Bill (1945) - Senate Bill 1050 H.R. 3293". The American Journal of Nursing 45 (11).

External links