New York Cultural Center
HUMAN AFFAIRS
Dialogues on events
that shape our world
MEMORY AND IDENTITY
Exploring our heritage
Testing our tradition
BEAUTY WILL SAVE
THE WORLD
Discovering the world
of arts: performances
and presentations
MEETINGS AT
THE CROSSROADS
Face to face with...
"Certainly there were many
evils that
the men of ancient times
suffered.
But there were, however, the
men of wisdom.
These would teach to other
men the principle
of mutual cohabitation and
of mutual support.
These wise ones chose their
rulers and teachers.
They put to flight the reptiles,
serpents and wild beasts,
and they established man's
primacy.
For those who were cold,
they made clothes;
for those who were hungry,
they prepared food;
for those who lived in trees ...
or in caves ... they made
houses.
They instructed the workers
that they might make utensils;
the merchants that they
might trade things
that they had or of which
they were lacking;
the doctors who would use
the medicines ...
They inculcated recognition
toward benefactors;
they instituted norms that
would assign each to his
proper place.
They created music that
would dissipate the sadness
built up in the
heart,
the government that would
give a shock to negligence,
the punishments that would
break down obstinance.
And since men were
cheating one another
the wise ones dictated to
them...
bushels, liters, weights and
scales in order that they keep
faith in
selling.

And now there are those who
say:
"let's smash these bushels, let's
smash these scales
and then the people won't
have anything to argue
about anymore."

Han Yu (768-824 B.C.),
Fragments of Chinese Doctrine
A place where roads meet. A time of change.
WHY SHOULD WE CARE
ABOUT THE SICK?


A Discussion on the Foundations
for Genuine Health Care Reform
(in collaboration with St. Vincent’s Hospital and Medicina e Persona)


Speakers:

Dr.
Edmund D. PELLEGRINO
Chairman of the U.S. President’s Council on Bioethics

Dr.
Peter STEINFELS
New York Times Religion Columnist

Dr.
Daniel P. SULMASY
Director of the Bioethics Institute, NY Medical College

Ms.
Marilyn WIENER
Registered Nurse, Columbia Presbyterian Hospital


Thursday, November 1, 2007 at 6:30 pm
St. Vincent’s Hospital Auditorium
170 West 12th Street, New York
ABOUT THE CONFERENCE

This discussion is co-sponsored by the
Crossroads New York Cultural Center
and by Medicine and the Person.
Crossroads has been organizing public
discussions and other events in New
York for a few years now (you can find
the Fall 2007 program on your chair).
Medicine and the Person... (ADD
DESCRIPTION). Both Crossroads and
Medicine and the Person find their
origin in the life of Communion and
Liberation, the Catholic movement
started by Msgr. Luigi Giussani over
fifty years ago.

Health care reform, as we all know, is a
short phrase that in reality refers to a
large set of complex issues. It requires
both solving many complex technical
problems in public policy and
reconciling many powerful political
interests. As such, it is the domain of a
particular class of "experts" who are
able to master the intricate
relationships between health care
providers, patients, employers,
government agencies, insurance
companies and so on. What motivated
us, both as Catholics and as health
care professionals, to organize today's
discussion is not that we presume to
have anything to teach the experts
regarding either the technical or the
political sides of health care reform.
Rather, if there is a contribution we
feel we can make, it is precisely to
point out that health care is one issue
that ultimately cannot be reduced just
to a set of technical and political
problems, even though this is a very
tempting (and common) approach. The
reason is simple: all technical and
political questions in health care
ultimately have to do with human
beings, and people cannot (or should
not) be reduced to technical and
political "problems." Many of us who
are doctors or nurses or hospital
administrators know how the "human
side" is an inextricable part of our
profession. For many of us, it is in fact
the most fascinating part of our
profession, and what attracted us to it
in the first place. For this reason, we
know that whenever the health industry
looks at patients in the same way the
automotive industry looks at cars,
something is terribly wrong. Mind you,
it is not only wrong in some abstract
sense. It is also wrong in the sense
that it is going to undermine the
system in the long run. It is impossible
to have good medical care if
physicians are not trained to look at
the whole person of the patient, and if
the relationship between the doctor
and the patient is sacrificed on the
altar of mechanical efficiency. It is
impossible to come up with fair
solutions to pay for healthcare costs
without valuing the human
relationships and communities that can
support the system when the state and
the corporate world will fall short. It is
impossible to make the hard choices
required by new and expensive
technologies on purely technical
grounds, without having a clear sense
of what the ultimate problem is, that is:
what is a human being? What is the
value of human life? What is the value
of health, and is anything even more
important than health? We think that
these larger questions do impact how
we approach health care reform, and
that we should remind each other of
them from time to time. In this sense,
what we are proposing tonight is a
discussion of method. Not how to solve
the technical and political problems,
important as they are, but to have
clear criteria to guide the work so that
the health systems may serve real
people, not some abstraction.
PHOTO GALLERY