Mommie Dearest, a best selling memoir, turned into a bio-drama motion picture. The book was released in 1978 and the movie was released in 1981. The memoir was written by Christina Crawford, adopted daughter of actress Joan Crawford. Christina recounts her childhood and claims that she and her siblings were physically and emotionally abused by their alcoholic mother.…
After Momaday's grandma passed away, he decides to learn more about his family background. Later, exploring more of his family roots , he realizes that his heritage is very meaningful to him. After learning more about his family roots and thinking about the stories his grandma shared with him before she passed away, he establishes more respect for his grandma and ancestors. I like how the author explains the setting of the story in his writing, like the beautiful landscape where his grandma lived. Also, the author provides the readers detailed information ,which gave me a detailed picture of the Kiowas way of life. I think the main point of this story was it shows the readers how important are ancestors and our own history is to us because…
Invisible Yet Strong “Black America’s Invisible Crisis” is an Essence article written by Lois Beckett that talks about a woman named Aireana and her family who were diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). In 2013, after riding along with her family in their car, someone on the outside started shooting at them. Aireana and her husband got shot, but her two kids were unharmed in the back seat. As Aireana was bleeding from the neck and mouth, she didn’t want her kids to think that she was going to die. She crawled out the car as she hear her kids screaming from the back seat yelling out, “My mom’s dying!”…
The boys are living in an apartment at the Henry Horner housing complex with their mother, LaJoe, their younger brother and sisters – the triplets, and a constant stream of people from their father Paul to their sister’s boyfriend’s brother staying on and off with them. Henry Horner is a housing project in inner-city Chicago. Between Henry Horner and a neighboring complex, 60,110 people resided here, 88 percent black, 46 percent below poverty level. (Kotlowitz, p12) This neighborhood has long been forgotten by the city of Chicago. There is no upkeep on the apartments, there are few police and the gangs have taken over.…
Sociologist David Williams discussed issues and problems that plague low-income communities and what can be done to make unhealthy neighborhood healthy again. We know that where you live, where you work, go to school what you eat, all determine your health outcome. He reminded us that health is not just restricted to healthcare or access to healthcare, but it involves the condition of your home, access to healthy food, available supermarkets etc. In other words, it is the physical and social environment that does affect health.…
Young women in rural America are dying. More specifically, poor Southern white women in rural America are dying. An impotence surrounds the mystery of this phenomenon. Researchers and analysts cannot explain it.…
An inherent quality all humans share, is the ability to recognize society and the effects we have on the communities around us, and while we all have different interpretations of what is wrong and what’s not, it’s crucial to acknowledge that your own beliefs may sometimes be misleading or contradictory, urging readers to always take a step back and review the evidence before making a judgement. In “The Final Patient”, Remen utilizes an anecdote, from her own life, to symbolize a much larger societal problem within our healthcare’s structure. Impressively, Remen effectively uses a variety writing techniques to portray a terrifying example of structural violence, which is much more common than is acceptable in a moral society. Remen’s example…
The topic I chose to discuss would happen to be none other than “Option 2”, which refers to the article I have recently read titled “Why My Mother Wants Me Dead” by Sabatina James. According to the story it sums up family tradition and religion to have selected marriage partners for teen girls and strict guidelines. Certain acts such as not wanting to marry the partner selected for you by the parents can result in family disownment and death. The mother of Sabatina happens to withhold full authority in her life which effected her in a sense as well as forcing her to act against the marriage arrangements. In response to the option I selected, I feel the do’s of being a parent raising a healthy child consists of rules and laws. Although the child…
Dash, L. (1997). Rosa lee a mother and her family in urban America (pp. 17-253). New York, NY: Plume.…
The Great Depression not only brought financial hardship and economic disaster to the United States, it also psychologically changed the soul of our nation and rocked our spirit to the core. Despite the recent economic recession experienced by much of our nation, our country’s current situation is nowhere near the magnitude of the Great Depression. The desperation and misery felt by the country during the 1920s and 1930s is nearly impossible to grasp by today’s society, yet when looking at photographs such as “Migrant Mother” we are given a glimpse of the hardships that plagued the nation. The hopeless, weathered gaze of the woman in “Migrant Mother” served as a representation of the hopelessness felt by so many suffering mothers and families during the Great Depression.…
Shi, L., & Singh, D. A. (2012). Delivering health care in America: Health Policy (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Jones and Bartlett. Retrieved from The University of Phoenix eBook Collection database.…
Bud remembers a lot of stuff about Momma. Bud was so young when he knew her, his memories consisted of things Angela did for him, like read him bedtime stories or fold his clothes for him and put them beside the bed with a little note that might says something like, "Dear Bud, Please be neater, see you tonight, I love you" (16.3). Something's Bud's remembers Momma is her life lessons. She tells him what she's learned from her own experiences, and even if Bud doesn't comprehend what she's even talking about, he learns a ton about how wise his Momma was and uses the life lessons as he grows older. One of the reasons Bud remembers what his mother told him so well is that she used to hold onto his arms and look into his face when she…
This paper aims to focus on health care on both the national and state level. First, there will be an examination of the controversial passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in the Senate and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 in the House, and how the United States of America is now facing a shifting landscape within the window of four years, specifically in terms of how health care is delivered, and the costs incurred. Additionally, there will be an examination of the situation that New York State has found itself in, and the recommendations, implications, and repercussions Governor Andrew Cuomo’s “Medicaid Redesign Team” will have on health care within New York State.…
The role of community, public health nursing and partnerships as they are applied to the family in my study is a challenge to describe. The village of Roseville is quite small, with a census of 1,754, according areavibes.com. The town is divided into two counties, Muskingum County and Perry County. The Muskingum County seat is located in Zanesville, Ohio while the county seat for Perry County is located in New Lexington, Ohio. Both Zanesville and New Lexington are about 10 miles from the village of Roseville. The actual village does not have their own public transportation or taxi services, but the neighboring towns have bus services that can be scheduled for pick up at people at their homes if needed. The only actual community services located within the city limits of Roseville, were the Perry County Housing Authority and the local Legion. There were many community services in either county to provide assistance to the community depending on which area of the town one lives in. The town of Zanesville is significantly larger than New Lexington and has resources available such as 2 hospitals, several first care centers, and doctors’ offices as well as a County Health Clinic and health department. The city of New Lexington also has resources available, such as Tri-County Community Action and the Help Me Grow program to assist with low income families.…
Racial and socioeconomic factors, however, are not independent of each other, as we have seen. Minorities, and in this paper I discuss African Americans mostly, have less access to jobs and education, thereby reducing their access to adequate or good health insurance, which then limits the type and amount of health care they can receive. Additionally, as we discussed in class, individuals classified as minorities have less opportunities than the White majority in part, at the very least, due to racial discrimination, implicit or explicit. The data and research indicate that health and equal treatment has become (or has always been) secondary to an individual’s physical and cultural characteristics. None of this is an attempt at minimizing…