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PBS News Weekend Full Episode: March 30, 2024

Saturday on PBS News Weekend, we look at the burden women across the United States are bearing as the primary caretakers of loved ones. Then, what’s at stake for tens of millions of Americans who rely on Medicaid, the nation’s biggest government safety net program. Plus, a 100-year-old Black woman reflects on a lifetime of serving her community and country.

PBS NewsHour

6 days ago

[BREAK] JOHN YANG: Tonight on "PBS News Weekend,"  the burden on women across the country as the primary caregivers for loved ones.  Then, what's at stake for the tens of millions of Americans who rely on Medicaid, the  nation's biggest government safety net program? MARROW WOODS: I go to the hospital a lot. I am  in and out of appointments constantly. And so, without it, there's a lot up in  the air about what I could even do, what medications I could have if I  could still afford my medication
. JOHN YANG: And the story of a Black woman who dedicated a lifetime to serving  her country and her community. (BREAK) JOHN YANG: Good evening. I'm John Yang. Tensions ratcheted up today along the  border between Lebanon and Israel. Three U.N. military observers and a Lebanese  interpreter were wounded in an explosion. They were patrolling the Lebanese side of the  border as part of their peacekeeping mission. A U.N. spokesperson says they're  investigating the source of the explosion and that
the observer's vehicle was  clearly marked and that all parties had been told about the patrol. Israel's military  denied any involvement. Israeli troops and Hezbollah fighters have been trading  attacks across that border for weeks. Meanwhile, a convoy of three ships carrying  400 tons of food and other aid set sail for Gaza from Cyprus today. The U.N. has  warned of imminent famine in Gaza. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy  fired more of his top aides in his ongoing government reshuffle
. It comes as Russia  launched more drone and missile attacks on Eastern Ukraine overnight,  killing two people in Donetsk. Over the last 24 hours, there's been  a barrage of strikes from Russia, many targeting energy infrastructure.  Ukraine has put planned power outages in place for about 120,000 people in the region. In Peru, government agents raided the home  of President Dina Boluarte as part of an investigation into a collection of luxury  watches and whether they had been disclosed. Last
night, a team used a battering ram to  break down a door as they sought multiple Rolex timepieces. Boluarte has been  president for a little more than a year, and she said she's owned at least one Rolex watch  that she bought with her own money when she was 18 years old. Today, Boluarte defended herself,  saying she's an honest woman with clean hands. And in Rome, Pope Francis resided over  an Easter vigil service at St. Peter's Basilica. He missed last night's  Good Friday procession as a healt
h precaution. The 87-year-old pontiff has  limited his public appearances lately, even skipping his Palm Sunday homily. He's  been struggling with respiratory problems. Still to come on "PBS News  Weekend," the role of the nation's largest health insurance  program in America's safety net, and the hidden history of a Black nurse who  served her country in a variety of ways. (BREAK) JOHN YANG: America's population is aging.  Currently, one in six is older than 65. By 2050, that's projected to be
one in four.  Women bear the biggest part of the burden of caring for older Americans and  their growing need for medical care and other support. Ali Rogin takes a look  at the often-unseen costs of caregiving. ALI ROGIN: In the United States, women make  up almost 60% of unpaid caregivers and over 80% of paid in-home caregivers for seniors.  According to a recent "Wells Fargo" report, taking care of loved ones often takes a financial, physical and emotional toll. We spoke to  some women about t
heir caregiving experience. RUTH LEAL: My name is Ruth, and I'm in Virginia, and I take care of my 82-year-old dad. It started  about 12 years ago, when he had prostate cancer. KENYA SERVIA: Kenya Servia, I'm  from Bayboro, North Carolina, and I'm caring for my mom. I've been a caregiver  since I was 8 years old. I started taking care of my great-grandma. Then I was taking care  of my grandma, and now I take care of my mom. DEANZA VALENCIA: I'm DeAnza Valencia. I live  in Albuquerque, New Mexico
, and I am a family caregiver for my mother, Linda Valencia, who  is 75 years old. One day, our family learned that she was going to need a liver transplant, and  she wasn't going to live much longer without it. So at a moment's notice, this responsibility  fell on me. I was the one that had, you know, the resources, the ability to leave home for  a period of time and take care of my mom. AILEEN RUESS: My name is Aileen Ruess,  and I took care of my mother for 15 years, and I'm currently taking
care of my husband. RUTH LEAL: My biggest struggles  have always been that this kind of also happened at the same time that I was  finishing college and entering the workforce. KENYA SERVIA: The hardest part is  just sort of stepping into that being in charge role when they're, you  know, essentially they're your parents, so you're used to them being the person in charge. AILEEN RUESS: You start neglecting  your own doctor's appointments, and you neglect your own personal care. It's not good for
the person that you are taking  care of, and it's not good for yourself. RUTH LEAL: At times I felt like I wasn't  doing a good job, and sometimes I still feel like I'm not doing a good enough job. I  cannot focus at work because my dad, something happened this morning that really worries me,  or I can't really be a good caregiver because my job is really stressing me and it's not really  giving me the flexibility to be a good caregiver. DEANZA VALENCIA: I literally had to  leave a business tha
t I had started up. I left the workforce completely to move  to another state. I left behind a husband, and my marriage suffered because of it. AILEEN RUESS: It's almost impossible  to take care of someone else all by yourself. You really need to surround  yourself with a community, a village. KENYA SERVIA: Thankfully, I have  uncles, cousins, aunts, in-laws, my brother, neighbors, even if they're only able  to come long enough to allow me to get a shower. DEANZA VALENCIA: I wish that I  would h
ave known that there were others out there like me that were still  struggling with the same financial issues, struggling with what to do next, and were frankly  tired and could have used a little relief. RUTH LEAL: I also try to give myself  as much grace as I can because, you know, I think just showing up  is already like 50% of the effort. KENYA SERVIA: Just take it one day at a  time. There'll be times when you'll get frustrated. There'll be times when you'll be  overwhelmed. Stop, take as m
any breaks as you can. Don't be afraid to ask for help. You'd  be surprised how willing people are to help. ALI ROGIN: Joining me now is Emily  Kenway, author of "Who Cares: The Hidden Crisis of Caregiving and How We  Solve it" and a former caregiver herself. Emily, thank you so much for joining us. Can  we start with your own caregiving journey? What did you go through and when did you  realize that this is indeed a crisis? EMILY KENWAY, Author, "Who Cares": Yes. So  I cared for my mother. She
was a single mom, which meant I needed to step in as her daughter  when she was diagnosed with cancer in 2016. And obviously that was incredibly difficult  personally. But it also woke me up politically to what's going on with caregiving around  the world today. And we know that this is just going to get worse over time as well,  right? So we have aging populations around the world. You know, one demographer  has called it the greying of America. And so we can all expect a greater and  greater l
oad of caring responsibilities and to be in the crisis that I was  in unless we introduce major changes. ALI ROGIN: And when you talk about  who's taking on those responsibilities, it is disproportionately women.  Why have you found that to be so? EMILY KENWAY: We have this historical  heritage whereby around industrialization, we created this cultural norm, right, that the  man goes to work and does waged work and the woman stays at home and does unpaid care. And we haven't  caught up with toda
y's reality at all, because, of course, today more women are working.  Many households need the women to work. You know, those wages are not things that can  just be tossed aside. And so this idea that we can carry on ascribing to one gender all of the weight  of care for our entire species is really outdated. ALI ROGIN: And given all those  realities you just laid out, what are some of the challenges that women  tend to face when they become caregivers? EMILY KENWAY: Of course, there's a  finan
cial impact. Most of the time, if you're a caregiver, you'll need  to reduce your working days and you may give up your work entirely. In  fact, we know in the U.S., on average, women caregivers lose about $320,000 in lost  income and lost social security benefits. And that doesn't just harm us right now. That means we're going to have a  real problem in retirement, right? Our security in old age is harmed just  because we stepped in and did the right thing. There's also a massive psychological
toll.  You may be having to constantly monitor and watch your loved one's condition. You're  experiencing what we call role reversal. So you suddenly become the mother of your mother, right? And you're dealing with  that strange dissonance. And then, of course, you're moving through a world  that doesn't recognize or support this. So your employer may well not accommodate your caring responsibilities. And  it bears out in the statistics, too. We know that caregivers have higher rates  of depress
ion and anxiety for these reasons. ALI ROGIN: Given the fact  that so few resources exist, I would imagine that also comes with a lot  of assumptions and misperceptions. What are some of the most pervasive that you've  come across when it comes to caregiving? EMILY KENWAY: I think one of the most  pervasive assumptions is that caregiving is kind of something that doesn't have any  costs when it's performed by the family, right? So, yeah, it's free. We're not  being paid, but there are enormous c
osts. When you're very elderly or very unwell,  you need to be kept warmer. There's higher energy costs. There's mobility aids.  There's special diets. There's all of this kind of thing. So there's a  material, practical reality there. The other misperception I encounter a lot  is this idea that some cultures can manage this more naturally than white Western  cultures, right? So that would typically be countries in the Global South. And it  is very much more normalized that they would perform ca
re, for example, for their  parents-in-law, not just their parents. But when you actually listen to them, they are  struggling in exactly the same ways as I was, the same ways as women everywhere are,  because care is hard. So we have to be very careful of making assumptions based on  people's culture, ethnicity, nationality, and so on, and instead see that women around the  world, we're all in the same fight here together. ALI ROGIN: And Emily, here in the U.S.,  one in five adults right now ar
e working as caregivers. How can we better prepare to care  for these aging populations in the years to come? EMILY KENWAY: What we need to do here  is really recognize that humans are going to have to provide care.  And so we need to embed policies that recognize that. That's things like  paid caregivers leave from work, right? So at the moment, the Family and Medical Leave  Act only provides unpaid leave. And in fact, the Department of Labor found that 41% of  private sector employees aren't e
ven covered by it. So there are these fundamental  economic policies that we shouldn't even be having to ask for, frankly, because  it's so obvious that they're necessary. But basically, we've arranged  our work world as if we're not actually humans who love people who need  us to step in. And that's got to change. ALI ROGIN: Emily Kenway, author of "Who Cares: The Hidden Crisis of Caregiving and How We  Solve it," thank you so much for joining us. EMILY KENWAY: Thank you. JOHN YANG: Medicaid is
the nation's  biggest health insurance program, covering nearly 80 million people.  That's more than one in five Americans. For many people who have low incomes, are  disabled, or who are either very young or very old, it's a vital government  program in America's safety net. MARROW WOODS: So I felt like that will work. But white chocolate-covered  strawberries sounds amazing. JOHN YANG: Like most college students,  Marrow Woods takes full advantage of mom's cooking while home from school. But
on top of  keeping up with classes and friends, Woods, who uses they-them pronouns,  also balances their health. MARROW WOODS: There are definitely  concerns about my ability to, like, hold a job if I don't have  the proper accommodations, or just kind of figuring out a life as  a 21-year-old with a chronic illness. JOHN YANG: Woods has a rare inflammatory skin  condition called hidradenitis suppurativa. It causes painful cysts on their body.  They take experimental medications and go to an Atla
nta hospital every month for  infusions of a drug to reduce inflammation. Can you imagine doing this without Medicaid? MARROW WOODS: Absolutely not. That has  been the one thing, like, getting me through this entire process. Without Medicaid,  I wouldn't be able to receive this medication. JOAN ALKER, Executive Director,  Center for Children and Families, Georgetown University: Medicaid is often the  unsung hero of our public coverage system. JOHN YANG: Joan Alker is the Executive Director of Ge
orgetown University's Center  for Children and Families. JOAN ALKER: Not many people are aware that  all poor children in this country have a right to Medicaid. Medicaid is also  the primary payer for long-term care, and it's a key backbone of  health care for low-wage workers. NO NAME GIVEN: The Harry S.  Truman Library at Independence, Missouri, is a scene of an historic event. JOHN YANG: Medicaid was one of President Lyndon  Johnson's Great Society programs. He signed the bill creating it in
1965, offering states  federal funds for providing basic health care services to families on public assistance  and people with disabilities. It's voluntary, but by 1982, all 50 states and the  District of Columbia had adopted it. Since then, both Democratic and Republican  presidents have signed coverage expansions. By the late 1980s, the program covered all poor  children and all low-income pregnant people. JOAN ALKER: On many, many of the basics, for  example, access to prime and preventive c
are, Medicaid is performing about as well as  private insurance. There are differences. Dental care is very hard to access,  particularly if you're on Medicaid. Behavioral health care is another  area where it's harder to access, but the answer is not to not give people  Medicaid, because then they're in worse shape. BARACK OBAMA, former U.S. President:  This is going to take a little while. JOHN YANG: In 2010, President Barack Obama's  Affordable Care Act expanded Medicaid even further, offerin
g states a generous  subsidy if they covered all poor adults. BARACK OBAMA: We are done. JOHN YANG: Today, more than 21 million  adults have Medicaid because of the ACA. JOAN ALKER: The marketplaces  were kind of the new shiny toy, but Medicaid was kind of the workhorse.  Because the Medicaid expansion for poor adults was really the way in which more uninsured  people accessed coverage. We see Congress turn to Medicaid time and time again because it's  a system that's been in place, it works. Mo
st recently, Congress adopted a new option to allow states to cover postpartum women  and people for 12 months after birth. DR. KEILA BROWN, Chief OB-GYN, Family  Health Centers of Georgia: Pain? NO NAME GIVEN: Sometimes. JOHN YANG: Dr. Keila Brown is Chief OB-GYN at  the Family Health Centers of Georgia. Many of her patients either are on Medicaid or  pay on an income-based sliding scale. DR. KEILA BROWN: Pregnancy can  be very trying on a patient, whether it's emotionally or physically. And  t
here are a lot of medical issues that can arise during pregnancy or that may have even existed  before pregnancy that need continual treatment. JOHN YANG: Georgia is one of at least 47  states that expanded Medicaid to cover women for a full year after giving birth.  Before, Georgia covered only six weeks. DR. KEILA BROWN: That finite period was  just not sufficient in order to be able to treat any of those things that may have come  about during pregnancy or even to put them in a better place p
ost-pregnancy, whether  it be for any cardiovascular issues, diabetic issues, which primarily  affect the population that we serve. There's also some mental health issues  that go along with being postpartum. So how are we doing today? JARICA WILLIAMS: I'm OK. I'm in postpartum.  It's been a little different this time around. JOHN YANG: Jarica Williams gave birth to her son, Bryce, two months ago. Bryce is also  covered by Georgia's Medicaid program. JARICA WILLIAMS: I really appreciate Medicaid
.  It takes a large burden off of me, takes some weight off my shoulders when it comes to making  sure that my child is getting proper health care. JOHN YANG: During the pandemic, the  federal government increased Medicaid funding to states and prohibited them from  kicking recipients out of the program, even if they were no longer eligible. But  when the COVID-19 public health emergency ended last May, states resumed checking  eligibility, a process known as unwinding. So far, 11 million people
  have lost Medicaid coverage, including more than 4.5 million children.  Some were no longer eligible, but others were dropped for bureaucratic reasons, like  re-enrollment forms sent to an old address. JOAN ALKER: There are many, many  ways that Medicaid is working, really to essentially prop up our private health  insurance system for people who don't have enough money to be able to afford private  coverage, or for people who are disabled, for whom the services that you typically get  in an e
mployer-sponsored package simply don't meet their needs. In our health care system,  having coverage is the price of admission. And you're just not going to see a good show in  our health care system if you're uninsured. JOHN YANG: College student Marrow Woods  will soon have to have their eligibility checked. They can't bear to think about  the possibility they may lose coverage. MARROW WOODS: It's definitely terrifying.  I go to the hospital a lot. I am in and out of appointments constantly. A
nd so, without it, there's a lot up in the air about what I  could even do, what medications I could have, if I could still afford my medications,  so definitely a very stressful time. JOHN YANG: Tomorrow, we continue our  series America's Safety Net with a look at Georgia's unique and controversial  program that expands Medicaid coverage, but only to those who meet a work requirement. Finally tonight, as Women's History Month comes to  a close, the next in our series, Hidden Histories. Tonight,
Michelle San Miguel of Rhode Island PBS  Weekly introduces us to a woman who embodies what it means to live a life of service, even  when that service wasn't always welcome. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: At the age of 100, Bennie  Fleming knows by heart all the notes to "Over the Rainbow," a song that, much like her own life  story, embodies hope. But the life that Fleming's created for herself in Providence is one, she  says, she never could have imagined as a child. BENNIE FLEMING: That's the  family
home in San Antonio, Texas, which was just sold four years ago. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: Growing up in South  Texas, Fleming dreamed of being a nurse, but she learned it wouldn't be  an easy path for a black woman. BENNIE FLEMING: There were no hospitals  in San Antonio that would hire a nurse, a black nurse. The only thing  I could do was private duty, and that was very expensive, and you're  doing private duty for black patients, so, you know, you didn't have a lot of  people who could afford a pr
ivate nurse. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: It was 1945, the  United States was engulfed in World War II. NO NAME GIVEN: Noble women doing a hard job  and serving their country in time of need. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: Fleming's friend  had joined the U.S. Cadet Nurse Corps, and she decided she wanted to do the same.  Fleming was 21 when she enlisted in the Army as a second lieutenant. At the time,  the armed services were still segregated. BENNIE FLEMING: You lived in a black dome while the nurses lived in a
white  dome. You were separated that way. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: When she was  stationed at Fort Huachuca in Arizona, she met the man who would become her  husband, Lieutenant Theodore Fleming, a doctor in the Army. The two went on  to witness an historic moment. In 1948, President Harry Truman signed an executive  order banning segregation in the military. By 1946, Fleming had left the Army and relocated  to Providence, Rhode Island, and eventually took a job working full-time at Rhode Island Ho
spital's  School of Nursing. But after two years -- BENNIE FLEMING: Somebody came  into my husband's office and said, I see you've got your wife working.  That was it. I had to quit. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: Because, your  husband did not want you working? BENNIE FLEMING: No, he wasn't too  happy about it anyway. My husband is just so -- he was of that era. That's  my daughter Jackie. My son, Theodore. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: Fleming became a  stay-at-home mother for a few years, raising her two childr
en, and  then made a career change. BENNIE FLEMING: I decided, well,  maybe if I went into public education, maybe that would help. Because I would be  out the same time that my kids would be out. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: For more than four  decades, she served in various roles, from teaching to overseeing the district  science curriculum. She also made history as the first black nurse to teach at Rhode Island  Hospital. Service, she said, is in her blood. BENNIE FLEMING: I was taught  that you give
something back. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: Fleming remains sharp  and mobile at 100. She still drives and goes for a two-mile walk in Providence  three times a week. She lives with her 75-year-old son. She credits him with being  able to maintain a high quality of life. BENNIE FLEMING: I'm so lucky because  people my age are stuck in nursing homes, nobody to see them, nobody  to do anything for them, but yet I still have people around  me, and I have young people around me. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: As yo
u reflect  on your life, the people you've met, the experiences that you've had, what is the most  important lesson you think that you've learned? BENNIE FLEMING: You have to be kind.  I try not to hurt people's feelings, and I know my kids don't think that. And  I try not to get into people's business. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: She says she  remains focused on enjoying her own. BENNIE FLEMING: At this stage in my  life, happiness is all I'm looking for. MICHELLE SAN MIGUEL: For "PBS News Weekend," I
'm  Michelle San Miguel in Providence, Rhode Island. JOHN YANG: And that is "PBS News Weekend"  for this Saturday. I'm John Yang. For all of my colleagues, thanks for  joining us. See you tomorrow. (BREAK) END

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