Our Impact
The work of the National Consumers League is making a difference in people’s lives across the country. Meet some of the consumers touched by our programs.
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Preventing yet another victim
Paige, 55, a Nashville wife and mother of two, answered an employment ad for secret shoppers. Before sending payment to the scammers, she reached out to NCL.
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Building a stronger generation
A grease fire flared up in Decklan’s kitchen. As his family scrambled and panicked, fearing that the whole house might erupt in flames, Decklan remained calm. He hurried over to the pantry, grabbed some baking soda, and dumped it on the fire quickly extinguishing the blaze.
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Script Your Future saved my life
Cincinnati resident Charles, 45, lost his computer business — and health insurance— during a time of economic downturn. A diabetic, Charles was now unable to afford his medication. He stopped taking it which made him seriously ill and put his life at risk.
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For a safer workplace
Jeremy is a fast-food worker who has been employed at a number of Chipotle restaurants in New York City. When he was just 20 years old, he took part in an NCL research project that revealed that management practices within the fast food chain were putting workers—and food safety for customers—at risk.
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Member Spotlight: National Partnership for Women & Families
Meet Carol Sakala
Director for Maternal Health
Q: How long have you been with the National Partnership and what do you love most about your job or career in health policy?
A: I am Director for Maternal Health within the Health Justice team at the National Partnership for Women & Families. I have been with the National Partnership for eight years. Throughout my career, I have worked for a maternity care system that reliably delivers the care childbearing families need and want. Our Listening to Mothers surveys give us considerable understanding about what birthing people want and experience, and inform our work. My abiding focus has been to use policy advocacy as a lever for meaningful, lasting improvement at scale for childbearing families.
I have always been deeply engaged in this work. My passion is rooted in clarity – about the foundational importance of what happens to birthing people and newborns for their lifelong health and well-being, that our maternity care system works well for just a fraction of the many millions it touches every year, and that proven high-performing care models exist and provide clear direction for the transformation that is needed. While a cadre of advocates and others share this understanding and have been working for a better system for decades, unprecedented opportunities for great strides have opened up in recent years. It’s a critical and exciting time to be working to advance maternal health.
Q. What are the biggest challenges and opportunities for the National Partnership today?
A. The complex external environment is undoubtedly our greatest challenge. This includes the pandemic grinding on, and causing avoidable death and suffering especially in communities of color; extensive economic dislocation; a national reckoning on racism fueled by ongoing racialized structures of disadvantage and unabated violence against BIPOC people; the fraying of our democracy; and the escalating effects of the climate crisis.
A silver lining of the pandemic has been to create new opportunities for advancing our core issues. Historically, these issues have deeply impacted women and families. However, the pandemic has brought them into sharp focus and widened the harm associated with not creating the core social policies and protections that women and families need to thrive – including national legislation for paid leave and paid sick days, strengthening protections of the Affordable Care Act and expanding Medicaid benefits, including extending Medicaid maternity coverage to one year postpartum.
As the National Partnership celebrates our fiftieth anniversary during 2021, we are closer than ever to realizing long-held goals for the national policies that will help ensure that women and families can live with dignity and security.
Q. What National Partnership initiatives would you like to share with the Council?
A. This summer, the National Partnership launched a series of bulletins in collaboration with the National Birth Equity Collaborative, Saving the Lives of Moms and Babies: Addressing Racism and Socioeconomic Influencers of Health. The series shines a spotlight on the impact of adverse social determinants (for example, incarceration, intimate partner violence, and homelessness) on maternal and infant health, especially in Black and brown communities. Moms & Babies is one important facet of the National Partnership’s maternal health work. Check out our Improving Our Maternity Care Now resources, our definition of Optimal Maternal Health, and our signature Listening to Mothers surveys – among other resources.
Additionally, our Economic Justice team just released new resources that find that national paid family and medical leave would improve the health and security of more than 20 million people who are experiencing a substance use disorder in the United States.
Q. What does the National Partnership hope to gain from their membership in NCL’s Health Advisory Council?
A. Like the National Consumers League, the National Partnership has a consumer/patient/caregiver/employee stakeholder vantage point. We have been especially active in NCL’s Preterm Birth Prevention Alliance, which is strongly opposing the Food and Drug Administration’s threatened withdrawal of approval of progestogen medications for the prevention of preterm birth. The fact that these medications have been found to prevent prematurity in Black women, who disproportionately experience the often-devastating birth outcome of prematurity, aligns directly with our deep commitment to health equity and our work for maternal health. The National Partnership welcomes the opportunity to raise issues of concern with the FDA, members of the White House Domestic Policy Council and Representative Madeleine Dean’s office.