This thread in the health section about gross understaffing and budget cuts at a hospital is a clear case of something that we should be throwing federal money at, in the present circumstances.
Spend money on nurses and emergency room help at state hospitals immediately, and you 1) employ the unemployed who will mostly use that money to pay bills and buy stuff immediately, thereby stimulating the local economies 2) improve urgent health care, and 3) reduce stress on state budgets. You surely will save lives, so we don't have people dying in the halls waiting for care, as happens too often. This is a serious problem in every big city, and it affects all of us.
The idea that a civilized society can have patients in a hospital suffering from a lack of basic care while one harried nurse races around too busy to go to the bathroom taking care of 7 sick people, and meanwhile there are people out of work desparate for jobs, is senseless and unconscionable.
I don't know if this
http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20090129/REG/301299962/-1/todaysnews">health provision in the House-passed stimulus bill would accomplish this, but this part sounds like a good start: "$1.5 billion for community health centers and $600 million to help shore up the ranks of primary care doctors".
We need the big picture of the bill and we need a strong list of the positives to counter the spin and focus on a handful of questionable earmarks. Where can we find that?