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- <text id=93TT1820>
- <title>
- May 31, 1993: A Cause of Her Own
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH CARE, Page 60
- A Cause of Her Own
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Tipper Gore has been lugging around a textbook on depression,
- which is oddly out of place in the hands of such a cheerful
- woman, the one person who seems to be able to unstuff the shirt
- of Vice President Al Gore. He gets so relaxed around her that
- at one of the marathon health-care task force meetings recently,
- he rubbed her aching neck. The neck notwithstanding, the Vice
- President says Tipper is "having a blast" in her job as mental-health
- adviser to the President's health-care task force, a slight
- exaggeration of the pleasure of spending late nights poring
- over options for psychiatric outplacement. But it's no exaggeration
- of her impact: she is the voice for mental health within the
- Administration. Says her press secretary Sally Aman: "She is
- at the table at every turn to remind the group that mental health
- should have parity with physical health."
- </p>
- <p> Tipper's voice is controversial because, if heeded, it will
- add billions of dollars to the health-care bill. Before the
- Senate Labor and Human Resources Committee, she said, "The same
- outrage expressed when we are confronted by race or sex discrimination
- must be voiced to expose the difference between how physical
- and mental illnesses traditionally have been viewed." She can
- be outraged, but part of her appeal is that she can be serious
- without being somber. As she sits in a wing chair sipping Mountain
- Valley spring water in her high-ceilinged office filled with
- evidence of the two interests in her life--psychology books
- and a gallery of her photos--she is happy to be here, working
- at her first full-time job out of the house since she married
- Gore in 1970. Armed with a master's degree in psychology, Tipper
- has taken fiercely to her new role, embarking on more than 30
- trips around the country, chairing hearings and giving speeches.
- </p>
- <p> Her own life was aided by counseling when her son, at the age
- of six, was nearly killed in an automobile accident in 1989.
- In her Senate testimony, she noted how hard it is to get the
- head treated as well as the body. Plaintively, she recalled
- Rosalynn Carter's trip to the same committee asking for the
- same thing in 1979. "What is wrong," she asked, "if so little
- has changed in the intervening 14 years that we must repeat
- our pleas?"
- </p>
- <p> By Margaret Carlson/Washington
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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