- 12 oral surgery updates in 2026
- 5 ASC, MOB deals in California
- Hidden OR capacity challenges: 8 perioperative leaders on what’s draining surgical time
- The Aspen Group’s 3-year growth recap: 40 moves
- Florida State University set to acquire Tallahassee hospital
- How Confusing Financial Journeys Undermine Revenue and Trust
- How Confusing Financial Journeys Undermine Revenue and Trust
- Misalignment, Not Malice: Rethinking Generational Conflict in Healthcare
- If AI ‘adds friction, it fails’: How Mayo Clinic scales technology
- As maternity units close, AdventHealth restores OB care in rural Kansas
- Oklahoma officials warn of new opioid
- The new metrics of healthcare technology ROI: What matters to healthcare leaders
- Hoag to launch transplant center in 2027
- MercyOne hospital to transition labor and delivery services
- MercyOne hospital to transition labor and delivery services
- Southeast metros lead US population growth as national gains slow
- 8 Medicare Advantage numbers to know in 2026
- 17 Senate Dems push back on 2027 ACA proposal
- Providence hospital closes inpatient pediatric unit
- Michigan finalizes Medicaid mental health assessment policy changes
- 10 financial notes on USPI’s growth over the past 3 years
- 15 new orthopedic practice, center openings in Q1
- The oral surgery technological revolution
- From Anxiety to Action: How Ambulatory Leaders Are Rebuilding Margins in 2026
- Where GI training may fall short
- What it took to become the world’s first ASC to offer Stryker’s robotic knee tech
- Medtronic’s win in spinal cord stimulator lawsuit upheld
- How the Trump Administration Uses Migrant Kids To Find and Detain Family Members
- Heartland Dental’s 3-year growth recap: 30+ moves
- Cencora’s $10B+ physician acquisition spree: A breakdown
- Tennessee physician practice acquired
- The FTC is coming for healthcare consolidation: 10 things physicians need to know
- Adventist Health sees momentum from insourcing revenue cycle operations
- Oral GLP-1s, COVID preventatives: 3 more drugs in the pipeline, Optum says payers should watch
- Unlicensed dentistry cases, DSO deals, legislation & more: 10 dentistry updates in Virginia
- Missouri system debuts mobile behavioral health unit
- Yale researchers study GLP-1’s potential for SUD
- Texas dental school receives $6.5M to expand pediatric dental, medical programs
- North Carolina autism provider to expand therapy access
- $3M Verdict Links Social Media to Anxiety and Depression
- West Virginia hospital to end OB delivery services
- 6 DSOs making headlines
- California hospital’s finances improve, cash position remains ‘dire’
- 1 in 5 metro markets face inpatient monopoly: 7 notes
- Minnesota system faces uncertainty amid Medicare delays
- Ohio county approves behavioral health crisis center plan
- The White House Delays CDC Pick
- New COVID 'Cicada' Variant Is Spreading — What Experts Want You To Know
- Op-ed: Empathy meets efficiency—how the responsible use of AI can transform Medicare
- Family Caregivers Provide $1 Trillion In Annual Labor, AARP Says
- ‘Health Doesn’t Need to Be Ludacris’: Bayer signs rapper-actor to multivitamin campaign
- Rocket plots measured trajectory for new gene therapy Kresladi after clearance to launch from FDA
- Healthy Lab Results May Mask Future Risks for Kids with Obesity
- At-Home Chemotherapy Is Safe, Feasible, Pilot Study Indicates
- What You Do While Sitting Could Predict Dementia Risk
- New Cholesterol Guidelines: What Patients and Caregivers Need to Know
- Want A Bootlicking Yes Man? Ask An AI Chatbot For Advice, Study Warns
- Specially Coated Implants Better For Breast Cancer Patients, Study Finds
- Trump Team Claims Successes Against ACA Fraud While Pushing for More Controls
- Give and Take: Federal Rural Health Funding Could Trigger Service Cuts
- Fierce Pharma Asia—Takeda’s $1.3B reorg; India’s GLP-1 floodgates; Gilead’s $2.2B buy of a China NewCo
- Where are you with EUDAMED?
- Where are you with EUDAMED?
- HL7 Launches Real‑Time Medical Device Interoperability Accelerator
- HL7 Launches Real‑Time Medical Device Interoperability Accelerator
- Two GA Tech ATDC Startups — Nephrodite and OrthoPreserve — Secure FDA Breakthrough Device Designation
- Two GA Tech ATDC Startups — Nephrodite and OrthoPreserve — Secure FDA Breakthrough Device Designation
- Artificial Intelligence: ROI, not Clinical Autonomy, Leads Operational Workflows
- Artificial Intelligence: ROI, not Clinical Autonomy, Leads Operational Workflows
- Medtronic and Merit Medical Systems distribution agreement for new, ViaVerte basivertebral nerve ablation system
- Medtronic and Merit Medical Systems distribution agreement for new, ViaVerte basivertebral nerve ablation system
- Breakthrough Device Designation for Noah Labs Vox Heart Failure Detection Device
- Breakthrough Device Designation for Noah Labs Vox Heart Failure Detection Device
- Why private practice dentistry needs a better model
- CareQuest Innovation Partners, Kno2 collab on medical-dental data integration
- Nonprofit highlights rural opioid care strategies
- Vitana Pediatric & Orthodontic Partners adds Florida practice
- What the Health? From KFF Health News: A Headless CDC
- 20 behavioral health leaders challenge industry assumptions
- Recordati confirms it's weighing CVC Capital buyout offer of $12.6B
- 3 California behavioral health centers to close amid funding shifts
- Indiana bars autism therapy provider from Medicaid billing: Wall Street Journal
- UnitedHealth shareholder sues over proposal to include details on integration in annual proxy
- SCAN taps biopharma, CMS vet Aman Bhandari as its first chief AI officer
- Infosys to acquire Optimum Healthcare IT in $465M deal
- DOJ alleges NewYork-Presbyterian forces payers into anticompetitive 'all-or-nothing' contracts
- FDA Warns Biotech Firm Over Cancer Drug Anktiva Claims
- Bees and Hummingbirds May Be Consuming Small Amounts of Alcohol
- Two States Sue Cord Blood Company Over Misleading Claims
- New WHO Guidance Aims To Speed Tuberculosis Testing
- As questions swirl around ATTR competition, Alnylam plots path to market leadership for Amvuttra
- Trump admin delays nomination for new CDC director past deadline
- Outspoken ACIP member steps down amid vaccine panel uncertainty: reports
- Egg-based drugmaker Neion Bio emerges from stealth to cook up multi-product biosimilar collab
- Genentech walks the walk in lupus as sponsor of annual awareness and fundraising event
- Study Reveals How Many Americans Consider Using a Gun
- Massive Study Finds Stress and Grief Don’t Cause Cancer
- Ultra-Processed Foods Harm Fertility In Both Men And Women, Studies Reveal
- Small Daily Habits Can Add Up To Better Heart Health
- Ritalin Might Protect ADHD Kids' Long-Term Mental Health, Study Finds
- Can You Drink Enough Fluids To Prevent Kidney Stones? Maybe Not, New Study Says
- Clasp, loan-linked hiring tool for employers, clinches $20M to expand amid federal loan caps
- Taking a GLP-1? Doctors Say Not To Forget About Movement and Mental Health
- OpenEvidence rolls out AI medical coding feature
- CDC’s Acting Chief Promises a Return to Stability in a Tumultuous Moment
- Remarks at the Financial Stability Oversight Council Meeting
- RWJF: Between 5M and 10M people could lose Medicaid coverage in 2028 under work requirements
- New therapy animal program aims to support 100K patients, providers
- Pulse check on Lilly's GLP-1 fortunes
- Gen Z nurses prioritize schedule flexibility, need more manager interactions to avoid turnover
- How pharma marketers can capitalize on HCPs’ AI, social media and streaming habits
- Federal Officials Investigate States That Require Abortion Coverage
- Corcept's lead drug bounces back from FDA snub with different approval as Lifyorli in ovarian cancer
- Ionis slashes Tryngolza's price tag by 93% ahead of anticipated label expansion
- FDA approves Denali's Hunter syndrome drug, handing rare disease community a win
- Baby Walkers Sold on Amazon Recalled Over Fall Risk
- Want To Protect Your Brain? Science Says Exercise
- HelloFresh Pizza Recall Issued in 10 States Over Metal Risk
- Clinical Trials Have Too Much Data…That’s the Problem.
- Clinical Trials Have Too Much Data…That’s the Problem.
- CMS reveals new Medicaid model that supports coordination for children with complex needs
- Novartis sued by breast cancer patient over branded drug websites’ data-sharing practices
- Takeda targets $1.3B in cost savings in further restructuring
- Biogen pays $20M upfront to tap into Alteogen's subQ delivery tech
- 'Universal Donor' Blood Supplies Dangerously Low, Study Warns
- Why Stepping Outside May Help You Eat Better
- U.S. Medicine, Science Facing An Online Misinformation Siege, Poll Concludes
- Childhood Obesity Undercuts The American Dream For Some, Study Says
- Inclusive High Schools Benefit All Students, Not Just LGBTQ Teens
- Parental Loss Due to Drugs, Violence Raises Child Death Risk by 2,000%
- As Boehringer touts US launches, board chairman worries EU is 'falling further behind'
- The evolving state of exome and genome sequencing
- Demoralized CDC Workforce Reels From Year of Firings, Funding Cuts, and a Shooting
- An Arm and a Leg: Steep Health Care Costs Steer Americans to Tough Decisions
- Qualified Health locks in $125M in fresh funding to scale enterprise AI at health systems
- Misery Loves [Investment] Company?: Remarks at the 2026 Investment Company Institute Investment Management Conference
- Study: Nearly 1 in 5 pediatric hospital deaths involve sepsis
- As expansions come online, CDMO Hovione aims to meet industry's 'dual supply and sourcing' zeal: exec
- Opening Remarks at the Digital Asset Summit 2026
- CVS Caremark, FTC reach settlement in insulin pricing case
- UCB unveils plan to build $2B biologics plant near its US headquarters in Atlanta
- PeaceHealth sued over plans to tap out-of-state staffer ApolloMD for Oregon EDs
- New Lyme Disease Vaccine Shows Strong Results in Trial
- TrumpRx Adds Diabetes, COPD Drugs at Steep Discounts
- Highmark reports $175M net loss for 2025 as financial headwinds batter health plan
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- Abivax hires commercial chief from Takeda to infuse Entyvio expertise into IBD launch prep
- ImmunityBio hit with FDA warning letter over Anktiva promotions in TV ad, podcast episode
- Alcohol Prep Pads Recalled Over Bacteria Risk, Cardinal Health Says
- Fewer patients traveled for abortions in 2025 as telehealth care increased, report finds
A 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization named Vot-ER has helped more than 50,000 doctors register their patients to vote, including many psychiatric patients. Since many of these patient are unable to vote, someone is assuredly helping them cast their ballot. Another form of ballot harvesting, as well as another example of powerful medical interests abusing their patients. Vot-ER claims to be non-partisan, but it was founded by a Massachusetts emergency room physician, Alister Martin, who serves as a health care adviser to Vice President Kamala Harris. It is also backed financially by a rogue's gallery of far left financiers:
Meet the Little-Known Activist Group That Has Tens of Thousands of Doctors Registering Patients To Vote
From psychiatric hospitals to the NICU, clinical settings have become political battlegrounds.
Aaron Sibarium - August 6, 2024Many patients at the Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute, an 89-bed facility affiliated with Pennsylvania State University, suffer from schizophrenia, substance abuse, depression, or bipolar disorder. They cannot complete the "activities of daily living," the hospital’s inpatient clinic states. Some are "suicidal, aggressive, or dangerous to themselves or others."
During their stay, which is often involuntary, patients participate in group counseling, learn strategies for stress management, have their medication adjusted, and interact with therapy animals.
They can also partake in a less orthodox therapeutic activity: registering to vote.
Located in a swing state that could decide the 2024 election, the hospital asks psychiatric inpatients, regardless of diagnosis, if they would be interested in "voter registration tools" that let them check their nearest polling station and register to vote online. Patients can also request a mail-in ballot with "assistance" from hospital staff, according to a pair of papers about the project, which began in 2020.
Since then, the hospital has continued registering patients—even those who are not near discharge and have not yet been stabilized—on the grounds that voting, as the institute puts it, is a "therapeutic tool" that "helps empower patients and makes them feel good."
"Voting is an important part of the recovery process," Julie Graziane, a geriatric psychiatrist who leads the hospital’s civic engagement efforts, said in a press release. Neither she nor Ruth Moore, the hospital’s head of community engagement, responded to requests for comment.
Initially, the Pennsylvania-based institute was relying on "voter support" materials created by its own staff. In more recent years, however, it has turned to the nonprofit Vot-ER, which develops "nonpartisan civic engagement tools" for "every corner of the healthcare system."
Founded by an emergency room physician at Harvard Medical School, Alister Martin, who served as an adviser to Vice President Kamala Harris, Vot-ER has helped more than 50,000 doctors register their patients to vote. Its signature product is a badge—with a QR code that pulls up an online voter registration platform—that health care workers can wear around their necks. Doctors ask patients whether they’ve registered to vote and, if the answer is no, encourage them to scan the badge.
Though Vot-ER claims to be nonpartisan, it is staffed by progressive operatives, funded by progressive foundations, and run by an umbrella nonprofit, A Healthier Democracy, that has referred to DEI as "the bedrock of fair healthcare." And ahead of the 2024 election, it is leading a movement—backed by top medical groups and an executive order from the Biden-Harris administration—that is turning health care centers into political battlegrounds.
Doctors have used Vot-ER’s tools to register patients in cancer hospitals, emergency rooms, substance abuse clinics, and palliative care departments. Some have even registered the parents of newborns in the neonatal intensive care unit, where infants in critical condition receive care.
The American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Nurses Association, and the Association of American Medical Colleges suggest that clinicians ask patients whether they plan to vote. So does the Department of Health and Human Services, which encourages federally funded health centers to provide "voter registration activities" to "underserved populations."
The HHS guidance is the result of a 2021 executive order instructing all federal agencies to promote "access to voting." Vot-ER has advised the Biden-Harris administration on how to implement that order, according to documents obtained by the Washington Examiner, and, amid a tightening presidential race, appears to be targeting traditional Democratic voting blocs.
Applications for the group’s resources ask whether the "majority of your patients" are "24 years old or younger," "Black/African-American," or "LGBTQIA+." Vot-ER's data indicate that 64 percent of the clinics that use its badges "predominantly serve" African Americans and Hispanics, who lean 83 and 61 percent Democrat respectively, according to the Pew Research Center, while 29 percent of the clinics serve patients primarily under the age of 24, a cohort where Democrats outnumber Republicans two to one.
The group even has scripts doctors can use to encourage "undocumented patients" to register their "friends and family members who are citizens" to vote. Vot-ER did not respond to a request for comment.
At stake, critics say, is not just the outcome of an election but the integrity of the patient/doctor relationship, at a time when trust in medicine—worn down by the COVID-19 pandemic, the politicization of medical associations, and a string of high-profile scandals at elite medical schools—has reached a nadir.
"I can’t even begin to tell you how inappropriate this is," said Sally Satel, a lecturer in psychiatry at Yale Medical School. "It’s such a contamination of a physician’s role."
Critics say that Vot-ER, which hosts trainings on "medical racism" and partners with the Climate Psychiatry Alliance, is turning doctors into political activists and patients into political capital. The transformation has raised ethical questions about the power dynamic between patient and provider, the capacity of institutionalized people to give consent, and the potential for partisan pushiness in the exam room, where political chit-chat was long seen as off-limits.
Though hospitals cannot conduct voter registration drives that endorse a specific party or candidate, federal law leaves plenty of room for more subtle appeals: Martin, Vot-ER’s founder, who is affiliated with Massachusetts General Hospital’s Center for Social Justice and Health Equity, said in an interview with the Boston Globe that he once told a patient recovering from an asthma attack to vote, since that was the "only way" to "take the smog out of the air."
"It’s very easy to insert politically coded speech into these interactions," said Kristen Walsh, a pediatrician in New Jersey. "You are effectively signaling to the patient how you want them to vote. And then you’ve really muddled the patient/doctor relationship."
Vot-ER was launched in 2019, a few months before the coronavirus pandemic, at Massachusetts General Hospital. Since then, it has partnered with over 700 health centers, been profiled by the New York Times, and helped more than 89,000 patients vote.
It has also worked with Ideas42, a group of "behavioral scientists" who design "equitable" interventions through a "race- and gender-conscious lens," to craft get-out-the-vote text blasts, according to an article in the Stanford Social Innovation Review.
These efforts have been underwritten by Democratic dark money, including the Tides Foundation and the Windward Fund, and overseen by an executive director, Aliya Bhatia, who says in her bio that she "prioritizes diversity and inclusion in all her endeavors."
Records from the Federal Election Commissions show that Bhatia cut $500 checks to Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, and Georgia senator Raphael Warnock (D.). At least five other Vot-ER officials, including chief of staff Leah Ford—a former Planned Parenthood "volunteer of the year"—have made donations through ActBlue, the Democratic Party’s online fundraising platform.
Bhatia did not respond to a request for comment.
Flush with cash and emboldened by President Joe Biden’s executive order, Vot-ER has developed ties to nearly every layer of America’s public health bureaucracy. Those layers include the Department of Health and Human Services, where Martin, also a Democratic donor, sits on an advisory panel; medical schools, where Vot-ER hosts competitions to see whose students can register the most voters; Epic Systems, the primary health records software in the United States, which now lets doctors record a patient’s "voter status" in his or her medical chart; and the American Medical Association, which in 2022 passed a resolution that declared voting a "social determinant of health."
Vot-ER "worked with the AMA" to get the resolution passed, Martin told the Aspen Ideas festival last year. He did not respond to a request for comment about what that work entailed.
The group has argued that because voting affects public policy, which affects public health, a patient’s voter registration status falls within the purview of physicians. Health care, Vot-ER says, is "an ideal arena for civic engagement" given the "trusted role" doctors play in their communities.
But for the group’s critics, it is precisely that trust that health care-based voter drives threaten to undermine. Physicians, they say, are guardians of physical, not civic, health. When voting is brought up by a doctor—perhaps by one sporting a pro-Palestinian pin on his white coat, as some physicians at the University of California, San Francisco, have done—patients may suspect an ulterior motive and worry that their care, or that of their dependents, will be impacted unless they do what the doctor wants.
"If you’re a patient, you want your doctor to like you," Satel, the Yale psychiatrist, told the Free Beacon. "In a real sense, your doctor has the power."
That’s especially true in the NICU, where parents have been asked to vote by the very doctors caring for their sick newborns.
Lisa Patel, a pediatric hospitalist at Stanford University and head of the Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health, wrote on X in April that she had spoken to "every family I saw in the newborn nursery about voting because their health and the health of their newborn depended on it." Adam Bauer, a neonatologist at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine, said in May that he had used Vot-ER’s tools to register the parents of infants "in the inpatient setting."
"I worry about the power imbalance there," Walsh, the New Jersey pediatrician, said, adding that her own children had spent time in the NICU. "As a parent in that situation, you’re on edge a lot of the time. There are a lot of medical decisions to be made, and you are hanging on the doctor’s every word."
Given those fraught dynamics, she added, "it’s important to be very careful not to exploit the doctor/parent relationship for political ends."
Both Bauer and Patel are active on social media and, between the two of them, have posted in support of Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Pete Buttigieg, Stacey Abrams, and the Green New Deal. Neither physician responded to requests for comment, though the Washington Free Beacon did receive an automated reply from Bauer saying that he was "currently on service in the NICU" and reminding the sender of upcoming election deadlines.
"Our pediatric patients," the message read, "need us to be their voices through voting."
For adult patients, some doctors now argue that voting is not just a form of civic uplift but an actual medical treatment, capable of alleviating anxiety, depression, and even suicidality.
Led by Debra Koss, a professor of clinical psychiatry at Rutgers Medical School, one team of psychiatrists described a patient who, depressed by the poor conditions in her Section 8 apartment building, gained an "internal locus of control" by registering to vote.
"Ultimately, she became less anxious and depressed," the doctors wrote in an op-ed last year, "and for the first time in 15 years, her intrusive suicidal thoughts ceased to exist."
Elliot Kaminetzky, a psychologist in New York who specializes in anxiety disorders, was skeptical.
"The claim that voter registration is a form of psychiatric treatment in a general sense is absurd," he said. It’s "misappropriating mental health terminology to further a blatantly political agenda."
Koss did not respond to a request for comment.
At the Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute, Graziane, the geriatric psychiatrist, has argued that voting can "increase life satisfaction, decrease risky behaviors and increase mental wellbeing." The institute has sought to democratize those benefits by taking advantage of Pennsylvania’s lax voting laws, which, unlike most states, do not impose competency requirements on voters in mental hospitals.
One paper indicates that "no psychiatric diagnoses were excluded" from the institute’s voter registration drive when it began in the six weeks leading up to the 2020 election, during which time nearly a fifth of the hospital’s patients had been involuntarily committed and nearly a fourth had psychotic disorders. Another paper indicates that patients were approached with voter registration tools "even if discharge was not upcoming."
Jane Rosnethal, a psychiatrist and medical ethicist at New York University’s Tisch Hospital, where she chaired the hospital’s ethics committee for three years, said that the lack of restrictions raised serious questions about the exploitation of vulnerable patients and their ability to give consent.
"Oftentimes these patients do not have the capacity to make a decision early on in an acute hospitalization," Rosenthal said. "What are we doing ethically posing this kind of question to people who are so vulnerable?"
Questions about voting can carry a whiff of extortion in psych wards, Kaminetzky noted, since some patients have been involuntarily committed and are there against their will: "They may fear that not registering to vote will be seen as non-compliant, necessitating a longer stay."
The potential for coercion went unmentioned in a 2023 paper by Graziane and her colleagues, in which they argued that psychiatrists had an "ethical obligation" to register their patients to vote.
"Psychiatrists might be apprehensive … about being perceived as pushing a political or moral agenda," they wrote. "We argue that social and political engagements naturally complement our expertise."
Their argument echoed what Martin told the New York Times in a 2020 interview about Vot-ER’s efforts: The time for doctors "being impartial and apolitical," he said, "is over."
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.

















