By Ralph R. Reiland on 8.14.09 @ 6:07AM
Life should not be wasted on the old, a physician with close ties
to the administration argues.
You'd think the central planners at the White House would go
outside their small group of relatives for some top-notch
expertise when they're trying to revamp something as big and
complex as one-sixth of the American economy.
When Bill Clinton sought to radically overhaul American health
care, he made the mistake of putting Hillary in charge.
This time around, Ezekiel Emanuel, brother of White House chief
of staff Rahm Emanuel, is on the Obama team as a special advisor
on health policy to the director of the White House Office of
Management and a member of the Federal Council on Comparative
Effectiveness Research.
What Hillary's months of closed-door meetings produced was a
top-down, command-and-control plan that put federal bureaucrats
in charge of the decision-making and conduct of doctors,
patients, employers, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies and
state governments.
To fund her Rube Goldberg scheme, Mrs. Clinton, with no
experience in business or medicine, advocated a federal mandate
that required employers to pick up the health insurance tab for
all their employees.
Asked about the jobs and small businesses that the mandate would
destroy, she said, "I can't go out and save every
undercapitalized entrepreneur in America." She didn't acknowledge
that it was precisely her mandate that would cause the
undercapitalization.
Her verdict for the small businesses that couldn't afford to give
full health care coverage to 100 percent of their employees?
"Where I come from, free loaders and free riders get no respect."
The message was loud and clear: Go out of business if you can't
pay for my vision.
The result was a defeat for HillaryCare and Republicans picking
up 52 House seats and eight Senate seats in the 1994 election,
plus five more seats in the House and two in the Senate due to
party-switching, giving Republicans control of both the House and
Senate for the first time in 40 years.
The promise from today's White House is that ObamaCare will
somehow provide universal coverage while simultaneously
increasing quality, decreasing costs and reducing federal
deficits.
The writings of Obama health advisor Ezekiel Emanuel provide some
insight into how our current crop of central planners might well
be intending to accomplish these seemingly conflicting goals.
Last year in Health Affairs: The Policy Journal of the Health
Sphere, Emanuel wrote that "Vague promises of savings from
cutting waste, enhancing prevention and wellness, installing
electronic medical records and improving quality are merely
'lipstick' cost controls, more for show and public relations than
for true change."
In other words, the billions in the House and Senate health
reform bills for "infrastructure" pork, i.e., "wellness" by way
of jungle gyms and walking paths, are just so much "lipstick."
In her recent "Deadly Doctors: Obama Advisors Want to Ration
Care" article, former New York lieutenant governor Betsy
McCaughey, founder of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths,
reports on where Emanuel sees the real savings, citing an article
he wrote last year in the Journal of the American Medical
Association: "Savings, he writes, will require changing how
doctors think about their patients: Doctors take the Hippocratic
Oath too seriously, 'as an imperative to do everything for the
patient regardless of the cost or effects on others.'"
The "effects on others" is the key. He's saying we've got to
think more collectively and less about ourselves. "Emanuel,"
writes McCaughey, "wants doctors to look beyond the needs of
their patients and consider social justice, such as whether the
money could be better spent on somebody else."
If "social justice" demands more spending on the young and less
on the old, Emanuel explains why this isn't a case of
discrimination: "Unlike allocation by sex or race, allocation by
age is not invidious discrimination; every person lives through
different life stages rather than being a single age. Even if
25-year-olds receive priority over 65-year-olds, everyone who is
65 years now was previously 25 years."
Granny, in short, should move on because she's had her chance.
"Social justice" requires that a costly individual be sacrificed
for the collective.
An essay co-authored by Emanuel on the "just allocation of health
care resources" in the Hasting Center Report,
November-December 1996, provides some detail regarding who should
be rationed out of the system, i.e., "services provided to
individuals who are irreversibly prevented from being or becoming
participating citizens are not basic and should not be
guaranteed. An obvious example is not guaranteeing health
services to patients with dementia."
We should die, in short, if we're deemed by the authorities to be
insufficiently participating.