By Betsy McCaughey on 8.17.09 @ 6:08AM
A response from the chairman and founder of the Committee to
Reduce Infection Deaths.
Instead of
trying to discredit me, the focus should be on the facts
about the proposed health legislation. The House bill (H.R.3200)
is dangerous to the elderly, as many are beginning to realize.
Here is what you need to know:
Partisans for the legislation claim that it simply aims to
provide Medicare coverage for once-every-five-year conversations
with doctors over end of life care. Wrong. The new "benefit" is
inserted in legislation with the express purpose of controlling
health care costs (page 1). The bill lists what must be covered
in the consultation (pages 425-30). Worse still, the legislation
states that the Medicare system will rate your doctor's "quality"
and (and adjust reimbursement) based on the percentage of your
doctor's patients who create living wills and adhere to them.
The "adhere to" part is especially dangerous. Some people say
"they'd never want to be on a ventilator," but when the time
comes, they choose it over death. Sick patients sometimes become
depressed and ready to give up on life, but a day later regain
their will to live. Doctors will incur penalties when families
don't adhere to end of life plans -- a horrible conflict of
interest. As a patient advocate, I see these difficult situations
and know that government should not be involved.
The President and his supporters claim that the provision is
"voluntary." The bill does not have to use the word mandatory to
make the counseling mandatory. In fact, the word mandatory is
seldom used in any legislation. But if there is a penalty for
noncompliance, it is mandatory. In this case the penalty is on
your doctor.
topics:
Health Care
About the Author
Betsy McCaughey, Ph.D., is a patient advocate, chairman and founder of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths, and a former Lt. Governor of New York State.