By Quin Hillyer on 8.24.09 @ 6:09AM
Yes, Obamacare tips scales toward death.
Let's posit that Sarah Palin overstated the case when she warned
about "death panels" in the House version of Obamacare.
Obviously, there are no specific provisions in the legislation
that create all-powerful boards whose members give a thumbs-up or
thumbs-down on whether or not one person receives life-saving
care while another one is left to die or even "assisted" in
dying. But that doesn't mean that fears of government-prompted
premature deaths are unwarranted. Call it "death by proxy," or
DBP. Obamacare encourages DBP in multiple ways -- and it's not at
all unfair to suggest that President Obama himself doesn't really
mind that prospect.
First, consider the context. We have a president who has such
extreme, sickening disregard for inconvenient life that he
opposed
the Born Alive Infant Protection Act in Illinois, thus refusing
to require hospitals to care for babies who survive an attempted
abortion. And regarding the other end of life, this is the same
president who
told the New York Times' David Leonhardt that
because "the chronically ill and those toward the end of their
lives are accounting for potentially 80 percent of the total
health care bill out here," therefore "I think that there is
going to have to be a conversation that is guided by doctors,
scientists, ethicists. And then there is going to have to be a
very difficult democratic conversation that takes place. It is
very difficult to imagine the country making those decisions just
through the normal political channels. And that's part of why you
have to have some independent group that can give you guidance.
It's not determinative, but I think has to be able to give you
some guidance."
So this president wants a "conversation" that is "guided by"
supposed experts who are apart from the "normal political
channels" but that is nevertheless influenced by "a very
difficult democratic conversation." Is it any wonder that some
people interpreted this "independent group" as a "death panel"???
This same president surrounds himself with people who aren't --
shall we say -- particularly bashful about considering the
possibility of rationing care so that young adults get priority
ahead of their grandparents and their would-be children. Yes, the
president's chief medical policy advisor, Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, is
personally opposed to euthanasia. But the Washington
Post editorial board protests entirely too much when it
absolves him -- without much proof -- of approving the
rationing of care that disfavors the old and infirm. Frankly, the
Washington Times
editorial on August 16 blows the Post's editorial
out of the water, because there is no way to explain away Dr.
Emanuel's statement that "allocation by age is not invidious
discrimination; every person lives through different life stages
rather than being a single age." From the
executive summary of his piece published just this past
January, this could not be more clear: "We recommend an
alternative system -- the complete lives system -- which
prioritises younger people who have not yet lived a complete
life…."
Then a president who won't save infants born alive but
who does want the government to be involved (a
"democratic conversation") in deciding end-of-life treatment --
and whose medical policy adviser would "prioritise" young people
-- hires as his chief science adviser a man, John P. Holdren, who
first gained notoriety pushing eugenics ideas such as coerced
abortions, forced sterilizations through the water supply, and
other notions so outrageous that the man should never be accepted
in polite company again, much less have the ear of the President
of the United States. Again, the Washington Times
summed it up, with a hat tip being appropriate for Internet
journalist "Zombie" via
Michelle Malkin.
It is in that context that Section 1233 of the main House health
care bill started catalyzing fears of "death panels." The section
provides for end-of-life counseling, and it lays out in specific
form exactly what should be included in that counseling.
Significantly, the substance of that counseling is not
negotiable: It "shall" -- not "may" but "shall" -- include all of
the possibilities that so raised people's fears. As Betsy
McCaughey
noted at this site, the provision also effectively imposes
sanctions against doctors whose results aren't up to… uh…
snuff.
This is precisely where the "death by proxy" really comes in. If
medical personnel are rated on how effective they are at getting
patients to create living wills and the like, and if independent
boards are deciding that patients will not be reimbursed for
their payments for certain forms of care, then the effect is that
death becomes the default option. DBP, indeed.
Anybody who doubts that such provisions inevitably lead to
rationing care in a way that subtly favors death need only
consider that this is exactly what already is happening at the
state level, not just in "assisted suicide" states like Oregon
but
also in Georgia, as
approved by a federal court.
Even without the now-infamous Section 1233, rationing does occur,
frequently, in government-run and government-mandated
systems. And even without any health care bill, the camel's nose
already is
under the tent in the form of the Federal Coordinating
Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research.
Despite what Mr. Obama keeps saying about how extreme
right-wingers are "distorting" his plans with tales of death
panels and the like, the truth is that these concerns come from
all parts of the political spectrum, and that they are valid. The
Washington Post's own
Charles Lane, formerly editor of the liberal flagship the
New Republic, wrote as much a few weeks ago. Lane is
worth quoting extensively:
Section 1233, however, addresses compassionate goals in
disconcerting proximity to fiscal ones. Supporters protest that
they're just trying to facilitate choice -- even if patients
opt for expensive life-prolonging care. I think they protest
too much: If it's all about obviating suffering, emotional or
physical, what's it doing in a measure to "bend the curve" on
health-care costs? Though not mandatory, as some on the right
have claimed, the consultations envisioned in Section 1233
aren't quite "purely voluntary," as Rep. Sander M. Levin
(D-Mich.) asserts. To me, "purely voluntary" means "not unless
the patient requests one." Section 1233, however, lets doctors
initiate the chat and gives them an incentive -- money -- to do
so. Indeed, that's an incentive to insist.
Lane continues:
Section 1233 goes beyond facilitating doctor input to
preferring it. Indeed, the measure would have an interested
party -- the government -- recruit doctors to sell the elderly
on living wills, hospice care and their associated providers,
professions and organizations. You don't have to be a
right-wing wacko to question that approach.
Noted civil libertarian Nat Hentoff, nobody's example of a right
winger, goes even further than Lane did, pronouncing himself
"scared" of Obamacare -- which he says could amount to a
"chilling climax of the Obama presidency." The Hentoff column,
linked here,
is well worth reading in full. "No matter what Congress does when
it returns from its recess," Hentoff accurately writes,
"rationing is a basic part of Obama's eventual master health care
plan." Without using the words, what Hentoff describes, and warns
against, is exactly DBP.
And I dare say the president knows it.
topics:
Health Care, Ezekiel Emanuel, Death Panels