By Ralph R. Reiland on 9.29.09 @ 6:06AM
Newsweek's editorial death panel has endorsed
it.
I thought we were supposed to think that Sarah Palin was nuts for
bringing up "death panels."
Now a few weeks later the cover of Newsweek has a
giant plug on it, unplugged, accompanied by a super-sized
headline: "The Case for Killing Granny: Curbing Excessive
End-of-Life Care Is Good for America." The article is by Evan
Thomas, a Newsweek editor-at-large.
Right below that cover headline is the title of a second article on the same
subject by Jon Meacham, Newsweek's editor: "I Was
a Teenage Death Panelist."
Inside, Meacham explains, "Our cover this week is of course
hyperbolic." The editors aren't yet nominating Dr. Ezekiel
Emanuel, President Obama's special adviser on health policy and
brother of White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, for the top
job on a plug-pulling panel.
Dr. Emanuel is the one who explained why it isn't discrimination
to discriminate against older people in favor of the young when
it comes to the government's distribution of health care dollars.
"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."
That's like saying that a transgendered individual, now a woman,
shouldn't complain about sexism because she was once a man.
Wacky, but that seems to be the kind of thinking that guys like
Dr. Emanuel pick up at Harvard in order to be more avant-garde
than the dummy-dominated hoi polloi.
In Dr. Emanuel's case, he got a quadruple overdose of
Harvard-think, receiving his M.D. from Harvard Medical School, a
Ph.D. in political philosophy from Harvard, then sticking around
as a fellow in the Program in Ethics and the Professions at the
Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, followed by a stint as
an associate professor at Harvard Medical School.
Emanuel is saying that a 25-year-old who hurts himself jumping
over a wall into the United States from Mexico gets a new knee
from the taxpayers before a 65-year-old who's paid into the
system her whole life because the younger person has more years
of life ahead of him to enjoy.
"Americans do spend an inordinate amount of money (30 percent of
Medicare, for instance) on care in the last six months of life,"
writes Meacham, pointing out that "R. Sean Morrison of the
National Palliative Care Research Center estimates that we could
save $6 billion a year if we better matched treatments to patient
goals and wishes during serious illness and at the end of life."
We saw how the central planners put together their goal of saving
money with alleged "patient goals and wishes" in their "Your
Life, Your Choices" booklet at the Department of Veterans
Affairs. The publication, canceled by the Bush White House but
resurrected by the Obama administration, asks veterans in
hospitals and nursing homes whether their lives would be "not
worth living" under various scenarios.
Answer in agreement to too many statements like "I can no longer
contribute to my family's well being," "My situation causes a
severe emotional burden for my family," and "I am a severe
financial burden on my family," and a bureaucrat with an eye on
the red ink might well report up the line to the plug-pullers
that the patient, himself, has decided that it's time for a
shovel-ready solution.
Meacham calls the money saved by getting rid of these patients a
"post-hope dividend." The $6 billion a year in estimated savings
referred to above is equal to 1.1 percent of Obama's
non-stimulating $800 billion stimulus package.
The estimate of $6 billion per year that we might squeeze out of
patients by hitting them with enough guilt-inducing and
depressing questions is also equal to the amount of red ink and
debt that the D.C. politicians are piling up every day and a half
by way of this year's federal deficit.
Still, Newsweek's Thomas sees granny as the
super-buster of the budget. "The need to spend less money on the
elderly at the end of life is the elephant in the room in the
health-reform debate," he writes. "Everyone sees it but no one
wants to talk about it."
Wrong. We are talking about it, and the more we talk, the more
we're seeing that it's not granny who is the elephant.
topics:
Health Care, Death Panels