06 Aug

Phantom Pains at The Post



Phantom pains at The Post
By Fred D. Thompson
A Page One article in Saturday’s Washington Post blaring the headline “Talk Radio Campaign Frightening Seniors” states, “A campaign on conservative talk radio … has sparked fear among senior citizens that the health care bill moving through Congress will lead to end-of-life ‘rationing’ and even ‘euthanasia,’ ” and that the bill has been described as “guiding you in how to die.”
The story’s continuation inside — under the headline “Conservatives Have Seniors Fearing ‘Euthanasia’ as Part of Reform” says that, like arguments about abortion coverage, this has become a distraction to the president’s broader health care agenda.
The reader looking for examples of this “talk show” campaign will be disappointed. Not one talk-radio host is quoted, and no specific radio show is mentioned (though The Post does quote an interview done on my radio show, without telling the reader the interview was done on a radio show). However, the article does make use of information supplied by off-the-record “Democratic strategists.” One is free to conclude for oneself who has launched a “campaign.”
It does seem that the words attributed to unnamed conservative culprits are fairly mild compared to the hysteria coming out of left-wing Web sites and blogs. My favorite is the one found on the Huffington Post, where Republicans are accused of saying that granny would be shot in her wheelchair under a provision in the Obama-Pelosi-Waxman health care bill.
Let’s discuss whether these deranged seniors are being misled by people who actually may have read the bill. (Presumably this offense cannot be laid at the feet of their representatives of Congress.) Although I have never said anything like the things attributed to radio talk hosts, the article states that “the attacks on talk radio began when Betsy McCaughey … told former senator Fred D. Thompson (R-Tenn.) that mandatory counseling sessions with Medicare beneficiaries would ‘tell them how to end their life sooner’ and would teach the elderly ‘how to decline nutrition — and cut your life short.’ ”
The basic position of the bill’s proponents seems to be that these consultations are totally voluntary, that seniors should have the benefit of such end-of-life consultations and that the consultation provision is nothing more than to get doctors reimbursed when a consultation occurs at the patient’s request. The “let’s get the doctor paid” rationale was swallowed whole by The Post’s writer, Ceci Connolly.
Those concerned by this provision believe it to be mandatory and wonder why the government is involving itself in the doctor-patient relationship and with end-of-life decisions.
Section 1233 of the bill, having to do with Medicare, describes the “advanced care planning consultation” as between the individual (a spouse and next of kin are not mentioned) and a “practitioner,” described as a physician, a nurse practitioner or a physician’s assistant. (It does not appear that it is a requirement that the physician in question be the patient’s physician of record.)
In legislation, an issue as to whether an action is mandatory or not can be resolved quickly by a glance at the statute, which will state that (in this case) the consultation either “shall” be taken or “may” be taken. Remarkably, neither phrase is used in the statute in question.
Rather, the statute just describes what a consultation is and then strictly prescribes in mandatory language what must be included in the consultation as well as what may be included. For example, in Paragraph 4, a consultation “may include the formulation of an order regarding life-sustaining treatment” and may include an order for “the use of artificially administered nutrition and hydration.”
The drafters of the provision were either sloppy, befitting a situation in which a complicated, 1,000-plus-page bill, controlling one-sixth of the economy, is rushed through the legislative process. Or it might be that the drafters desired an intentionally vague statute, knowing administration officials would be drafting regulations for the implementation of the bill after it passed.
As it stands, there is more than ample reason to believe the provision was meant to be mandatory with regard to the practitioners. Otherwise, why have the provision in the bill at all? If getting the doctors paid for a voluntary consultation really was the provision’s intent, an amendment of two or three lines would have fixed it. As it is, it is two lines in a five-page provision full of specific instructions about what doctors, nurses or doctor’s aides must explain to the patients.
Seniors are reminded daily by the media that Medicare is going broke, that the country must cut Medicare costs and that the last days of life are by far the most expensive. Now they are being told by the administration — one that has been less than transparent on this bill and a host of other issues — that this bill will cut Medicare costs. They are learning that they are “coincidentally” being asked about end-of-life issues at the government’s behest, perhaps by a stranger who is receiving Medicare reimbursement payments. How long do you think it will take a Medicare patient to figure out which decisions will cost the government money and which will save the government money?
This is no reflection on medical professionals. They clearly are being put in a position they neither have asked for nor are completely qualified for. However, I am gratified that a president who can matter-of-factly accuse doctors of routinely removing a child’s tonsils solely for financial gain has newfound trust in a doctor’s or some hospital employee’s ability to consult and even help draw up legal documents regarding end-of-life issues.
If this is all just a misunderstanding about whether this provision is mandatory or not, it can be resolved readily. Let’s see if the supporters of the provision are willing to add language to the bill making it clear that there is no requirement that these consultations take place. Better still, they should drop this provision from the bill and let patients discuss these matters with their families, their clergy, lawyers who have expertise in living wills and powers of attorney, or whomever else they desire.
So is this a conspiracy to kill off granny? No. Will seniors be forced to make decisions they don’t want to make? No. But will “practitioners” be encouraged to have end-of-life discussions that include when it might be best for patients to allow their life to end earlier than it has to? Of course. And seniors have a right to be satisfied that there is not, at the heart of this process, undo consideration given to cost-cutting.
In the end, it depends on how comfortable one is with having the government in the middle of this process. That is what this discussion is really all about.

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Wild Thing’s comment………
Excellent article, he nails them, and I like when Fred said they njeed to take this out of the bill. I will even go further and say they need to trash the entire bill.
Consultation, or no consultation; government health care will be rationed.

….Thank you Mark for sending this to me.
Mark
3rd Mar.Div. 1st Battalion 9th Marine Regiment
1/9 Marines aka The Walking Dead
VN 66-67

TomR says:

You’re correct Wild Thing. The entire bill should be dumpster fill.
Betsy McCaughey is a very articulate woman. She does her work thoroughly. She would make another one of the many upcoming conservative women who could be a candidate for high office or a Cabinet appointment for a Conservative president. Betsy already has some experience from being a Lt. Governor of New York.

Mark says:

Got to disagree with Betsy McCaughey, here. And its only my opinion. She says, ” Are they trying to kill off Granny, No. Will Seniors be forced to make decisions they don’t want to make, No.”
Just the fact that this End of Life counseling is in the bill leads easily to that slippery slope of Euthanasia. How many times have they added and addendum to Medicare as a rider on some other bill. This bill is already restricting care to Special Needs children. The whole bill is garbage from the get go. You can bet that with the DNA testing of unborns who may have some sort of defect(Downs), the government will encourage abortion, so the family doesn’t have to be put through that and the government doesn’t have to pay for it. It is only a question of time before we start weeding out the undesirables.
Obama already has in place, people who want to use mass sterilizaton techniques, forced abortions, Animals can sue in court. It isn’t much of a stretch to believe that euthanasia is right around the corner, if not already here in disguise and plucking the “Human Weeds”.

TomR says:

Mark – that statement is Fred Thompson’s. He is using it as an arguement that seniors are questioning whether those articles are in the bill. He says no, but infers that once the bill is in place we don’t know what could be added later if you blindly trust government.

Mark says:

Tom thanks for the heads up. But my argument was sound, LOL. Been too much into this stuff. It can make one crazy, …Ooops beter not say that too loud, thats in there too- Mental Health.
Thanks Tom

Wild Thing says:

Tom, thank you. I really would love for
them to throw it away and stop talking
about forever. Even the one the Republicans
have, we need much less government in our lives.
waaaaaaaaa