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Ahneida Ride
02-11-2009, 11:03 PM
Big Brother deterimes your medical treatment (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601039&refer=columnist_mccaughey&sid=aLzfDxfbwhzs)

From Bloomberg.com

Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Republican Senators are questioning whether President Barack Obama’s stimulus bill contains the right mix of tax breaks and cash infusions to jump-start the economy.

Tragically, no one from either party is objecting to the health provisions slipped in without discussion. These provisions reflect the handiwork of Tom Daschle, until recently the nominee to head the Health and Human Services Department.

Senators should read these provisions and vote against them because they are dangerous to your health. (Page numbers refer to H.R. 1 EH, pdf version).

The bill’s health rules will affect “every individual in the United States” (445, 454, 479). Your medical treatments will be tracked electronically by a federal system. Having electronic medical records at your fingertips, easily transferred to a hospital, is beneficial. It will help avoid duplicate tests and errors.

But the bill goes further. One new bureaucracy, the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology, will monitor treatments to make sure your doctor is doing what the federal government deems appropriate and cost effective. The goal is to reduce costs and “guide” your doctor’s decisions (442, 446). These provisions in the stimulus bill are virtually identical to what Daschle prescribed in his 2008 book, “Critical: What We Can Do About the Health-Care Crisis.” According to Daschle, doctors have to give up autonomy and “learn to operate less like solo practitioners.”

Keeping doctors informed of the newest medical findings is important, but enforcing uniformity goes too far.

New Penalties

Hospitals and doctors that are not “meaningful users” of the new system will face penalties. “Meaningful user” isn’t defined in the bill. That will be left to the HHS secretary, who will be empowered to impose “more stringent measures of meaningful use over time” (511, 518, 540-541)

What penalties will deter your doctor from going beyond the electronically delivered protocols when your condition is atypical or you need an experimental treatment? The vagueness is intentional. In his book, Daschle proposed an appointed body with vast powers to make the “tough” decisions elected politicians won’t make.

The stimulus bill does that, and calls it the Federal Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research (190-192). The goal, Daschle’s book explained, is to slow the development and use of new medications and technologies because they are driving up costs. He praises Europeans for being more willing to accept “hopeless diagnoses” and “forgo experimental treatments,” and he chastises Americans for expecting too much from the health-care system.

Elderly Hardest Hit

Daschle says health-care reform “will not be pain free.” Seniors should be more accepting of the conditions that come with age instead of treating them. That means the elderly will bear the brunt.

Medicare now pays for treatments deemed safe and effective. The stimulus bill would change that and apply a cost- effectiveness standard set by the Federal Council (464).

The Federal Council is modeled after a U.K. board discussed in Daschle’s book. This board approves or rejects treatments using a formula that divides the cost of the treatment by the number of years the patient is likely to benefit. Treatments for younger patients are more often approved than treatments for diseases that affect the elderly, such as osteoporosis.

In 2006, a U.K. health board decreed that elderly patients with macular degeneration had to wait until they went blind in one eye before they could get a costly new drug to save the other eye. It took almost three years of public protests before the board reversed its decision.

Hidden Provisions

If the Obama administration’s economic stimulus bill passes the Senate in its current form, seniors in the U.S. will face similar rationing. Defenders of the system say that individuals benefit in younger years and sacrifice later.

The stimulus bill will affect every part of health care, from medical and nursing education, to how patients are treated and how much hospitals get paid. The bill allocates more funding for this bureaucracy than for the Army, Navy, Marines, and Air Force combined (90-92, 174-177, 181).

Hiding health legislation in a stimulus bill is intentional. Daschle supported the Clinton administration’s health-care overhaul in 1994, and attributed its failure to debate and delay. A year ago, Daschle wrote that the next president should act quickly before critics mount an opposition. “If that means attaching a health-care plan to the federal budget, so be it,” he said. “The issue is too important to be stalled by Senate protocol.”

More Scrutiny Needed

On Friday, President Obama called it “inexcusable and irresponsible” for senators to delay passing the stimulus bill. In truth, this bill needs more scrutiny.

The health-care industry is the largest employer in the U.S. It produces almost 17 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product. Yet the bill treats health care the way European governments do: as a cost problem instead of a growth industry. Imagine limiting growth and innovation in the electronics or auto industry during this downturn. This stimulus is dangerous to your health and the economy.

(Betsy McCaughey is former lieutenant governor of New York and is an adjunct senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. The opinions expressed are her own.)

To contact the writer of this column: Betsy McCaughey at Betsymross@aol.com
Last Updated: February 9, 2009 00:01 EST

Blue Jays
02-11-2009, 11:19 PM
Yikes! I wonder if we'll get bailout deals on bicycles? :banana:

mschol17
02-11-2009, 11:22 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betsy_McCaughey_Ross

Louis
02-11-2009, 11:27 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betsy_McCaughey_Ross

Hey, if it's anti-Obama, it's got to be true. ;)

csm
02-12-2009, 08:00 AM
I read about this in the news. is it anti-obama?

Volant
02-12-2009, 08:08 AM
Thanks for the posting. I wonder what else is in the bill that we haven't been made aware of?!

johnnymossville
02-12-2009, 08:16 AM
Thanks for the posting. I wonder what else is in the bill that we haven't been made aware of?!

The speed at which they're rushing this through tells me there's much in there to worry about. Who knows though, maybe it'll be like winning the lottery. Gotta play to win! wooohoooooo! :beer:

CNY rider
02-12-2009, 08:30 AM
I share everyone else's concern.
But you do realize that your insurance companies are already doing this, I hope?

goonster
02-12-2009, 08:34 AM
I share everyone else's concern.
But you do realize that your insurance companies are already doing this, I hope?

Insurance Companies = Free Enterprise = Yay!
Gubbermint = Big Brother = Boo!

Plus, anything touched by Tom Daschle is now bad.

sg8357
02-12-2009, 09:13 AM
Insurance Companies = Free Enterprise = Yay!
Gubbermint = Big Brother = Boo!

Plus, anything touched by Tom Daschle is now bad.

In my experience Health Insurance Bureaucrats are a bit worse than Gummint Insurance Bureaucrats.

Besides we haven't had free enterprise since the 1890s in the United States,
we got 17,000 pages of government handouts and gimmicks in the tax code
determining which well the economony will fall down next.

Sandy
02-12-2009, 09:38 AM
To place major medical decisions on patient care away from the patient's actual physicians seems remarkably inefficient and actually dangerous. My brother, a physician, remarked some time back, that patient medical decicsons were being made by individuals who knew too little and did not practice medicine in the real world as they were not really capable of such. He would have patients in the hospital who needed certain tests and the insurance companies would say no. Some patients absolutely needed to stay in the hospital but the insurance companies said no to that too.

He has major concerns about the ability of the Government to regulate and/or control patient medical care.


Sandy

JeffS
02-12-2009, 10:02 AM
Every major crisis in history leads to an erosion of our rights.

This stimulus package is nothing but a collection of everyone's wishlist thrown into a pot and called stimulus. Well, if we're spending money it's got to be a stimulus right?

Better yet, they're playing it just like Bush did with Iraq. Question it and you're somehow unAmerican and don't care about saving the country. I don't care who proposed it... these big blank checks (both before and after the election) are nothing but the fleecing of the American public.

93legendti
02-12-2009, 10:17 AM
...Hiding health legislation in a stimulus bill is intentional. Daschle supported the Clinton administration’s health-care overhaul in 1994, and attributed its failure to debate and delay. A year ago, Daschle wrote that the next president should act quickly before critics mount an opposition. “If that means attaching a health-care plan to the federal budget, so be it,” he said. “The issue is too important to be stalled by Senate protocol.”...

...Obama’s brilliant appointees, we keep being told, are irreplaceable. But as de Gaulle said, “The cemeteries of the world are full of indispensable men.” You have to wonder if this team is really a meritocracy or merely a stacked deck. Not only did Rubin himself serve on the Obama economic transition team, but two of the transition’s headhunters were Michael Froman, Rubin’s chief of staff at Treasury and later a Citigroup executive, and James S. Rubin, an investor who is Robert Rubin’s son...

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/08/opinion/08rich.html

thwart
02-12-2009, 12:57 PM
The health-care industry is the largest employer in the U.S. It produces almost 17 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product. Yet the bill treats health care the way European governments do: as a cost problem instead of a growth industry. There's the quandary...

Someone has to pay for the growth.

Detroit is going under to some degree because of health care costs, and most employers fear looking at the latest premiums for health care insurance as much as an IRS audit.

If you are unlucky enough to lose your job, your COBRA will run $800 to $1200 a month... out of your now absent paycheck.

It's not a sustainable system.

The latest and greatest treatments cost huge amounts of money. Treating macular degeneration, for example...

Meanwhile those without insurance don't have money to buy their diabetes or blood pressure drugs or get basic immunizations.

sloji
02-12-2009, 02:10 PM
"I got me no healthcare, got me no house, work my sorry butt off and i'm worried about this bill? I'm a wage slave in the most applauded system ever invented by man and I can't afford any of this. My friends in Canada can at least get to see a doctor I don't go cause I need the money for food and rent." Jack in the Box, one of 14 million merricans who hasn't seen a doctor but three times in his life.

I read about healthcare and I hope that we find a way to cover all americans, rich or poor. The health of the nation is our security and without it there is no education and no workforce. If we can find a way to go to war we can find a way to have healthcare for all our citizens that is as first rate as a smart bomb.

TimD
02-13-2009, 12:56 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/02/13/press-ably-picking-apart_n_166707.html