Berwick Pretends to Change Spots
on Rationing
By Wesley J. Smith
Editor's note. This appeared yesterday on Wesley's very fine
blog--
http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/
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Wesley J. Smith |
It is very clear that the Obama
Administration knows its approach to health care is unpopular.
Thus, the short term Medicare head, Donald Berwick–who Obama
gave a recess appointment to so he wouldn't have to testify in a
Senate Committee about his rationing views–pretended that we can
expand coverage, while not raising prices and not cutting care
in a speech yesterday. What a joke. From the Associated Press
story [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/13/AR2010091303597.html]:
The nation's health system
can't be transformed by rationing medical care, President Barack
Obama's new Medicare chief said Monday in his first major
speech. Dr. Donald Berwick's appointment earlier this summer
without Senate confirmation was contentious because some
Republicans accused him of being willing to deny care to save on
costs. Since then, the administration has kept Berwick out of
the limelight, turning the otherwise well-known medical
innovation guru into something of a mystery man in Washington.
Berwick broke his silence
Monday, telling an audience of health insurance industry
representatives that pushing back against unsustainable costs
cannot and should not involve "withholding from us, or our
neighbors, any care that helps" or "harming a hair on any
patient's head." Berwick also said he doesn't think federal
bureaucrats have all the answers when it comes to remaking the
system. "A massive, topdown, national project is not the way to
do this," he told a conference hosted by America's Health
Insurance Plans, the industry lobbying group.
"Some Republicans accused." No,
he said it himself. As the story points out:
Republicans have seized on
previous comments from Berwick, such as this one from an
interview last year: "The decision is not whether or not we will
ration care – the decision is whether we will ration with our
eyes open. And right now, we are doing it blindly." They say
that raises questions about what Berwick really thinks of
rationing. Berwick's supporters counter that rationing already
takes place, through actions of insurance companies, and all he
wants is to bring the medical decision-making process into the
open.
That's not the same thing at all
as "not harming any hair on a patient's head," and in fact,
endorses explicit rationing. Besides, Berwick is also on record
as applauding NICE and the NHS's top-down, rationed care
approach, as I pointed out at
www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/2010/05/13/obamacare-nominee-to-head-medicaremedicaid-loves-uks-socialized-nhs,
in which he extolled the NHS for "planning supply," (e.g.
rationing) and "redistributing wealth," and also stated:
'I am a romantic about the NHS;
I love it,' and 'the NHS is not just a national treasure, it is
a global treasure.'"
[The NHS] is melting down! People
are denied important medical services. Hospitals are filthy.
People are left waiting in ambulances before going into the ER.
Cancer patients and others are denied efficacious treatment
based on QALY quality of life bean counter analyses. (Just do a
search on this site under "SHS Meltdown" to see scores of
stories I have carried here.)
Berwick can pretend to change his
spots. But we know what he really believes. And next year, when
his temporary appointment ends, he will most likely be out of a
job. |