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WHEN THEY SAY….YOU SAY….
Editor's note. The following
from NRLC's Robert Powell Center for Medical Ethics is a
brilliant explanation of how ObamaCare has sown into it
rationing denial of lifesaving medical treatment.
On March 23, 2010 President Obama
signed into law the anti-life, unpopular health restructuring
plan, passed by the slimmest of margins. If the Obama Health
Care Rationing Law is not repealed before its most dangerous
provisions come into effect, the result will be the rationing
denial of lifesaving medical treatment, and consequent premature
and involuntary death, of an unknown but immense number of
Americans. The pro-life movement must devote itself over the
upcoming critical years to ensuring that the American people are
given the facts needed to counter the misinformation the Obama
Administration and its apologists in Congress and the press are
already spreading. When they say….you say!
They Say:
If you like your plan, you can
keep your plan.
You Say:
For seniors in the Medicare
program, this is simply NOT TRUE. Aside from the fiction that
cutting billions of dollars to a program somehow won't drive
many Medicare plans out of existence, the Obama Health Care
Rationing Law specifically paves the way for plan elimination.
Millions of Americans are on a unique Medicare program which is
known under the title of "private fee-for-service plans." This
option allows senior citizens the choice of health insurance
whose value is not limited by what the government may pay toward
it. These plans had been able to set premiums and reimbursement
rates for providers without upward limits imposed by government
regulation. This means that such plans would not have been
forced to ration treatment, as long as senior citizens chose to
pay more for them. Now, the Obama Health Care Rationing Law
allows bureaucrats at the Center for Medicare/Medicaid Services
to refuse to allow private-fee-for-service plans that charge
what they regard as premiums that are too high – or, literally,
allows them to refuse to allow private-fee-for-service plans (or
any other Medicare Advantage plans) altogether, for any reason
or no reason.
They Say:
If you like your doctor you can
keep your doctor.
You Say:
With the dramatic cuts doctors
will face, coupled with evidence of providers leaving Medicare,
seniors may not be able to keep their own doctor (nor find a new
one). Take one example -- In Arizona, the Mayo Clinic actually
announced it will stop treating many Medicare patients. This
pilot program will no longer accept new Medicare patients– a
plan Mayo may put in place across the country. The reason is
that it is no longer able to afford the low reimbursement rates
Medicare offers providers now. Each year, the rates paid to
Medicare providers are supposed to be cut in order to keep
Medicare solvent.
In truth Congress cobbles
together expensive bills yearly to ensure those cuts do not take
place. National Right to Life has long recognized this dilemma
of how underpayments in the Medicare program can lead to
rationing.
Moreover, a powerful rationing
board, known as the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB),
will be given the authority to further reduce payments to
providers as part of its mission to reduce costs. The IPAB will
have sweeping powers, not the least of which will be to ensure
that seniors' Medicare meets budget goals (which will tighten
each year). An increasing number of Medicare providers, being
paid further and further below their costs of providing care,
would stop accepting new Medicare patients, and many would stop
seeing their Medicare patients altogether.
They Say:
The law gives patients and
doctors more control over health care decisions.
You Say:
In fact, the Obama Health Care
Rationing Law takes away doctor-patient control, imposing
"quality and efficiency" standards for what treatment patients
can and cannot get, standards set in Washington with the
specific intent of preventing doctors and patients from being
able to provide or receive care that keeps up with medical
inflation – standards that every doctor and other health care
will have to follow as a condition of contracting with any
qualified health insurance plan.
A powerful rationing board will
not only have the power to cut senior treatment in Medicare, but
will also reach into every corner of the private system to limit
what Americans can spend to save their own lives. Starting in
2015 and then every two years after, an 18-member "Independent
Payment Advisory Board" (IMAB) is given the duty, with regard to
private health care, to make "recommendations to slow the growth
in national health expenditures . . . that the Secretary [of
Health and Human Services] or other Federal agencies can
implement administratively". In turn, the Secretary of Health
and Human Services is empowered to impose "quality" AND
"efficiency" measures on health care providers (including
hospices, ambulatory surgical centers, rehabilitation
facilities, home health agencies, physicians and hospitals)
which must report on their compliance.
What this amounts to is that
doctors, hospitals, and other health care providers will be told
by Washington bureaucrats just what diagnostic tests and medical
care is considered to meet "quality" and "efficiency" standards
– not only for federally funded health care programs like
Medicare, but also for health care paid for by private citizens
and their nongovernmental health insurance. And these will be
"quality and efficiency" standards specifically designed to
limit what ordinary Americans spend on health care. Treatment
that a doctor and patient in consultation deem needed or
advisable to save that patient's life or preserve or improve the
patient's health but which the government decides is too costly
– even if the patient is willing and able to pay for it – will
run afoul of the imposed standards.
In effect, there will be one
uniform national standard of care, established by Washington
bureaucrats and set with a view to limiting what private
citizens are allowed to spend on saving their own lives
They Say:
This bill holds insurance
companies accountable for unreasonable rate hikes.
You Say:
While this may sound appealing,
when the government limits by law what can be charged for health
insurance, it limits what people are allowed to pay for medical
treatment. While everyone would prefer to pay less – or nothing
– for health care (as for anything else), government price
controls in fact prevent access to lifesaving medical treatment
that costs more to supply than the price set by the government.
Instead of Americans making their own choices balancing the cost
against the benefit in evaluating competing insurance plans,
that decision will be taken out of their hands by bureaucrats
whose principal duty is to hold health care spending down.
Denial of lifesaving diagnostic tests and treatment would surely
follow. This is rationing, pure and simple
Not only will the newly created
exchanges be allowed to exclude policies when government
authorities do not agree with the premiums, but they will be
able to look at any increases plans charge, outside the exchange
– and remove those insurers from the exchange. This would create
a "chilling effect," deterring insurers who hope to be able to
compete within the exchange from offering adequately funded
plans even outside of the exchange in the regular market,
limiting consumers' access to adequate and unrationed health
care.
Under a scheme of premium price
controls, health insurance companies will ration lifesaving
medical treatment as they are squeezed more and more tightly
each year by the declining "real" (that is, adjusted for health
care inflation ) value of the premiums they take in. These
day-to-day rationing decisions will have the most direct and
visible impact on the lives – and deaths – of people with a poor
"quality of life."
They Say:
We are making Medicare solvent,
extending its life by eliminating waste and fraud.
You Say:
Aside from the fiction that
cutting billions of dollars to a program somehow won't hurt
Medicare, the Obama Health Care Rationing Law by gives Medicare
bureaucrats the specific power to cut plenty more than simply
waste and fraud. One of the most dangerous provisions creates a
powerful rationing board known as the "Independent Payment
Advisory Board" or IPAB.
To the extent the that Medicare
growth rates are expected to exceed growth targets, the Board
would have to act to reduce the gap by specified percentages
varying by year. This gap-reducing would come through reduction
of Medicare Advantage payments, and reductions in payments to
doctors and so forth.
The recommendations of the Board
would automatically go into effect unless Congress, through an
expedited procedure, adopted another means resulting in the same
reductions; to waive this would require a 3/5 vote. It would
also require a 3/5 vote to repeal or amend the provisions of the
law establishing the Board and its duties and authority.
This is likely to have either –
or, more likely, both– of two rationing effects. First, an
increasing number of Medicare providers, being paid further and
further below their costs of providing care, would stop
accepting new Medicare patients.
Second, the Board could change
the way reimbursement rates are structured, away from a
fee-for-service model toward a model, for example, under which
practitioners are paid a set annual amount per patient, or
toward an "episode" model, under which a set amount is paid per
illness or injury. In either of these cases, the physician or
other health care provider would have a strong financial
incentive to limit treatment, especially if it is costly. So,
the Board itself would not be "rationing" treatment – instead,
it would be compelling health care providers to do so.
They Say:
Patients will be given the
information they need to make good decisions.
You Say:
Patients will be pushed and
cajoled to reject life-saving treatment in order to reduce
costs. Under the "Shared Decisionmaking" program, the federal
government will contract with private entities to produce
"patient decision-making aids" and doctors and other health care
providers will be brought to regional centers to be trained in
their use. What sort of "decision-making aids" are likely to be
produced by these contracted entities?"
If you go to the website of the
Foundation for Informed Medical Decision Making, you immediately
come across a little box titled "Did You Know?" And in that box
flash statements like these: "About 25% of Medicare dollars are
spent on people in their last 60 days of life." "Whether or not
they receive active treatment, most men diagnosed with early
stage prostate cancer will die of something else." "Back
patients in Idaho Falls, Idaho are 20 times more likely to have
lumbar fusion surgery than those in Bangor, Maine, with no clear
difference in . . . quality of life." "For at least 70% of
people who have heart bypass surgery, the survival rate is no
better than if they had chosen to take medication alone." "More
care does not equal better outcomes." "In many people with
stable heart disease, medications are just as good as stents or
bypass surgery."
Do you notice a pattern? Clearly,
this is a group that wants to discourage patients from choosing
treatment that may be extensive or costly.
What do you find on the website
of the Center for Information Therapy? This statement: "Toward
the end of life, too many people receive ineffective, expensive
medical treatments." What about "Healthwise"? The home page of
its website proclaims "avoid unnecessary care with Healthwise
consumer health information", and its "Mission Statement" says
"We help people ... do as much for themselves as they can [and]
Say 'no' to the care that is not right for them."
Under the guise of giving
accurate and unbiased information to guide their informed
consent, these groups develop material whose clear bias is to
push and persuade patients to reject medical treatment. |