National Right to Life
Calls on Senate to Vote to Repeal Obama HealthCare
Part One of Four
WASHINGTON – The National
Right to Life Committee (NRLC) today called on all Senators to
vote to repeal the Obama Healthcare Law, and stated that it
would include the vote, expected shortly, in its scorecard of
key right-to-life roll calls of the 112th Congress.
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Burke Balch, JD,
director of NRLC’s Robert Powell Center
for Medical Ethics |
"As enacted, the Obama
Healthcare Law contains multiple provisions authorizing federal
subsidies for abortion, and additional provisions on which
future abortion-expanding regulatory mandates may be based,"
said David N. O'Steen, Ph.D., NRLC executive director.
"In addition, it contains
multiple provisions that will, if fully implemented, result in
government-imposed rationing of lifesaving medical care," added
Burke J. Balch, J.D. director of NRLC's Robert Powell Center for
Medical Ethics. "Among the most dangerous:
· The department of Health
and Human Services (HHS) will be empowered to impose so-called
"quality and efficiency" measures on health care providers,
based on recommendations by the Independent Payment Advisory
Board, which is directed to force private health care spending
below the rate of medical inflation. In many cases treatment
that a doctor and patient deem needed or advisable to save that
patient's life or preserve or improve the patient's health but
which runs afoul of the imposed standards will be denied, even
if the patient wants to pay for it.
· The law empowers HHS to
prevent older Americans from making up with their own funds for
the $555 billion the law cuts from Medicare by refusing to
permit senior citizens the choice of private-fee-for-service
plans whose premiums are sufficient to provide unrationed care
but which HHS, in its unlimited discretion, disallows. The Obama
Health Care Law could thus lead to elimination of the only way
that seniors will have to escape rationing - by limiting their
right to spend their own money to save their own lives.
· The law instructs and
authorizes state bureaucrats to limit the value of the insurance
policies that Americans may purchase. Not only will the
exchanges exclude policies from competing in an exchange when
government authorities do not agree with their premiums, but the
exchanges will even exclude insurers whose plans outside the
exchange offer consumers the ability to reduce the danger of
treatment denial by spending what those government authorities
claim to be an "excessive or unjustified" amount. This will
create a "chilling effect," deterring insurers who hope to
compete within the exchanges from offering adequately funded
plans even outside of them, so that consumers will find it
increasingly difficult to obtain health insurance that offers
adequate and unrationed health care.
"To summarize, the law is
so riddled with provisions that violate right-to-life principles
that it cannot simply be patched. It must be repealed, and any
replacement legislation must contain all necessary safeguards
for the right to life of the most vulnerable members of the
human family," Balch added.
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four |