Health care rationing Obama
believes in begins!
Part Two of Three
By Nat Hentoff
Editor's note. This appeared
today at
www.JewishWorldReview.com
and is reprinted with the
author's permission.
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Nat Hentoff |
As a reporter, I do not use
euphemisms -- such as calling
murderous terrorists "militants"
or "activists." And as an
American, I can exercise my
First Amendment right to say
plainly that President Obama is
a liar with regard to our new
health care law, often referred
to as ObamaCare.
When a number of critics of
ObamaCare, including myself,
warned that it would bring the
rationing of treatments,
medications and research into
new procedures, the president
said to the American Medical
Association (June 15, 2009) that
this rationing charge was a
"fear tactic."
The next month, he said flat
out: "I don't believe that
government can or should run
health care." (firstthings.com,
May 31, 2010)
But in May of this year, the
president nominated Dr. Donald
Berwick, a professor at Harvard
Medical School, to head Health
and Human Services' Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS) -- the most powerful
health care position. As Hal
Scherz underlines (RealClearPolitics.com,
May 26): "CMS covers over 100
million Americans, has an annual
$800 billion budget that is
larger than the defense
department's and is the second
largest insurance company in the
world."
Unlike Obama, Berwick is
enthusiastically, openly candid
in his support of Britain's
socialistic National Health
Service. In a 2008 speech to
British physicians, our new
health czar said: "I am romantic
about National Health Service. I
love it (because it is)
'generous, hopeful, confident,
joyous and just.'"
That "just" National Health Care
Service decides which care can
be too costly for the government
to pay. Its real-time decider of
life-or-death outcomes is the
National Institute for Health
and Clinical Excellence (NICE).
Here is how "nicely" it works,
described by Michael Tanner,
senior fellow and health care
expert at the Cato Institute
(where I, too ,am a senior
fellow):
"It acts as a
comparative-effectiveness tool
for the National Health Care
Service, comparing various
treatments and determining
whether the benefits the
patients receives -- SUCH AS
PROLONGED LIFE -- are
cost-efficient for the
government."
So listen to our very own
decider of how the Obama
administration will lower our
national debt by cutting
inefficient health care costs.
After declaring his ardent
romantic attachment to the
British system, Berwick said:
"All I need to do to rediscover
the romance is to look at health
care in my own country." He
will, of course, be too busy to
attend the funerals of the
sacrificial Americans whose
lives -- not only those of the
elderly -- may thereby be cut
short.
Tanner makes a grim point as
Berwick rediscovers the romance
of government
cost-effectiveness: "Recent
reports suggest that the
recently passed health care bill
will be far more expensive than
originally projected. As it
becomes apparent that ObamaCare
is unsustainable, the calls for
controlling its costs through
rationing will grow louder. With
Donald Berwick running the
government's healthcare efforts,
those voices have a ready ear."
(The Daily Caller, May 27) By
then, Berwick will be involved
in the government-controlled
health of more than 100 million
Americans and -- notes Michael
Tanner -- "Maybe those worries
about death panels weren't so
crazy after all."
Keep in mind that already, in
May, "the Congressional Budget
Office updated its cost
projections (of ObamaCare). It
found that the new health
legislation would cost $115
billion more than estimated when
it was enacted. ("ObamaCare's
Ever-Rising Price Tag," Wall
Street Journal, June 3).
How soon will the romantic
rhythms of health-rationing
follow?
Wesley Smith, an invaluable
investigative reporter on the
dangers of government-controlled
health care, describes the
consequences if ObamaCare is not
repealed by the next Congress
after the midterm elections:
"Once the centralized planning
of medical delivery is complete
-- with cost-containment boards
controlling the standards of
care and the extent of coverage
for both the private and public
sectors -- insurance companies,
HMOs and the government will be
able to legally discriminate
against the sickest, most
disabled, and most elderly in
our country. In other words,
those whose care is most
expensive."
For what to watch for during the
reign of Berwick, whom Secretary
of Health and Human Services
Kathleen Sibelius recently
glorified as "absolutely the
right leader for this time,"
(CNS News, May 26), I bring back
Michael Tanner:
In the British Health Service
Berwick loves: "750,000 patients
are awaiting admission to NHS
hospitals. ...The latest
estimates suggest that for most
specialties, only 30 to 50
percent of patients are treated
within 18 weeks. For trauma and
orthopedic patients, the figure
is only 20 percent. ... Every
year. 50,000 surgeries are
canceled because patients become
too sick on the waiting list to
proceed."
And, again unlike the president,
Berwick tells it like it
frightently is in a June 2009
interview for the magazine,
Biotechnology Healthcare:
"It's not a question of whether
we will ration health care. It
is whether we will ration with
our eyes open."
There are many reasons why it is
vital for Americans to vote in
the midterm elections -- and, of
course, in 2012, to prevent a
second term for the most
dangerous and incompetent
president we have ever had --
but for many Americans, it is
particularly important this year
to vote against supporters of
ObamaCare. The question for many
voters should be whether, in the
years ahead, they will be in
condition to vote if they are on
waiting lists for
government-controlled health
care.
More of us are learning that
during the Obama administration,
it is essential to continually
keep our eyes open on all it
does.
Please send your comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
Part Three
Part One |