Health Care Reform: End-of-Life Issues

by Charmaine Yoest on July 30, 2009

Health care reform must respect life, and not contain provisions that mandate or encourage the withdrawal or curtailment of effective life-sustaining treatment to the terminally ill, the chronically ill, or the permanently disabled.  Therefore, the provisions that address end-of-life issues must be amended to leave no room for an interpretation that would pressure healthcare providers to make decisions based on cost rather than best medical care.

Section 1233 of the House bill includes vague, federally defined end-of-life counseling.  We are concerned that such counseling might put subtle pressure on patients to make decisions not on sound medical bases but in order to conserve costs.  Additionally, the bill does not define terms such as “palliative care” and “end-of-life services,” raising the question of whether a discussion about euthanasia might even be mandated.

Section 2707 of the Senate HELP bill requires that insurers develop and implement a reimbursement structure for making payments to healthcare providers that includes incentives for use of evidence based medicine and best clinical practices.  This and other provisions in the bill create the possibility that health care coverage determinations could be based on a patient’s health status, age, and/or quality of life.  The resulting structure could become a means of advocating for the least expensive treatment at the expense of respect for life.  With cost as a primary driver, the elderly, sick, and disabled may find their options for care severely limited.

Supporters of the healthcare reform bills claim that the legislation will not lead to the withdrawal or curtailment of life-sustaining healthcare, or put pressure on doctors and patients to hasten death.  However, amendments offered in the Senate HELP Committee to address these concerns were defeated, including the following: (1) amendments to prevent the denial of end of life care and prohibit rationing on the basis of patient age, disability, medical dependency, or quality of life; (2) an amendment to ensure that taxpayers were not forced to fund assisted suicide; (3) an amendment that would have prevented private health insurers from being prohibited from covering treatment; (4) an amendment that would have ensured all individuals have access to essential health benefits; and (5) an amendment that would have required certification that participating plans do not have a  pattern of practice or denying coverage based on their age, expected length of life, and disability.

If the supporters of these healthcare reform measures do not intend to withdraw or curtail life-sustaining healthcare for many patients, why are they unwilling to include clarifying language in the bills?  We urge members of Congress to clarify these provisions before a bill is brought to the House and Senate floors.

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Health Care Reform: End-of-Life Issues | americans united for life … | Helping Aids For Elderly
October 6, 2009 at 5:16 am

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Bernard August 12, 2009 at 11:35 am

You people are unconscionable. You obviously have an agenda to kill any reform to a health care system that is very lucrative to some but devastating to many. Maybe you simply see this as an opportunity for President Obama’s “Waterloo”.

Whatever your motivation, to extract a very sensible provision in a proposed bill and to distort it into a nefarious intent to kill old people is cruel to people who are predisposed to believe you and plays upon their fears.

My hope is that your lies and distortions are exposed for what they are.

Sara Wade August 15, 2009 at 2:03 pm

Many, many family caregivers who has gone through the process of caring for an elderly family member through the dying process agree that signing up their elderly family member for hospice care was the best thing they did.

Hospice providers are knowledge, experience and skilled in the dying process. In addition, they encourage and help family members complete important legal documents such as a living will and power of attorney.

More people should know about end of life care services and options. Far too may people wait until it’s too late.

Compromises in language could have been made. Outright opposition to the provision is unwise, unkind and ill-informed.

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