Remember the Golden Oldies, Dr. Emanuel

Started by Warph, September 08, 2009, 01:15:59 AM

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Warph

Remember the Golden Oldies, Dr. Emanuel
By Yale Kramer, MD

How humane, how civilized, liberal values have made America. We've gotten rid of the death penalty, and all other cruel and unusual punishments. So Charles Manson -- murderer of nine people -- and hundreds of other murderers can live out their lives in relative comfort, not having to worry about where their next meal is coming from, or freezing in the winter, or having to do hard labor, or miss their weight-lifting routines or basketball games.


We've gotten rid of torture of our national enemies who may harbor dangerous knowledge. So they can breathe easy and mock our weakness and stupidity.


Alas, it seems that only innocent, non-threatening old timers who've never hurt anybody or threatened anybody, and who've lived out their law-abiding lives quietly and independently have been forgotten in the liberal calculus of humaneness and civility. Murderers get life, old timers get a humiliating lecture and a gentle shove to the funeral home. Nothing like the left to get things right.


Now that Obama is in full charge of things this is what we can look forward to.  On April 14 he told us.


"...the chronically ill and those toward the end of their lives are accounting for potentially 80% of the total health care bill out there....It is very difficult to imagine the country making those decisions just through the normal political channels. That's why you have to have some independent group that can give you guidance."


Who? Someone like Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, health advisor to Obama, and Zeke's brother Rahm, who loves to hurl thunderbolts from Mount Olympus and bully freshman congressmen. They and their ilk will give us "guidance" about who is worthwhile, who is ready to die, who shall live a week or two longer. Zeke is a Harvard academic who is arrogant enough to believe that he can change human nature and decide the most intimate and complex of human issues -- those of life and death. The man, a bona fide MD, clearly prefers writing bushels of words about what's good or bad for society to caring for people and being responsible for suffering patients. The soft-spoken arrogance and vanity of this administration is sometimes stunning.


Dr. Emanuel thinks health care must be distributed according to the group to which an individual belongs. Valued groups include young and healthy persons, and favored racial and gender groups. Those of less value, of course, are those with medical problems and the elderly.


According to Emanuel's "Complete Life" plan, society's scarce resources should be spent mostly on those under 40 years of age. Old folks get what's left over as determined by him and his ilk. How they will make their decisions is not at all clear.


With the help of several websites devoted to the achievements of older people, (museumofconceptualart.com; wilsonsalmanac.com) I have aggregated a number of individuals who are noteworthy and whose very lives are challenges to the kind of collectivist thinking that characterizes Obama's administration.


First of all there are those individuals who achieved something outstanding long after they had passed their Medicare age:


Benjamin Franklin -- At the age of 70 he helped to draft and signed the Declaration of Independence. For the next 14 years, until his death in 1790, he at one time or another served as the Ambassador to France, negotiated a peace treaty with England, had a romantic affair with a Mme Brillon, invented bifocals, signed  the U.S. Constitution, and became the president of the Society for promoting the abolition of Slavery.


Casey Stengel -- Stengel's genius contributed to that great run of 10 Yankee pennants in 12 years from 1949-1960. After losing to the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 1960 World Series Stengel was involuntarily retired from the Yankees, because he was believed to be too old to manage.  Stengel's view was that he had been fired for turning 70, and that he would "never make that mistake again." Stengel was talked out of retirement after one season to manage the New York Mets, which he did for four more years. And though they ended up last in their league those years Stengel never stopped adding to the poetry and lore of baseball, "Can't anybody play this here game?"


Ronald Reagan -- Ran for and was elected President of the United States at the age of 69 and again at 73.


Arthur Rubenstein -- One of the greatest pianists of the twentieth century played his last concert at the age of 89, only after his sight began to fail. And even then he continued to teach master classes until shortly before his death at age 95.


Grandma Moses -- A renowned American folk artist who began painting in her seventies after abandoning a career in embroidery because of arthritis. Instead of allowing herself to be pushed into the nearest bone yard, as Dr. Emanuel would have prescribed, she began her new career. She lived to be more than 100 and in those thirty years produced 3600 canvases. A work she painted in 1943, "Sugaring Off," was sold for $1.2 million in 2006.


Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. -- Became a member of the Supreme Court at the age of sixty and continued being one of America's most influential jurists for another thirty years, long after Ezekiel Emanuel would have judged him worthless.


Jessica Tandy -- Won the Academy Award for best actress in 1989 at the age of 80, for her role in "Driving Miss Daisy."


George Burns -- One of the most gifted comedy actors in the American theatre won an Oscar for his role in the "Sunshine Boys" at the age of 80 and continued performing and writing for the next 20 years.


Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. -- A physician and poet who remained active in both professions until he died at the age of 85.


Barbara McClintock -- An American Geneticist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for physiology at the age of 81. Continuing her scientific work, some believe that if she had lived a little past her 90 year she might have won a second Nobel Prize.


Alberta Hunter -- An American blues singer, songwriter and nurse. Her career had started back in the early 1920s, and continued from there on into the fifties when she became a nurse. She was prepared to devote the rest of her life to nursing, but the hospital retired her in 1977. Bored by inactivity, Hunter decided to resume her singing career, because she "never felt better." A limited engagement turned into an open-ended one and she became a success all over again. The comeback lasted six years, during which Hunter toured in Europe and South America, made television appearances, and enjoyed her renewed recording career. She continued to perform until shortly before her death in 1984.


There is an almost endless list of gifted people who remained creative and vital well into their senior life. Here is only the briefest of lists: Tolstoy, Churchill, W. Somerset Maugham, Coco Chanel, Nobelist Francis Rous, Albert Schweitzer, Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall, G.B. Shaw,  and P.G. Wodehouse.


But it would a shame to leave out some ordinary people who achieved remarkable things at a very ripe old age, such as:


Katsusuke Yanagisawa, 71, a retired Japanese schoolteacher, became the oldest person to climb Mt. Everest.


Retired mining engineer Ed Whitlock became the first man over 70 to run a standard marathon in under 3 hours. A Maori woman, Ramari Port, received her PhD in molecular medicine from the University of Auckland at the age of 74.Cancer survivor Barbara Hillary became one of the oldest people, and the first black woman, to reach the North Pole-at age 75.Cincinnati resident Harold Berkshire graduated from high school at the age of 81.

Venus Ramey, aged 82, balanced on her walker and fired her handgun to shoot out an intruder's tires. Ramey, who had been winner of the 1944 Miss America pageant, confronted the man on her Kentucky farm and disabled his vehicle so he couldn't escape.


Allan Stewart of New South Wales completed a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of New England at the age of 91. He said he finished what would have normally been a six-year degree in four and a half years "because of my age."


What Obama and Emanual cannot easily understand because they were raised and educated in identity or communitarian politics is that people don't dream collective dreams. People are individuals, with unique experience, genetic makeup, and destinies. One size does not fit all. They can only think in group or racial terms-whites, blacks, old people, young people, sick people, well people. Most people are mixed people with complex traits and ambitions.


What those "worthless" old people bring to life is one of the most precious contributions there is - hope.
"Every once in a while I just have a compelling need to shoot my mouth off." 
--Warph

"If you don't have a sense of humor, you probably don't have any sense at all."
-- Warph

"A gun is like a parachute.  If you need one, and don't have one, you'll probably never need one again."

Warph

September 06, 2009

Talking Seniors to Death
By Rita L. Marker


First, the bad news.  For the first time since 1975, Social Security recipients are being told they won't be receiving an annual cost of living increase in their monthly benefits.  At the same time, their Medicare premiums will go up, so monthly checks will actually shrink next year.  Not to worry, though.  Here's the good news.  Seniors may not have to live on such meager funds for long because the government is going to help them plan how they want to die.


This benevolent plan is in Section 1233 (p. 424) of the health care reform bill known as "America's Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009" (HR 3200).  It didn't just show up on the doorstep of health care reform, but was packaged and delivered by Compassion & Choices (C & C), the assisted-suicide advocacy group previously known as the Hemlock Society. 


Under Section 1233, a doctor would be paid for having an "advance care planning consultation" with a patient.  The consultation wouldn't be mandatory, at least for now.  But if the doctor wants to get paid for it, the consultation's contents are very specifically prescribed.  For example, each consultation "shall include" an explanation of legal documents such as living wills and durable powers of attorney, and information about the "continuum of end-of-life services."  Patients need not be ill but, because they are over a certain age, their doctors will suggest that it's time to talk about death.   


So, if George, a healthy 70-year-old marathon runner, goes to the doctor because of tendonitis, his doctor will have the all-important discussion with him, reminding him that he's not getting any younger and that it's time to decide how he'll die.   Sure, George may or may not be adversely affected by this.  But consider Clara, an 84-year-old widow who needs a hip replacement. If the doctor tells her that the government health plan won't pay for her surgery but will pay for pain pills, and then tells her it's really time to discuss her end-of-life options, what message is she getting?  Isn't it likely that Clara will acquiesce, if her doctor suggests that she "choose" to forgo treatment for any future illnesses so she won't be a burden on her family?     


To hear proponents of Section 1233 talk about it, one would think that people have no access now to information about advance directives.  But for years, federal law has required that patients be provided with general information about advance directives.   


In 1992, Congress passed the Patient Self-Determination Act.   It requires every health care organization receiving Medicare or Medicaid funds to do the following: at the time of admission, provide a written summary of a patient's rights under state law to make health care decisions, including the right to have an advance directive; ask all adults entering for treatment whether they have an existing advance directive; and document the existence of an advance directive in the patient's medical record.


Cheerleaders for more advance care planning claim that physicians won't tell their patients about options regarding available treatments and the right to accept or reject them unless they receive reimbursement for doing so.  But physicians already have a responsibility to provide that information to patients so they can give or withhold consent to available treatments.  This is known as informed consent. 


Yet there are calls for more details about end-of-life planning.  Perhaps those who are advocating this are unaware that, beginning in 2009, doctors have been required to discuss end-of-life planning, including advance directives, with all Medicare patients at their initial "Welcome to Medicare" physical exam. 


With all of these current requirements, isn't paying doctors to have another talk with grandma just a bit of, shall we say, overkill?   Is foisting yet another death planning chat with her really necessary?  And what would be part of the "end-of-life continuum" discussion?


In most states that continuum would culminate in such services as palliative care and hospice.  However, in Oregon and Washington the continuum extends to the provision of a prescription for a lethal dose of drugs under those states' "Death with Dignity" laws.  This should be of concern to all. 


The background of Section 1233 sheds some light on its inclusion in the health care reform bill. 


According to C & C's newsletter, the organization has worked long and hard for such language, which is "part of a great advance in end-of-life care, building upon several years of thoughtful and strategic groundwork."  C & C proudly acknowledges its leadership role in placing Section 1233 in the bill: "Compassion & Choices and its supporters have worked tirelessly with supportive members of Congress to include in proposed reform legislation a provision requiring Medicare to cover patient consultation with their doctors about end-of-life choice (section 1233 of House Bill 3200)." And it plans to continue leading the charge:


"As Congress debates health insurance reform, Compassion & Choices is leading the charge to make end-of-life choice a centerpiece of any program that emerges. We are working hard to reach our goal to make end-of-life choice a centerpiece of national health insurance reform."


C & C has worked hand in hand with Oregon Congressman Earl Blumenauer who it describes as a "long-time supporter of individual choice."  Indeed, Blumenauer has been an outspoken supporter of Oregon's assisted-suicide law, the "Death with Dignity Act."  During a floor speech in 1998, he stated:


"In Oregon, our legislation, Death with Dignity, is still a work in progress, but the fact is the preliminary evidence suggests that this option may actually reduce the incidence of violent suicide while easing the burden on both the individual and their family....

"As we age as a society, exponentially, with the increase of the elderly population, and just the growth in our population, this will become more serious....The evidence suggests that Americans support the principles of Death with Dignity."


In a 2004 press release, he applauded a court ruling that upheld the assisted-suicide law. 


"This is a great victory for the people of Oregon who decided not once, but twice that people should have the right to make personal end-of-life decisions without federal interference," he said.   (Blumenauer seems to ignore the fact that, also in 2004, he said the government shouldn't meddle in personal end-of-life decisions.  Yet, now he's attempting to dictate the content of communication between patients and their doctors.)


He continued, "Every day people across the country struggle with these end-of-life decisions but Oregon is the only state that has protections and safeguards in place." (Note that he, like other assisted-suicide activists, refers to assisted suicide as an "end-of-life decision.")


Blumenauer's "end-of-life" terminology is part and parcel of Section 1233.  Clearly expressing his ownership of the section, he described an incident that took place when he was presiding over House proceedings.  Writing about Section 1233 in the Huffington Post, Blumenauer stated, "Actually, I know a little bit about this section because it's a bill that I wrote which was incorporated into the overall legislation."


His earlier incorporated bill is HR 2911, called the "Advance Planning and Compassionate Care Act."    In fact, a portion of that bill, (Sec. 211, p. 50) makes up almost the entirety of Section 1233. 


Although Blumenauer and other defenders of Section 1233 vociferously deny that it could have anything to do with assisted suicide, his earlier bill acknowledged that assisted suicide would be included in such consultations.  Since federal law currently prohibits federal funding from being used for "items and services" related to assisted suicide, Blumenauer inserted language into HR 2911 (Sec. 111, p. 19) stating that advance care planning "shall not be construed to violate the Assisted Suicide Funding Restriction Act of 1997."   That exception did not make its way into HR 3200, probably because any reference to assisted suicide would raise red flags.   Also, not contained in HR 3200 is a provision from Blumenauer's earlier bill (Sec. 121, p. 31) to "encourage providers to discuss advance care planning with their patients of all ages."


Blumenauer is not the only lawmaker to propose advance care planning consultations.  Senator Mark Warner (D-VA) introduced a similar bill, curiously called the "Senior Navigation and Planning Act of 2009" (SB 1251).  Warner told Medical Futility that he submitted the legislation because Congress is considering health care reform and he would like to see some of his ideas incorporated into that legislation.   His bill (Sec. 6, p. 14) would force doctors to provide information on advance directives and other end-of-life planning tools in "a form and manner, and at a time, determined to be appropriate by the Secretary [of Health and Human Services]." The consequence for not doing so would be severe.  No payment would be made to physicians for any items and services furnished after January 1, 2014,  unless they agreed (under a process established by the Secretary) to provide individuals with information on advance directives and other end-of-life planning tools.


Technically, a patient would not be forced to have an advance care planning consultation. However, physicians would be unlikely to treat them unless they agreed to do so since doctors who didn't provide the end-of-life talk would not be paid for any other services.


Could coercion like this be avoided by deleting the advance care planning consultation from HR 3200?  Clearly, the answer is "No."  If a particular intervention is not mentioned in HR 3200, it can easily be reinserted when the details of covered benefits are determined by one of the myriad committees that would be charged with formulating the particulars through the rule-making process.  In the final analysis, any "benefit" that is not explicitly prohibited in a health care reform bill could become a covered benefit. 


Would the actual provision of assisted-suicide drugs be covered?  That would certainly be cost effective, since dead patients don't consume Medicare dollars.  But coverage of the actual lethal prescription wouldn't be necessary. As Oregon's suicidal approach to health care has demonstrated, a government health plan could deny wanted and needed treatment and then suggest assisted suicide as an alternative.  Initially, an organization like C & C could pay for the oh-so-inexpensive lethal prescription. 


Such assistance by C & C would undoubtedly be touted as compassionate, would advance the organization's agenda and could, eventually, lead to the repeal of the Assisted Suicide Funding Restriction Act.  C & C has many powerful friends on Capitol Hill, including Senator Dianne Feinstein (D -CA).  Feinstein, who is the honorary co-chair for a November 5 fund-raiser for C & C, is on record endorsing a failed proposal for an Oregon-style assisted-suicide law in California.   So it is not beyond the realm of possibility that, if HR 3200 passes, assisted suicide could eventually be an included benefit in any qualified health benefit program.


However, passage of the bill is far from assured, thanks to seniors across the country.  They have read Section 1233.   They are making it clear that they want no part of government-designed death talk.  They are savvy.  They are informed.   They are not angry mobs.  They are intelligent citizens who have been expressing their strong opinions.  For now, they are successfully fending off the soft smothering cushion of deadly governmental paternalism.  But they cannot stop now. 


Only by continuing to speak up and speak out will seniors be spared the subtle and not so subtle pressure to die and get out of the way.


Rita L. Marker is an attorney and executive director of the International Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide.
"Every once in a while I just have a compelling need to shoot my mouth off." 
--Warph

"If you don't have a sense of humor, you probably don't have any sense at all."
-- Warph

"A gun is like a parachute.  If you need one, and don't have one, you'll probably never need one again."

pamsback

I read it too. It didn't say "WOOHOO lets kill off the geezers" to me.

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