Posted on 03/22/2012 2:41:56 PM PDT by NYer
March 21, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Concerns over the new health care law’s system for rationing health care - famously dubbed the “death panels” by Sarah Palin - have been reinforced by a former head of the American Medical Association, who said the advisory panels “will essentially mean rationed care” for the elderly.
Former AMA President Donald Palmisano wrote in a Daily Caller column Monday that the Independent Payment Advisory Boards (IPAB), tasked with keeping Medicare expenses under control, would have little oversight as they deal with the disproportionate cost burden from seniors with greater medical needs.
“The 15 officials who will make up the board will not only be empowered to make what is expected to be billions of dollars worth of cuts to Medicare every year, but will be required to do so when spending exceeds targeted rates,” wrote Palmisano.
“PABs recommended cuts will become law unless a supermajority in Congress vetoes the boards proposal and creates its own cost-cutting proposal of equal size an unlikely scenario even in the most harmonious of political times.”
Although the panels are expected to focus on cutting payments to the doctors themselves, Palmisano said that Medicaid providers are already being sucked dry - and warned that a more brutal form of rationing, using adjustments based on “quality of life” as already practiced in Great Britain, was likely in store.
“IPAB may eventually be allowed to resort to Great Britains chosen rationing methods and refuse to provide certain effective treatments to patients who need them based on costs and patients remaining ‘quality adjusted life years.’ Though the law currently forbids IPAB from engaging in such behavior, there is little reason to believe these rules wont be changed or at least stretched down the road as costs continue to balloon and political dynamics change,” he wrote.
Palmisano warned that a group of lawmakers urging full repeal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), instead of piecemeal attempts, may miss the opportunity to block the most dangerous parts of the law, such as IPAB.
“[I]f Congress misses what could be its last chance to eliminate IPAB one of the most egregious aspects of the law it will be doing a disservice to seniors who need good medical care now and in the near-term future,” wrote Palmisano.
Read Palmisano’s full column here.
Since medical school I, and many other docs have had little respect for the AMA and several other professional associations. The leadership of these is routinely stocked with politically motivated individuals who extract themselves from patient care and are impervious to the policies they support. They are not physician or patient advocates, although they will swear up and down that they are.
That will be interesting because many will remember the not too long ago when it could all be done in one day. Literally. I felt a lump this past November, a week before Thanksgiving. I went to my ob-gyn a few days later. He sent me to the surgeons office that very day. They saw me two days later where she ultrasound the lump (a cyst) and aspirated it right then and there. I was able to enjoy my Thanksgiving worry free. All with in a week.
I am glad it was only a cyst! I was not so fortunate but my problem was handled quickly and that is why I am alive today. Won’t be like that in the near future.
I know they’re not in favor of it; it very openly takes money from their programs. I don’t think the AARP has come out against Obama, though; I’m not sure why they’ve given him a pass (unless they’re simply bought & paid for).
Like Europe, America is admitting that once people aren’t contributing to the tax base, they are economically detrimental; euthenasia won’t follow far behind the current plan to have blacks abort as many of their children as possible (under the guidance of our first mulatto president). The death panels are awaiting their first clients.
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