FROM MOUNTAIN MEDIA
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE DATED JULY 19, 1999
    THE LIBERTARIAN, By Vin Suprynowicz
    A politial circus


    Reflecting their standard dedication to thoughtful and informed debate,
both Democrats and Republicans staged news conferences and pep rallies on
Capitol Hill last week, dragging lab-coated professionals and the grieving
parents of dead children onstage to help promote their own (while
demonizing their opponents') versions of a national "Patients' Bill of
Rights."

  President Clinton reinforced the circumspect atmosphere by promising to
veto the GOP version once it reaches his desk (Republicans passed their
version Thursday), thundering that the stingy GOP plan "covers too few
people, provides insufficient patient protections, and contains inadequate
enforcement provisions."

  At issue were the Democrats' demands that these new "consumer
protections" -- including a guarantee of emergency room services and
increased access to specialists -- be extended to 160 million Americans,
rather than the Republicans' paltry 48 million, and that decisions as to
what medical care is necessary be returned entirely to attending physicians
(providing they follow "generally accepted medical practice.")

  Republicans warned that would destroy the efforts of health care plans to
put a lid on medical costs, bringing back uncontrolled medical inflation
and ultimately causing 1.8 million Americans to lose insurance coverage,
entirely.

  (Actually, the Congressional Budget Office estimates the Democratic plan
would have added 4.8 percent to the cost of insurance over five years,
while the GOP version would add 0.8 percent.)

  "The Democrat plan means more government, more lawyers, more rules, more
uninsured and more government control," declared Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas.
Meantime, across the aisle, millionaire whisky heir Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
D-Mass. and co-sponsor of the Democratic proposal, called the GOP version a
"profit-protection plan for the insurance industry."

  Needless to say, the dog that never barked in this particular circus is
the one that might have pointed out the U.S. Constitution grants no
authority for the federal government to meddle in the medical market at all
-- that Americans are supposed to be free to contract for the medical
insurance of their choice (if at all), and that national edicts requiring a
gray sameness of "consumer protections" were never part of the founder's
vision of a "small central government, with limited powers, sharply
delineated."

  Such quaint notions no longer receiving even token attention in
Washington, of course.

  So, unfortunately, even the GOP plan will now make it harder for patients
to sue their HMOs -- a further restriction on patient rights, peddled as
part of a "Patient Bill of Rights." How charming.

  What "rights" are guaranteed? Both the Republican and Democratic plans
would require that insurers pay for emergency room visits outside the
plan's network when a "prudent lay person" would believe symptoms indicate
a medical emergency. (An insurer would have to pay for an emergency room
visit for chest pains, for example, even if the pains turned out not to
indicate a heart attack.)

  That seems reasonable at first glance. But look again. No one has
proposed barring access to emergency rooms, which nearly always treat
life-or-death emergencies without advance payment guarantees. Furthermore,
patients always retain the option of paying such bills themselves. (Would
you allow your favorite politician to condemn your grocer or health insurer
for "conspiring to starve the children" because the grocer expects to be
paid for his produce and the insurance company won't buy it for you -
despite the obvious importance of fruit and vegetables to your health?)

  And why should consumers be banned from buying less expensive policies
that announce up front they will not pay for ER visits that fail to result
in hospital admissions -- a mighty expensive alternative to the local
health clinic?

  While patients should certainly have an accessible grievance process, and
retain the right to sue their insurance companies, grisly photographs and
worst-case anecdotes about HMOs denying "life-saving treatment" -- often
referring to expensive experimental treatments for patients already
terminally ill -- ignore the fact that managed care is working well at
holding back costs, which is all that makes medical insurance affordable
for millions, in the first place.

  Our medical system, while the best in the world, could stand some reform.
Getting government quickly out of the picture  -- except for courts to
prosecute fraud -- would be the best and fastest fix. (Even the "linkage"
of health insurance to the workplace -- the root of the current problem --
was the direct result of a government intervention, since the 1940s federal
wage freeze allowed employers to compete for employees only by offering
better tax-deductible health insurance -- a tax advantage never offered the
self-employed.)

  But failing that, what's required -- if anything -- is minor surgery
under the old guideline: "First, do no harm."

  Does anyone really believe that's what we're likely to get, in an
atmosphere of hucksters and carnival barkers maneuvering to savage their
Year 2000 opponents with charges they "don't care about dying children"?


Vin Suprynowicz, assistant editorial page editor of the Las Vegas
Review-Journal, is author of the new book, "Send in the Waco Killers."

***


Vin Suprynowicz,   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

"The evils of tyranny are rarely seen but by him who resists it." -- John
Hay, 1872

"The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed -- and
thus clamorous to be led to safety -- by menacing it with an endless series
of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary." -- H.L. Mencken

* * *


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