'Death panel' controversy remains very much alive
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| Washington
The 鈥渄eath panel鈥 debate 鈥 it鈥檚 still alive.
The White House has pushed back hard against the notion 鈥 spread by former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, among others 鈥 that healthcare reform legislation might set up 鈥渄eath panels鈥 that would control access to end-of-life care for the elderly.
鈥淭he president鈥檚 made some discernible progress on the mistruth about government making end-of-life healthcare decisions for seniors, which obviously isn鈥檛 going to happen,鈥 said White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs on Friday. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not in the bill.鈥
But some liberal groups have flipped the argument on its head, saying that private insurance firms, with their power to deny claims by policyholders, are the real 鈥渄eath panels.鈥 And some Republicans have used the 鈥渄eath panel鈥 term as a jumping-off point to discuss a larger issue 鈥 government rationing of services, which they say might be the result of healthcare reform鈥檚 passage.
鈥淲hen Sarah Palin said that the emerging healthcare reform legislation would lead to 鈥榙eath panels鈥 and government rationing of care, her language was explosive, but her premise about rationing was not,鈥 wrote former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich in a this week.
Palin鈥檚 鈥渄eath panel鈥 charge pointed at a provision in the House version of health legislation that would fund voluntary end-of-life counseling sessions. It has been widely debunked by fact-checking journalism organizations. The Pulitzer-prize winning site gave Palin a 鈥淧ants on Fire鈥 designation for the remark.
Still, Senate Democrats quickly pulled the counseling provision from their version of the bill. For some voters, this may have confirmed their suspicions of the provision鈥檚 intention.
A poll released Aug. 20 found that 86 percent of respondents had heard of the 鈥渄eath panel鈥 controversy. Of those people, 50 percent thought the charge to be false. Thirty percent said it was true.
However, a plurality of Republican respondents, 47 percent, thought that the health legislation would indeed create 鈥渄eath panels.鈥
While Palin鈥檚 charge was over the top, it was just an extreme example of the overall rhetoric surrounding the healthcare reform effort, says Thomas Schaller, a professor of political science at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
鈥淭here is a lot of heavily loaded, coded language being thrown around, of which 鈥榙eath panels鈥 is at the top of the list,鈥 says Mr. Schaller.
President Obama has called the allegation an 鈥渆xtraordinary lie.鈥 On Friday, the liberal group launched a cable TV ad calling insurance companies 鈥渢he real 鈥榙eath panels鈥 鈥 for allegedly denying care in the past to patients with life-threatening conditions.
Conservatives have denounced the charge, too 鈥 the conservative magazine ran an editorial calling the 鈥渄eath panel鈥 discussion 鈥渉ysteria.鈥
Some Republicans, however, quickly pivot from 鈥渄eath panel鈥 discussion to the subject of 鈥渞ationing.鈥 It鈥檚 an issue on which they may feel that opponents of healthcare reform are on much firmer ground.
Asked whether he believed the health bills would set up 鈥渄eath panels,鈥 Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele in an Aug. 19 broadcast interview said that House members were putting in place a structure that could cause concern about people鈥檚 end-of-life decisions.
鈥淵ou can call [it] a panel. I call it rationing,鈥 Mr. Steele told interviewer Joe Scarborough on MSNBC.
The debate over possible rationing of care usually involves different sections of the pending legislation than does the 鈥渄eath panel鈥 controversy.
The House bill would set up a comparative effectiveness panel, for instance 鈥 a government-appointed board of experts to try to determine what treatments are better than others. In addition, a separate panel would advise Medicare and Medicaid officials of ways in which they might approve the efficiency of their treatment delivery.
Combine these elements in an environment in which the government is looking to cut future costs, and you might have a recipe for rationing care, according to critics of the legislative effort.
Administration officials reject this charge, however. They say there is already rationing in the healthcare system. Denying someone private health insurance because they have a preexisting condition is 鈥渞ationing, to me,鈥 said Vice President Joe Biden at a panel discussion Thursday on healthcare reform in Chicago.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not rationing anything. We鈥檙e trying to eliminate what is a de facto rationing that鈥檚 [already] going on,鈥 said Mr. Biden.
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