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DEATH PANELS IN HEALTH CARE LAW: FACT AND FICTION, by Wendell Potter, Huffington Post, March 21, 2011 (984 hits)

"Death panels" are back in the news, and Congress is turning its attention to them once again. The problem is, lawmakers are looking in all the wrong places.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee, now headed by Republicans, sent a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius last week demanding to know how a controversial provision that was excised from last year's health reform bill wound up -- briefly -- in a government "rule" on physician reimbursement.


The proposed provision would have allowed Medicare to pay doctors to counsel patients about their end-of-life medical wishes. That idea originally had bipartisan support, but when the provision was brought to Sarah Palin's attention, she accused Democrats of wanting to create "death panels" that would decide when to pull the plug on granny and grandpa.

The claim was utterly false, but it was such an irresistible soundbite that Palin posted it on her Facebook page. She and many other Republicans quickly made it a central part of their efforts to scare people away from health care reform. They were so successful -- it spread like wildfire through the online and cable news worlds -- that PolitiFact.com, the fact-checking website of the St. Petersburg Times, chose it as the "Lie of the Year" for 2009.


Worthy as the idea of paying for end-of-life counseling might be, cowed Democrats pulled it from the reform bill before it reached President Obama. Last November, however, the provision was included in a rule that was issued by Medicare on physician payment rates. When the rule became public, Republicans pounced once again. The Obama administration pulled the provision immediately, dropping it like the political hot potato it had become.
In their letter to Sebelius last week, Republicans on the Energy and Commerce Committee charged that the administration had attempted "a political maneuver designed to avoid public scrutiny."

Raising this issue again is part of a larger strategy by Congressional Republicans to further erode public support for reform, to keep it alive as a divisive political issue. Meanwhile, the business of real death panels is proceeding as usual, outside of any public scrutiny or apparent interest on Capitol Hill.

Yes, death panels do exist. They exist inside the big health insurance corporations that every day make decisions on whether or not people enrolled in their health benefit plans will get the care their doctors believe might save their lives. I know this firsthand from nearly two decades inside the insurance industry.

You don't have to take my word for it. Just ask Hilda and Grigor Sarkisyan, who very possibly would be helping their daughter, Nataline, plan her 21st birthday about now had a corporate medical director not refused to pay for a liver transplant Nataline's doctors believed would save her life.

Nataline was diagnosed with leukemia at 14. Initial treatments were successful and the disease went into remission. It came back a couple of years later, though, and the sort of treatments she'd had previously were not working. She had to have a bone marrow transplant, which weakened her liver. In mid-December 2007, her doctors at UCLA Medical Center said she needed a liver transplant. They asked for prior approval from her insurer, CIGNA, to pay for it. Nataline's doctors said they believed she had at least a 65 percent chance of living five years or longer if she had the procedure.

A CIGNA medical director 2,500 miles away in Pittsburgh disagreed. To the astonishment of Nataline's doctors, he ruled the transplant "experimental." Insurers almost never pay for procedures they consider experimental, so this corporate medical director's decision meant that the Sarkisyans would have to pay for the transplant and all related care out of their own pockets. Not being wealthy enough to do that, Nataline's parents launched a campaign to rally public support and media interest in the case. It worked. CIGNA eventually agreed to cover the transplant. Unfortunately, so much time had passed since the original request had been made that Nataline's other organs began to shut down. She died a few hours after the family got the news that CIGNA had changed its mind.

As chief spokesman for CIGNA at the time, I was on the receiving end of hundreds of calls and emails from reporters and also from regular folks who were outraged that CIGNA had initially refused to pay for Nataline's transplant. The Sarkisyan family sued CIGNA, but the case was thrown out because of a Supreme Court precedent that shielded employer-paid plans from damages resulting from their decisions.

I wish I could say that Nataline's story was unique. In the course of my 20 years in the industry, however, I handled media inquiries involving many cases in which coverage had been denied by a corporate medical director for one reason or another. I probably will never know how many of those people died as a result of not getting the care they needed, and I will never know if Nataline would have lived if she had gotten the liver transplant when her doctors wanted to do it. I will also never know if she might have gotten the transplant if she had lived in Canada or England or France, countries that do not permit doctors at for-profit corporations to make such decisions.

What I do know is that medical directors at insurance companies are corporate executives, just as I was. When you work for an investor-owned insurer, you're aware that you must do your part to assure that the firm meets Wall Street's relentless profit expectations. Medical directors don't get memos from the CEO saying they have to deny a certain number of transplants every month, but they do get the message that if they don't help the company keep medical spending down, they can forget about getting a raise or bonus or stock options at year's end.

Last year, when Democrats were in charge of Congress, the House Energy and Commerce Committee conducted an investigation into denials of coverage in the private insurance market, although the investigation was limited to denials for pre-existing conditions. The committee found that over a three-year period, the four big insurance companies it investigated had denied coverage to more than 600,000 people who had been treated in the past for a broad range of medical conditions and that the number of coverage denials had increased significantly each year. The lawmakers found that one of the companies maintains a list of 425 medical diagnoses that it uses to refuse health insurance coverage permanently to many applicants.


The results of that investigation led lawmakers to include in the health care law a provision barring insurers from using pre-existing conditions to deny coverage.

If the lawmakers who are now leading that committee were truly interested in looking out for the best interests of their constituents, they would drop their politically motivated probe into the end-of-life counseling provision and launch a new investigation of the death panels inside private insurance companies.

One of the people they might want to call to testify is the former chief medical officer at Aetna, Arthur "Abbie" Liebowitz. In an interview for a report written last year for the Center for American Progress, Liebowitz explained the pressure that is exerted on corporate medical directors -- medical directors who now report to regional business managers, rather than chief medical officers, as was previously the norm.


"The concept was that business leaders had P and L (profit and loss) responsibility for the region," Liebowitz was quoted as saying. "The business guys said if I have responsibility for profits and losses I have to control for the things that account for my costs. The biggest things affecting cost was medical cost delivery."

Liebowitz said he fought the change in reporting relationships "until the very end." He left Aetna in 2001.

"I didn't think that people should be making medical decisions based on business needs."

Neither do I. I saw the life and death consequences of that on a regular basis. If the House Energy and Commerce Committee doesn't think this is important enough to look into, maybe the Senate will.
Posted By: Richard Kigel
Tuesday, March 22nd 2011 at 10:49AM
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Anyone who has had to argue with the faceless bureaucrats in the Medical Insurance Industry knows how ridiculous and insidious they are when it comes to covering procedures and medicine your doctors recommend.

Under nationalized universal health care--like in Britain or Canada, everything is covered--there is no debate, no questions. Your health needs will be taken care of.

I guess that is why our health care system is so screwed up.

Tuesday, March 22nd 2011 at 10:51AM
Richard Kigel
[Yes, death panels do exist. They exist inside the big health insurance corporations that every day make decisions on whether or not people enrolled in their health benefit plans will get the care their doctors believe might save their lives. I know this firsthand from nearly two decades inside the insurance industry. ]

I hear that! I worked for a year for Horizon subsidiary that was responsible for the Medicaid mgmt portion. I will say that for the most part the company looked for real delays to treatment and unnecessary diagnostic tests, but were fair about approving medically necessary days and treatments. I never witnessed the company not approving life substaining procedures that would improve quality of life and treatment.


Tuesday, March 22nd 2011 at 3:30PM
Jen Fad
I sure to miss Rep Alan who said the Republicans want people to hurry up and die. Too, bad he wasn't able to be re-elected.
Tuesday, March 22nd 2011 at 3:31PM
Jen Fad
Right, Jen--that was Alan Grayson from Florida.

He was a standup guy who threw verbal bombs. He wasn't afrid to "tell it like it is."

I will miss him as well.

I am glad to see that you have first hand knowledge of a Health Insurance company that actually put patients first. Just now, my own health insurer (GHI) has rejected payment for an expensive procedure our edoctor ordered for my wife. It's done already--who has the temerity to tell a doctor "no thanks" when he or she wants to do a certain procedure? You put yourself totally in their hands.

So now we have to argue the point with some bureaucrat.

I hope we get to talk to someone as nice you you!!!

Tuesday, March 22nd 2011 at 4:56PM
Richard Kigel
@ Sister Irma,
I think that people who don't want to have universal health care coverage should at least buy some type of coverage. When these people get sick, we don't want them using the an already overburded emergency room as their primary care. There must be some type of relief for ERs all over America that will divert people from using ERs for common colds, fevers, coughs, ect... What I have seen is that places like Canada have walk in clinics all over that stay open until 9pm or 10pm who can provide treatment until their primary physician's office opens the next day. In this wise people wouldn't be forced to use a place like an ER set up for emergency purposes for nonemergency needs.
Tuesday, March 22nd 2011 at 6:28PM
Jen Fad
Jen:

Man...that was so invaluable!!! Thank you so much for sharing.

It is important to know exaclty how to negotiate through the maze the insurance companies force you to walk through. I really appreciate your knowledge and experience!!!

Tuesday, March 22nd 2011 at 10:28PM
Richard Kigel
@ Brother Rich,
Anytime!

@ Sister Irma,
Yes that sounds like a good start in Ca but there needs to be so many more of those walk in clinics around and opening later and later and especially on weekends.
Thursday, March 24th 2011 at 8:06PM
Jen Fad
bROTHER COW, as someone who believes in cause and effect...this is somehting that has been bothering me since hearing a discussion on Hardball@msnbc not too long ago...

Chris and his guest suprised, shocked me and started me wondering if this had something to do with teh "must buy insurance" part of this bill? They said Wall street would not touch nuclear plants, because these plants can not be insured!!!!!!!!!!!!!

HOw can a business even exist without no insurance at all. this is someting I have never heard of before!!!!!!!!!

Proper education is really dangerous in our country...and those like me who never stop asking questions. (otfl) (smile)

I have said all of that to say this...could your blog about the energy people getting into this now have something to do with all of this?!? (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
@Jen, we don't really expect even filthy rich like A.G. to be able to hold office if they speak facts/ truth now do we...

and, by the way don't some republicans remain in office after having been sent to prison while there and after getting out of federal prison? lol ONLY IN AMERICA. (SMILE)

@ Rich with the way the average person on main street is fighting back at bi gbusiness lobby money politicians today, now may be just the perfect time to have this back before us in tehpublic. (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
Jen, I so understand what you say about emergancy room cost...you know here in Ca. we have lots of vegs , fruit and nuts products and many illegals and a lot of smaller hospitals being forced to close because of the over riding cost of emergancy room cost going unpaid , because they by law they can not refuse to treat even a common cold there...

At one time they had signs at all medical places that you had to show id...but that did not remain a requirement for long...I never learned why this had started nor why it had stop...but I had an idea why this was.
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
...oh, and a lot of our clinics have started to stay open until around 7pm and open on sat. Flu shots are give on certain days and given by the nurse in ckinics, you don't have to see the doctor and a lot of drug stores and major super markets have shots days in them also. (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
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