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Patient Protections
September 30, 1999
ISSUE:
House Speaker Hastert (R-Ill.) has scheduled a vote on the
House floor for Patients' Rights legislation during the week
of Oct. 4th. The bipartisan bill introduced by Norwood (R- Ga.)
and Dingell (D-Mich.) seems to have a majority of the House
Members supporting it. The Speaker also may allow a vote on
a bill introduced by Coburn (R-Okla) and Shadegg (R-Ariz.) and
a bill offered by Boehner (R-Ohio) bill.
Hastert has not endorsed the Coburn-Shadegg bill (H.R. 2824),
which he had turned to in August as a rallying point for House
Republicans. Coburn and Shadegg have produced a more limited
"right-to-sue"provision than the Norwood-Dingell bill
(H.R. 2723), but not limited enough to satisfy the Republican
leadership. Rep. Boehner's bill, which is being written, will
not include the right to sue.
ACTION:
Contact your Representative immediately! Urge him or her to
support the bipartisan Norwood-Dingell bill. Urge them to maintain
the liability provision in Norwood-Dingell and to oppose any
amendments that weaken external appeals or reduce the number
of patients who would be protected. Ask them to support defining
medical necessity so that it becomes harder for health plans
to deny coverage recommended by a physician.
Contact your Senators and urge them to overturn S. 1344 (passed
by the Senate on July 15) and instead to support the Patients'
Bill of Rights (S. 6) which more closely resembles H.R. 2723.
If S. 6 cannot replace S. 1344, ask support for H.R. 2723 in
conference.
WRITE OR PHONE:
The Honorable _______
The U.S. Senate
Washington, DC 20510
The Honorable _______
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
Capitol switchboard: (202) 224-3121. You may obtain your Senator's
or House member's Washington fax number or e-mail address by
calling the state or district office, or search on-line through
http://thomas.loc.gov.
BACKGROUND:
The strategy of the House leadership seems to be to use Norwood-Dingell
as the base bill for a vote by the full House and to amend it
on the floor. Norwood-Dingell appears to have the most support
of the three bills that may be voted on as members face adjournment
of the first session of the 106th Congress. The Coburn-Shadegg
bill may be voted on as a substitute along with another substitute
based on the legislation approved by Boehner's Education and
the Workforce Subcommittee on Employer-Employee Relations. In
June, the subcommittee approved a package of eight bills that
provide a limited number of expanded protections for managed
care patients.
House members, therefore, may be given three choices on where
to focus on patients' protections: (1) the broad liability provision
in Norwood-Dingell, which includes the controversial right-to-sue
issue; (2) the more limited liability provision in the Coburn-Shadegg
bill; and (3) a third bill with external appeals but no liability.
Although some House Republican leaders strongly oppose any legislation
that would expand liability for health plans and employers,
Hastert recognizes that the House cannot move a bill which does
not include some kind of right to sue holding health plans accountable
for bad decisions that harm patients. Norwood and Coburn are
health providers: Norwood is a dentist and Coburn is an obstetrician.
Both the Norwood-Dingell and Coburn-Shadegg bills include language
shielding employers.
GENERAL ASSEMBLY GUIDANCE:
The 211th General Assembly (1999) approved a resolution on
managed care that affirms that "every system of health-care
provision should have as its goal the wellness, wholeness, and
integrity of its users. A health-care system should not treat
the physical ailments of a user while the system's character,
attitudes, relationship, and communication with the user cause
stress and anxiety, or exclude persons from receiving service
or from participating in decisions about their own healing."
"Health Care: Policies and Activities," another 1999
GA statement, directs the PC(USA) Washington Office, until a
national medical plan for the United States is adopted, to advocate
on behalf of the uninsured, underinsured, and other vulnerable
populations.
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