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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated

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To: KLP who wrote (317963)8/2/2009 2:10:13 AM
From: Nadine Carroll2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) of 793963
 
"I don't think it's about cutting costs; it's about quality," said Tia Powell, director of the Montefiore-Einstein Center for Bioethics. Pointing to extensive research, she said: "The good news is, if you get people in an environment that is of their choosing, where there is support and they have good pain control, it is very likely to extend their life."

She's right, a good result like that doesn't cut costs at all. It's much cheaper to die.

The real angle that conservatives should be pushing is that under a federalized system, a central committee of federal bureaucrats will be making the decisions on what constitutes "best practice" for end-of-life care. They will apply a formula just like Britain's NICE committee does because that is what federal bureacrats so: Prognosis: so many years left. Quality of life good/fair/poor. X Dollars per year*quality of life factor=$ permissible spending on Granny. It will be like this because it can't be like anything else, once you remove personal knowledge from the case.

Expect conscientious doctors to game the system like hell, reducing spending even further, and wasting their time.
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