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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: zonkie who wrote (2772)2/11/2002 9:57:13 PM
From: zonkie  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15516
 
In all fairness to our Morons in Washington I am going to also include this, which proves that this administration doesn't think that all things should be hidden.

_______________

Thursday, January 31, 2002

HHS Unveils 24/7 Plan to Track Patients
St. Paul, Minnesota - The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services today released $1.1 billion and a plan to build government health surveillance systems in every state. The stated goal: to enhance public health infrastructure for bioterrorism preparedness. The plan: government access to everyone's medical record through their hospitals and doctor's offices.

"The public was never consulted about this plan. The very idea that government officials plan to get a direct line into the medical records of patients should outrage citizens. Private medical records are not public data," said Twila Brase, R.N., president of Citizens' Council on Health Care (CCHC), a health care policy organization in St. Paul, Minnesota.

State must draw up a plan to present to HHS by no later than April 15, 2002. Sixteen criteria must be part of each state plan, including:

Timeline for development of a state-wide plan for response to a bioterrorist event, infectious disease outbreak, or other public health emergency.
Ability to receive and evaluate urgent disease reports from all parts of the jurisdiction on a 24 hour a day, 7 days a week basis.

Communication systems that provide a 24/7 flow of critical health information between hospital emergency departments, State and local health officials, and law enforcement.
"The HHS plan represents a greater danger to patients than bioterrorism," said Brase. "Just knowing government officials and police officers will receive patient data without patient consent will change the way patients interact with the health care system. They may not tell their doctors the whole story. They may come for care too late. They may receive the wrong diagnoses, the wrong treatment, the wrong advice."

Legislative requirements for meeting HHS criteria were built into the Model Emergency State Health Powers Act released in October by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The Act, now under consideration in all 50 State legislatures, requires ongoing reporting by health care providers and pharmacists to the state public health department. It also permits epidemiological research without patient consent, at both the state and federal level.

"This plan is not just about bioterrorism. HHS officials plan to use patients for medical research without their consent," said Brase. "Public health officials have long expressed a desire to track and tag the entire population. They hope September 11th will make their dreams come true."

cchconline.org



To: zonkie who wrote (2772)2/12/2002 1:44:23 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 15516
 
Good reading, zonkie,albeit, alarming. That kind of secrecy would allow Bush and all to proceed with their scams with impunity. Compared with Bush, the despised (by Burton) Clinton Administration had a virtual open-door policy with Congress. In response to requests from Burton's committee, Clinton produced more than 1.2 million pages of documents from January 1997 to January 2001. The GAO found that between October 1996 and March 1998, White House staff spent more than 55,000 hours responding to more than 300 Congressional requests. These included prosecution memos and documents containing legal advice normally protected by attorney-client privilege. Clinton also provided the GAO with the names of private individuals who worked for or consulted with the President's healthcare task force.