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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Editorial: Measure Filled With Pain
Title:US: Editorial: Measure Filled With Pain
Published On:1998-09-21
Source:Orange County Register (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-07 00:43:58
MEASURE FILLED WITH PAIN

Decent intentions have gone awry in a bill by Rep. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.) that
Congress has fast-traked for House and Senate votes in the coming week.In
an attempt to outlaw assisted suicide, the measure would also make doctors
less likely to prescribe adequate painkillers for terminally ill patients.

Hyde, saying he was concerned that Oregon's implementation in January of a
law allowing physician-assisted suicide would encourage the practice in
other states, introduced the bill in June to overturn the Oregon law. The
bill, however, also authorizes federal Drug Enforcement Administration
agents to investigate any doctor who prescribes "a controlled substance" in
amounts that might be lethal and revoke a doctor's license if it finds any
evidence of intent to hasten death. But who would decide, since tolerances
to such drugs can vary wildly"

Hyde's bill has rightly inspired a chorus of opposition from medical
groups, including organizations like the American Medical Assn., which
staunchly oppose any legalization of physician-assisted suicide. The groups
argue that the Hyde bill would further discourage doctors from prescribing
adequate pain control at a time when they are already under medicating. One
recent study found that of nearly 900 physicians caring for cancer
patients, 86% reported that most patients were under medicated for pain.

Since pain and suffering are the leading reasons patients seek to commit
suicide in the first place, Hyde's bill, by discouraging doctors from
relieving severe pain, would only exacerbate the problem it was meant to
solve.

The bill is peppered with impractical provisions. For instance, it requires
pharmacists to record the medical factors that led a physician to prescribe
a painkiller, a literally impossible task. Should the pharmacist guess
wrong, the entire pharmacy could lose its ability to dispense all federally
controlled drugs, not just the one in question.

The biggest problem with Hyde's bill is that it puts the DEA, which by its
own admission has no experience in pain management, in charge of medical
decisions that 90% of Americans say ought to be left to doctors and their
families.

Hyde is right to be concerned that the growing field of "palliative care,"
which uses painkillers to make patients comfortable in the final stages of
a disease - could be abused by unscrupulous health care providers simply
wishing to trim the expenses they incur in caring for terminally ill
patients.

But the solution to that problem does not lie in Hyde's punitive,
ill-conceived legislation, which House and Senate leaders irresponsibly
scheduled for a vote without allotting the discussion time that would have
enabled Congress to understand the ways in which the bill would overturn
existing medical practices in America.

First, Congress should defeat this bill. Then lawmakers could let doctors
and their patients safely and responsibly discuss how to best bring needed
comfort and dignity to the terminally ill.

Checked-by: Joel W. Johnson
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