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This week, concerns about swine flu have dominated the media and many government
officials. While the American people should be made aware of infectious diseases
and common sense preventative measures, much of the hysterical reaction from
government only serves to remind us how detrimental to your health it can be
when government plays doctor.
As a physician, I have yet to see any evidence that justifies the current
level of alarm. Influenza typically kills around 36,000 people every year in
this country and hospitalizes a couple hundred thousand. So far there are only
a handful of confirmed deaths attributable to this strain, and most of those
sickened have or will fully recover. Every death is tragic, but I see no reason
to deal with this flu outbreak any differently than we typically deal with
any other flu season. Instead, government in its infinite wisdom is performing
even more invasive screening at airports, closing down schools and sporting
events, and causing general panic.
We had a similar outbreak in 1976, with only 1 death from the flu, but mandatory
vaccinations killed at least 25 before the program was abandoned.
When government gets involved in healthcare decisions, the cure is so often
worse than the illness. And yet, this administration will likely consolidate
the government's power over your health with sweeping new reforms that are
already being discussed in the Senate.
Government has not improved healthcare, and has not made it cheaper. Quite
the opposite; costs have skyrocketed, and quality has gone down in many ways.
Gone are the days of the country doctor making house calls, or of voluntarily
giving away medical services at charity hospitals. The bureaucratization of
healthcare these past 45 years has made things worse. It saddens me as a doctor
that physicians are less and less accountable to patients, but more and more
accountable to government red tape, insurance companies and attorneys. It seems
so perverse to me that important medical decisions that will directly affect
the lives of all or nearly all Americans are being hashed out behind closed
doors in Washington rather than between doctors and patients.
There is perhaps nothing more valuable to a human being than his or her health,
which is why I've always considered the practice of medicine so crucial to
our well-being. Any intrusion by government into the privacy and trust between
doctor and patient is detrimental to the art of medicine. It distorts the whole
dynamic of who the client really is when doctors must answer more to government
or insurance companies than to their patients. The best solutions to improving
quality and lowering costs of healthcare would be measures that put decisions
back into the hands of patients and doctors, where they rightfully belong.
I have introduced HR 1495 The Comprehensive Healthcare Reform Act, which promotes
health savings accounts and tax deductibility of healthcare costs as an important
step in this direction.
The unfortunate reality of this recent health crisis, as with any crisis,
is that it presents opportunities that the unscrupulous will take advantage
of, while the fearful become more compliant.
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