[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 55 (Monday, April 19, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2417-S2418]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RESPECTING THE RIGHTS OF HOSPITAL PATIENTS
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, last week, the country took another
important step toward a more just and perfect union when President
Obama issued a Presidential Memorandum on Respecting the Rights of
Hospital Patients to Receive Visitors and to Designate Surrogate
Decision Makers for
[[Page S2418]]
Medical Emergencies. I applaud the President for this effort to ensure
that every person enjoys the same right to have their loved ones with
them in hospitals and to designate surrogate decision makers when they
are hospitalized, often in their time of greatest need. No one should
be forced to face important medical decisions or spend their last
moments apart from their loved ones just because the person they love
happens to be of the same sex.
The President has directed the Secretary of Health and Human Services
to issue regulations prohibiting hospitals that participate in Medicare
and Medicaid from denying visitation privileges on the basis of race,
color, national origin, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender
identity, or disability. The memorandum issued last week also calls for
greater enforcement of existing regulations that ensure all patients'
legal representatives have the right to make informed decisions
regarding patients' care.
There is a tragic history of discrimination in health care, but
fortunately, we are making progress to end it. Hospitals were racially
segregated until the 1960s, when Congress passed legislation
prohibiting that discrimination in hospitals that are recipients of
Federal funding. The President's memorandum is a similarly important
step toward equal treatment. For too long, some hospital patients have
been denied the basic rights of receiving visitors and designating
surrogate decision makers without a remedy in Federal law. In Vermont,
many same-sex couples have sought to be recognized as committed couples
by law to ensure that they and their families are entitled to these
rights. Those families should not lose those rights when traveling out
of State.
The fight for equal rights protections continues in Congress. I am a
proud cosponsor of the bipartisan Domestic Partnership Benefits and
Obligations Act of 2009, which would provide domestic partners of
Federal employees all of the protections and benefits afforded to
spouses of Federal employees, including participation in applicable
retirement programs, compensation for work injuries and health
insurance benefits. I also support the Tax Equity for Health Plan
Beneficiaries Act of 2009, which would end the taxation of health
benefits provided to domestic partners in workplaces that provide
domestic partner health benefits to their employees.
Respecting the rights of all hospital patients to have their loved
ones near in times of crisis is something every American should
support.
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