[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 41 (Wednesday, March 12, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H2306-H2307]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PERSONALIZE YOUR CARE ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
[[Page H2307]]
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Recently, the Reverend Billy Graham, in his latest
book, talked about the situation that families face in the difficult
circumstances surrounding end of life.
Reverend Graham said:
Refusing to act on the practical issues that confront us as
we grow older or simply ignoring them often becomes a sure
recipe for turmoil and conflict within a family.
Former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, who was a physician long
before he entered politics, said in an op-ed that appeared in one of
the Capitol Hill publications:
In the absence of advanced care planning, patients are much
more likely to receive medical interventions that can
actually prolong or worsen their suffering and will certainly
increase expense for their loved ones.
Yesterday, I had an opportunity to work with the American Society of
Oncology, who gave us further evidence. They have a report and
recommendations that are coming forward that I think ought to be
commended to each and every one of us. They pointed out that palliative
care is not an either/or choice in terms of therapies. They found in
one study that people who receive both palliative care and chemotherapy
lived 3 months longer and more comfortably than people who just got the
medical intervention.
Additionally, further in their study, they pointed out that it isn't
just the patient; it is the people who help serve ill patients who
receive palliative care therapy. They suffer less emotional stress. ICU
and hospital deaths are associated with more psychiatric illness among
bereaved caregivers compared with home hospice.
Yet, as they pointed out, the sad truth is, for many insurance
companies and our Federal Government, that although patients are
entitled to make informed choices about their palliative care and
treatment options, our Nation's health care system currently places no
value on conversations that can guide these decisions.
It is true; Medicare will pay $100,000 on a complex surgical
procedure on a 90-year-old woman with terminal cancer, but it won't pay
$200 for her and her family to understand the circumstances that they
face, understand what their choices are and make sure that their
choices, whatever they are, are respected.
It, frankly, is embarrassing to me that Congress and the
administration have not been able to respond to an issue that is
supported by 90 percent of the American public, that will cost us no
money, and that will assure that patients receive better treatment and
we reduce the stress on their families.
That is why my friend, Congressman Phil Roe, himself a physician from
Tennessee, and I have introduced the Personalize Your Care Act, H.R.
1173. This would provide for voluntary advance care planning
consultation in Medicare and Medicaid every 5 years or in case there is
a change in health status. It would provide grants to establish or
expand physician orders for life-sustaining treatment programs, require
that certified electronic health records display current advance
directives and physician orders for life-sustaining treatment--what
people want--and help make sure that their wishes follow them when they
cross State lines.
Currently, we have over 50 bipartisan cosponsors of this simple,
commonsense approach to give American families what they need and what
they say they want. I would strongly urge my colleagues to look at this
legislation, to join us in cosponsoring it, and move in Congress and
with the administration to remedy this serious oversight.
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