[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 133 (Wednesday, September 17, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H7621]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE END OF LIFE REPORT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, for the last 6 years, I have been
spending a significant amount of time making sure that the Federal
Government is a better partner in helping families as they deal with
some of the most difficult times they will ever encounter, as a loved
one enters their last stage of life.
This often involves an elderly spouse or relative, but not
necessarily. This is a challenge that faces all of us, regardless of
age, health, or family circumstance. The youngest, healthiest, most
vital member of your office could suffer an accident or come down with
a disease this afternoon.
We all must at some point face this challenge that requires that we
do a better job of meeting those needs, helping our families understand
the circumstances and choices and that we make their wishes known, and
that those wishes are respected.
This afternoon there is an important landmark in this effort to
protect families, as the Institute of Medicine releases key facts and
recommendations on improving the quality and honoring individual
preferences at the end of life. It is entitled ``Dying in America,''
sort of a jarring title, but it should be required reading for everyone
in government, health care, insurance, anyone who is involved with this
complex web that should be supportive of families in their time of
need, but too often fails them.
This report makes clear that most people nearing the end of life are
not physically, mentally, or cognitively able to make their own
decisions about care, and that the majority of those patients will
receive acute care from physicians who don't even know them.
The default is often for more hospital days, intensive care, and
emergency care, which means that there are more transitions about care
settings, which can be unnerving for patients and complicate their
care. All this combines to jeopardize the quality of end of life care,
while obviously adding to its cost and complexity.
This panel of experts, after months of intense study, makes a
compelling case that we all should be working to provide comprehensive
care for individuals nearing end of life, how it should be seamless,
high quality, integrated, patient-centered, family-oriented, and
consistently accessible around the clock.
It should be tailored to the needs and desires of the families, and
the resources that we can save by doing it right can be redirected to
enhance the quality of their last days. Often done right, it will
enable them to live longer as well as more comfortably.
This report is an opportunity for all of us to step back and make
sure we are doing everything we can to play our part in meeting the
critical responsibilities not just for our constituents, but for our
family members.
Dr. Phil Roe and I have introduced H.R. 1173, the Personalize Your
Care Act. There are 60 bipartisan cosponsors focusing on the Federal
Government placing value on this relationship, on these critical
conversations, and empowering families and patients to control the
circumstances that matter so much to them.
We strongly urge that everyone looks at this Institute of Medicine
report and that you cosponsor the Personalize Your Care Act. I
congratulate the Institute for the careful research, the clear
analysis, and the strong recommendations. It is an important step to
make sure that critical assistance to support our families, that they
deserve and demand, is available.
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