[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 59 (Monday, April 18, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Page S2122]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL HEALTHCARE DECISIONS DAY
Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, I am pleased to recognize that Saturday,
April 16, 2016, was National Healthcare Decisions Day. National
Healthcare Decisions Day exists to inspire, educate, and empower the
public and providers about the importance of advance care planning.
Started by a Richmond attorney as a local grassroots initiative in
Virginia, NHDD became an annual event in 2008, and today it is
recognized across all 50 States. Faith-based groups, doctors and
nurses, hospitals, patients, and caregivers alike are engaged in these
efforts. NHDD is an opportunity for all Americans to discuss their
preferences and goals with family and friends--and this starts with
filling out an advance directive.
In the last year, we have made real progress in giving Americans
access to the clear, consistent, and concise information they need to
make critical health care decisions, and there is a growing awareness
of the need to transform advanced care, both among providers and
families.
In my own State of Virginia, the general assembly recently designated
April as Advance Care Planning Month. Around the Commonwealth,
Virginians are innovating and creating new models of care to provide
patients with the tools and support to make their own advanced care
decisions. For example, the Richmond Academy of Medicine's Honoring
Choices Initiative is a partnership with three major health care
systems working to adopt nationally recognized best practices and
adapting them to the needs of patients, families, doctors, and
hospitals in central Virginia. On the ground, Virginians are holding
dozens of events this month to encourage individuals to fill out an
advance directive.
This year has been a significant one at the national level as well.
For the first time, Medicare providers are being compensated for
spending time with their patients to discuss their health care
decisions. And I am pleased that the bipartisan Care Planning Act,
which I introduced again this last year with Senator Isakson, has
gained more support than ever, including from nearly 90 health and
senior advocacy groups. The purpose of the Care Planning Act is to
align the care people want with the level of care they get. It doesn't
limit choices; it works to make sure people are made fully aware of the
broad range of choices they have. The growing support for this
legislation demonstrates just how far the conversation around advance
care planning has come. While physician reimbursement is an important
first step, the Care Planning Act provides a strong, bipartisan
foundation for Congress as we consider how to further empower patients
to make informed choices about their own care.
I am working to advance this conversation wherever I can. For
example, Senator Isakson and I are cochairs of the Finance Committee's
bipartisan chronic care working group, and we are looking at a broad
range of policies so that chronically ill patients receive the highest
quality care at all stages of illness, especially towards the end of
life. We are not going to pass the Care Planning Act in full as a part
of that process, but I see this process as a real way to move the ball
forward. While this process remains a work in progress, I am hopeful
that we will be able to get some of these bipartisan provisions done.
I know how important this is not just from my time serving as a
Governor and as a Senator but through the eyes of a loved one who
struggled with these issues. My own mother suffered from Alzheimer's
disease for 10 years, and for 9 of those years, she couldn't speak. My
father, sister, and I found grappling with the challenges of caring for
her difficult. The difficulty was greater because, when she was first
diagnosed, my family didn't take the opportunity to talk in an honest
and fully informed way with her and her health care providers about the
full array of health care options available or about what her
priorities would be during the final years of her life.
Care planning is a subject that most people do their best to avoid,
but on National Healthcare Decisions Day, I urge all Americans to fill
out an advance directive and to have these conversations. I also urge
my fellow policymakers to continue engaging in this dialogue to improve
advanced care planning at all levels--Federal, State, local--so that at
the end of the day, we are empowering Americans and their loved ones.
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