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Good Day All,
In the item below, Sen. Kennedy offers....

"I welcome the fact that the United States Senate will consider the
patients' bill of rights. Every day we fail to act, 50,000 Americans
experience suffering," Kennedy told reporters at a news conference on
the White House grounds after the hourlong meeting.

Can we remind Sen. Kennedy and his colleagues about the million+
with Parkinson's,  (not to mention the millions with ALS, Alzheimers,
Huntingtons, Diabetes, etc.) who are waiting every day for some one to
take some action on their behalf re: embryonic stem cell research?

Read on ............  Cheers ........... murray


The Los Angeles Times
Friday, June 15, 2001
Patients' Rights Negotiations Break Down Over Lawsuit Issue
Bill: Talks between the White House and Senate leaders fail to
bring compromise. Aggressive, open debate is expected.
By ROBERT A. ROSENBLATT, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON--Key senators and the Bush administration failed
to resolve their differences over the patients' bill of rights legislation
during a White House negotiating session Thursday, setting the
stage for contentious debate in the Senate next week.

"Everyone will get a vote," and there will be numerous amendments
during the floor debate, predicted Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the
dissident Republican who is joining forces with liberal Democrats to
push a tough bill that is strongly opposed by the White House.

The right of patients to sue their health plans and their employers
remains the biggest obstacle to an agreement, according to
participants in the meeting. Senators from both parties attended the
session, along with Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G.
Thompson, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao and other administration
officials.

The Senate is likely to spend two weeks in complex discussions about
the best way to offer additional protections to 170 million Americans
who have private health insurance.

Thursday's meeting at the White House was the first time that
contending senators sat down with each other and Bush administration
policymakers to seek a compromise.

Despite the intense arguments over the right to sue, all parties to the
debate in Congress have generally agreed on some basic principles in
the legislation:

" Patients would have the right to an independent review of decisions
by their health plans when treatment is denied. If independent outside
experts--a panel of doctors--agree with the patient, the health plan
would have to cover the treatments.

* Patients would have the right to see specialists even if the health
plan's primary care doctor refuses to make a referral.

* Health plans would be required to cover all emergency medical care
and ambulance services on a "prudent layperson" standard.

That means if a person thought he might be in danger, the care would
be covered even if no serious illness was diagnosed. For example,
a visit to the emergency room because of severe abdominal pains
that turned out to be indigestion, instead of appendicitis, would be
covered by the health plan.

But those noncontroversial ideas have been overshadowed by
concern about the circumstances in which patients could sue their
health plans or their employers. Business groups are strongly
opposed to all versions of the legislation, threatening that some
firms might cancel health insurance for their workers rather than
run the risk of facing big liability judgments.

"Frivolous lawsuits will result in higher costs, more uninsured and
could force many small businesses into bankruptcy," said Dan
Danner, chairman of the Health Benefits Coalition, a group
representing employers. The coalition is mounting a print and
television advertising campaign against the bill sponsored by
McCain and two Democrats, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of
Massachusetts and John Edwards of North Carolina.

The bill would allow lawsuits in federal court with unlimited damages for
economic losses and punitive damages of up to $5 million.

President Bush has warned he will veto the McCain-Edwards-Kennedy
bill if Congress approves it, but the sponsors gave no hints Thursday
that they would modify their proposal.

"I welcome the fact that the United States Senate will consider the
patients' bill of rights. Every day we fail to act, 50,000 Americans
experience suffering," Kennedy told reporters at a news conference on
the White House grounds after the hourlong meeting.

But HHS Secretary Thompson said at the news conference that the
meeting had not resulted in any changes that would make the McCain-
Edwards-Kennedy approach acceptable.

The bill would drive up costs and increase the number of workers
without health insurance, he said. And enforcement of the
legislation would add a "huge amount of responsibility"
that his department would not be able to handle, Thompson said.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nation/20010615/t000049834.html

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