Posted on 10/02/2009 5:25:31 PM PDT by Man50D
Should doctors and hospitals be required by the federal government to maintain a national network of electronic health records for every individual in America that indicates, for example, whether that individual has had an abortion, a sexually transmitted disease, a mental illness or a drug problem?
Such a system has already been mandated by the stimulus law enacted in February, and politicians in Washington, D.C., would now prefer not to answer straightforward questions about it.
Americans should not let them get away with it.
The stimulus law provided for the development of a nationwide health information technology infrastructure that would include an electronic health record for each person in the United States by 2014.
The law says these records should contain each persons medical history and problems lists.
This system holding each Americans medical history and problems lists, the law says, will allow for the electronic linkage of health care providers, health plans, the government and other interested parties to enable electronic exchange and use of health information among all the components in the health care infrastructure in accordance with applicable law.
When President Obama was pushing his health care plan earlier this year, he pointed to this system as a way the government would save money on health careand indicated that a persons full medical history would be included in the system.
You shouldnt have to tell every new doctor you see about your medical history, or what prescriptions youre taking. You should not have to repeat costly tests, Obama told the American Medical Association on June 15. All that information should be stored securely in a private medical record so that your information can be tracked from one doctor to anothereven if you change jobs, even if you move, even if you have to see a number of different specialists. Thats just common sense. And that will not only mean less paper-pushing and lower administrative costs, saving taxpayers billions of dollars; it will also mean all of you physicians will have an easier time doing your jobs.
At a town hall meeting in Annandale, Va., on July 1, Obama argued that the electronic-health-records system would also reduce medical errors.
We have to build on the investments that weve made in electronic medical records, said Obama. We already made those investments in the Recovery Actbecause when everything is digitalized, all your recordsyour privacy is protected, but all your records (are) on a digital formthat reduces medical errors.
Speaking at AARP headquarters on July 28, Obama said the electronic-health-records network would substitute for people having to relay their entire medical history to each new health care provider.
Were also working to computerize medical records, because right now too many folks wind up taking the same test over and over and over again because their providers cant access previous results or they have to relay their entire medical history, every medication theyve taken, every surgery theyve gotten, every time they see a new provider, said Obama. Electronic medical records will help to put an end to all that.
On the face of it, the system created by Obama and Congress in February is designed to record when any person in America has diabetes, contracts strep throat, breaks an anklehas an abortion, contracts HIV or suffers a nervous breakdown.
But when CNSNews.com video reporter Nicholas Ballasy specifically asked Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., last week whether people would be able to opt out of having abortions and STDs reported on their electronic health records, Kennedy said people would be able to do that.
This is totally going to be up to the individual, Kennedy told Ballasy. So, obviously, for the full effectiveness of the person, its to their benefit to have everything on a record, but its going to be totally up to the individual.
Hmmm.. didn't the Klintoon dodge this while in office? Perhaps he needs to um, er, "come clean" with Monica...?
I knew an Iranian woman who said she had 12 abortions. I don’t know how she could keep track after the 3rd or 4th one.
if the government pays for it, they’ll do anything they want. that’s the whole point.
OTOH, both ladies AND gentlemen, considering just how insecure Soc Sec, DOD, DOE, bank, CC, and other "secure" restricted data systems are, you probably would really not want everybody's health records centralized and computerized this way.
Well...THIS should end the call for computerized records! How many lefties want THIS in the records? What about AIDS? What about other homo diseases that are transferable?
Sure. Fair is fair. You don’t think they are going to keep records of smoking? Cup cake eating? Anal warts from experimenting with your high school fwench teacher in the coat closet? Drug use, alcohol, excessive motocross?
Come on, no secrets from Dr. Obama!
You sign a release so your insurance will pay? Now you sign a release within your authorization to treat. No way to control it, it’s totally automatic.
“Such a system has already been mandated by the stimulus law enacted in February, and politicians in Washington, D.C., would now prefer not to answer straightforward questions about it.
Americans should not let them get away with it.”
Scream it from the rooftops - maybe this’ll get us a few votes.
The woman in your example will be a perfect candidate for the ‘abortion minimization program’ aka sterilization.
Too bad we don’t just phase out all of the monetary ‘rights’ that seem to be given out. If you’ve got to feed yourself, you’ll be careful about your reproductive status.
Check out the UK. Teenagers get a free flat when they become preggers. Drives up taxes, property values, minimizes work opportunities, and creates a perverse incentive to have children when unprepared to raise them.
IIRC, I read stories about folks working two jobs to get by and dole mom’s with three or four kids netting up to 60k pounds/year...at the time it was almost 120K!
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