PRESS RELEASES
MEDIA RELEASE
For Immediate Release
April 28, 2004
"Government Should Not Direct the Practice of Medicine," Say Panel of MN Physicians and Business Owners
(St. Paul, Minnesota) - To counter the support of the Minnesota
Medical Association and the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce for "best
practices" health care legislation, Citizens' Council on Health Care
(CCHC) brought together a panel of 4 physicians and 3 business owners
today to discuss the issue with the news media:
- Dr. Paul Bearmon, MD
- Mel Brandl, owner, Printmaster
- Dr. Steve Brzica, MD
- Dr. Dale Hammerschmidt, MD
- Dr. Spencer Johnson, MD
- Harold Hamilton, owner, Micro Control Company
- William Wenmark, owner, Now Care Medical Centers
"Government Will Tell Doctors How to Practice Medicine" was the
heading of a large display board that listed and described government
actions authorized by the House and Senate Health and Human Services
Omnibus bills, HF 1681 and SF 1760:
- Impose Bias
- Collaborate with HMOs
- Practice Medicine
- Violate Privacy
- Coerce Doctors
- Control Doctors
- Penalize Non-Compliance
"If the proposed legislation becomes law, state government will be
empowered to direct patient care-quite simply, to, disease by
disease, tell your doctors how to practice medicine," said Twila
Brase, president of CCHC.
"The doctor-patient relationship will be done. The doctor-bureaucrat
relationship will begin," said Dr. Steve Brzica, MD, anesthesiologist
at Fairview Southdale Hospital.
"If we're going to use a cookbook approach, perhaps we should
computerize the process and eliminate doctors," said Harold Hamilton,
tongue-in-cheek. Hamilton, owner of Micro Control Company, noted that
individual doctors do better than bureaucracies in determining what
is best for patients.
The Health and Human Services omnibus bills which contain the "best
practices" proposal have passed both the House and Senate and await
conference committee action. The Governor signaled his support for
the proposal in his State of the State address, saying his
administration will "force health care providers to use best
practices."
"This is a dangerous proposal, yet there has been virtually no public
debate about it. The public must be informed about this proposal
before the legislature requires their doctors to work for government
first and patients second," concluded Brase.
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CCHC is an independent non-profit free-market health care policy organization located in St. Paul, Minnesota.
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