Billary the evil one and Bill our man on the hill Team up

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Is this bad news for gun owners that the two of them a re teaming up now???
A government run centralized system to track our medical records makes me feel queasy.

Clinton, Frist Tout Medical Records Bill

By DEVLIN BARRETT
The Associated Press
Thursday, June 16, 2005; 1:33 PM

WASHINGTON -- Hillary Rodham Clinton and Bill Frist, two senators in the mix of speculation about the White House race in 2008, touted a new medical records bill Thursday that they said is necessary to prevent life-threatening mistakes.

Clinton, a Democrat who led President Clinton's unsuccessful push for substantial health care overhaul in the early 1990s, said the standard of record-keeping in the United States remains "in the Dark Ages" at a time when people can easily access a wide range of information on the Internet.



WASHINGTON - JUNE 16: Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) (C) speaks during a news conference as Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) (L) listens at George Washington University Hospital June 16, 2005 in Washington, DC. The two Senators discussed their health information technology and quality legislation.
The bill that Clinton is working on with Frist, the Republican Tennessean who leads his party in the Senate, would try to move the medical community away from what many believe is an over-reliance on paper records.

Clinton, who represents New York, had joined a former Republican foe, former House Speaker New Gingrich, last month to promote the medical-records bill.

Her work with Frist on modernizing health care records began a year ago with a private dinner meeting to talk about health care, they said.

"It's a partnership that I guess surprises some people because we are on two different sides of the aisle," Frist said standing beside Clinton at George Washington University Hospital.

"It should speak loudly to the American people that we are united around this common goal of establishing these inter-operable standards that we know will improve health care in this country," said Frist.

The bill would spend $125 million a year to promote local and regional health information systems to allow some 6,000 hospitals and 9,000 health care providers to better communicate and share patient histories during medical emergencies.

The bill would also increase reimbursement rates paid to doctors who participate in the networks. Some providers have already switched to a paperless record keeping system, but many would like to see the federal government speed the changes and ensure the different technologies being adopted can work together.

The legislation has been criticized by privacy advocates, who say it would be far too lax in protecting patient records.

The Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights said expanding medical databases the way Clinton and Frist hope would put more people at risk of identity theft.

Clinton said lawmakers would have to ensure that such electronic records be secure and that confidential information is protected.

She also said hospitals were separately moving toward creating new records-keeping systems, and such steps will only create more confusion and waste without standards for sharing critical data.

The senators began the day pitching their plan together on network television, before visiting the Washington-area hospital and making their case on the Senate floor.

They argue thousands of deaths due to medical mistakes like misreading a prescription could be prevented by the greater use of computer technology, and the change would save billions of dollars over the long term.

"We're really in the Dark Ages," Clinton said on NBC's "Today" show.

"We have to make the case for it," she said. "But I know that both Senator Frist and I are determined to move this legislation because for every month that we wait, people are spending money on these systems which may or may not make the kind of seamless system that we are looking for in this country."

Frist, asked about his and Clinton's possible run for the presidency, replied, "We're both running. I'm running the Senate and she's running for re-election."
 
Anything that Hilary wants can't be good.... :fire:

I'm expecting having to show my "papers" to buy Tylenol, and being told that only one box a month is permitted....

This ain't going to be something the THR gang will like.

Joe Stalin, maybe, though.... :neener:

Sheesh....
 
The private sector has already recognized the need for interoperable patient data standards, and has already evolved a (somewhat reasonable as these things go) response to the need.

I'm very suspicious, but this bill probably means nothing with respect to gunrights.

It's in the interest of both parties to occassionally pick something innocuous and innoffensive (to the layman) that they can be seen cooperating on.

(One of my earliest companies was _way_ ahead of it's time on this topic. So far ahead of our time that we were pretty much the first to do fully integrated electrong patient record keeping and billing. Naturally, the market didn't know what to make of it, could not see the advantage over what at the time was governmentally mandated paper, and consequently, we went out of biz.)
 
The paper record system is inefficient IMO, and is subject to lost records (I recently experienced this), misfiled records, and general confusion. Add that to the fact that the medical profession's self policing leaves a lot to be desired, and you can see why so many (90k+?) people a year die as a result of 'medical mistakes'.

OTOH, we should be skeptical of a central database containing private medical information because it has the very real potential for abuse.

And in other news, anybody else really concerned about this cozy relationship between the Clintons and the Bushes? :scrutiny: :uhoh:
 
I heard this one the radio yesterday (Hellary herself talking) and it was terrifying.

I'm very suspicious, but this bill probably means nothing with respect to gunrights.
Oh, sure ... wait until they want to tie this in with NICS :rolleyes:
Ever taken an anti-depressant? Denied
Ever had a jackass doctor (I repeat myself) ? Denied


And in other news, anybody else really concerned about this cozy relationship between the Clintons and the Bushes?
But American history will get easier. The presidents, beginning in 1988:
Bush I
Clinton I
Bush II
Clinton II
Bush III

... and so on till the fall of the empire.
 
I don't see anything about a centralized system in there. It says they want to help local hospitals, etc. to upgrade their information system. Doesn't say it will be tied into anything or that the government will be getting any of these records.
 
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