One of the latest proposals, in keeping with the drive to change the health care system, is a proposal that doctors must talk to patients about end-of-life issues and to outline handling advanced health care directives and hospice care offered under the auspices of Medicare. This is startling because it means physicians will be cast in the roll of pseudo-lawyers discussing legal issues that affect their patients.
The interesting part of this proposed change is that if it’s passed as currently written, those same pseudo-lawyers, dressed as doctors, would make money from the government providing Medicare patients with end-of-life consulting every five years. This has the potential to happen more often if a person is diagnosed with a terminal condition. Also, this end-of-life consultation wouldn’t be offered to those covered under “other” health plans. As yet, no one has explained why that would be the case.
This proposal is rife with unanswered questions, not the least of which is who would train the doctors and how would seniors with dementia or other forms of cognitive impairment be informed about these “directives”?
What do all the changes in 2010 in Medicare and Medicare supplements really mean? This is a question that seems to have no direct answer at the moment. Only time will tell how the coming changes to Medicare will affect American seniors.
