[My] Life in Wisconsin

Hospitals Must Grant Same-Sex Visitations: NPR


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126034014
Here is the article, dated April 16, 2010

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President Obama issued a memorandum Thursday to the Department of Health and Human Services, ordering hospitals to give same-sex couples the right to be with a partner who is sick or dying.
The memorandum applies to every hospital that receives Medicare or Medicaid funding -- nearly every hospital in the country.


The language in the memo is not boilerplate government bureaucrat-speak. It says gay and lesbian Americans "are often barred from the bedsides of the partners with whom they may have spent decades of their lives -- unable to be there for the person they love."

James Esseks of the ACLU's LGBT project called the memo a huge deal that harms no one and helps many people.

"What we face is a whole series of problems in our daily lives, and certainly in times of crisis, when the relationships that are an integral part of our lives are just not protected," Esseks said. "It shows up in lots of different places, but hospital visitation is a prime example.

Some states already have policies like this one, but the country is a patchwork of different rules.

J.P. Duffy, vice president for communications at the Family Research Council, said Obama was pandering to a radical special interest group.

"There are many other ways to deal with this issue, whether through health care proxy or power of attorney, through private contractual arrangements. We have no problem with those situations," Duffy said. "But the fact here is this is undermining the definition of marriage."

Most hospitals, he said, have no restrictions on same-sex visitation.

But Dr. Jason Schneider, former president of the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association, said that unless a hospital has a formal policy allowing same-sex hospital visitations, gay couples can run into trouble.

"One person in a hospital can make a huge difference," said Dr. Jason Schneider, former president of the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association. "So I think this directive gives weight to the importance of recognizing the variety and the breadth of how people define families."

The memo also applies beyond same-sex couples.

It says a patient can name anyone to be a surrogate decision maker, including a friend or a distant relative.

It also says hospitals must follow patients' advanced directives, no matter who the patient designates as a surrogate in a medical emergency.

In the past year, gay and lesbian groups have criticized the Obama administration, saying the White House has not moved quickly enough on "Don't Ask Don't Tell" and other issues that are important to the community.

Esseks of the ACLU says he thinks this might change their view of the president.

"He put his name on this memorandum," Esseks said. "This change could have simply come through [the Department of] Health and Human Services. And the fact that he did it over his name, I think, speaks to an understanding of the real problem that people are facing."

Some prominent gay and lesbian advocates said they never thought of using Medicare and Medicaid funding as a tool to force hospitals to expand LGBT access. It's a move that Duffy of the Family Research Council calls "a big government takeover of even the smallest details of the nation's health care system."

But this isn't the first time a president has used Medicare funding to expand access to hospitals.

When President Johnson signed Medicare into law in 1965, many hospitals were racially segregated. That new law said hospitals receiving federal Medicare dollars would have to integrate. Initially there was strong resistance, but within a year of Medicare's beginning, the desegregation of the nation's hospitals was essentially complete.



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Why has this taken a presidential memorandum?
Would it not have been the kind thing to have been doing all along?

XOXO
Me

Posting new blog shortly-  (I hope).

image: renwl.org

5 comments:

  1. With that said my unrelated best friend is my power of attorney and advocate if something were to happen where I am not able to perform tasks myself , so a lot of hospitals are allowing non family members to take lead roles. Sad that a memorandum needs to go out to accomplish simple human compassion in America.

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  2. You don't already ??? That's incredible Anne hey, that is just normal

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  3. You have reminded many that if their own papers are not up to date, they might want to seriously consider changing them.

    XOXO
    me

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  4. You're darn right it should be the norm.

    And no matter what anyone feels about gay/lesbian, this topic should never have been one to require a presidential memorandum!

    Now don't say "you" like it's me. hehehe
    I really am not that cruel.

    XOXO
    Me

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  5. Hahahaha I meant "You" as in the Country, Anne but ya new that ( How's that for English )

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