When the so-called ‘sequester’
went into effect and there was no immediate calamity Conservatives
responded that see, cutting government spending does not hurt anyone. It turns out they
were wrong, not surprisingly.
Cancer
clinics across the country have begun turning away thousands of Medicare
patients, blaming the sequester budget cuts.
Oncologists
say the reduced funding, which took effect for Medicare on April 1, makes it
impossible to administer expensive chemotherapy drugs while staying afloat
financially.
Patients
at these clinics would need to seek treatment elsewhere, such as at hospitals
that might not have the capacity to accommodate them.
But this was probably
only good news for anti-government spending legislators, who see government
involvement in health care as a huge colossal blunder. So on hearing the news they may have reacted
thusly.
Portrait of a Wasteful Government Spending Program
Ralph V. Boccia of the Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders runs a cancer clinic that is in danger of losing funding due to the sequester cuts. (Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post)
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Conservatives in Congress Praise Cutting Off
Cancer Patients from Expensive Drug Therapy
“These patients
were part of the 47% who think they are entitled to live” said one member of the
group “and that just because they cannot afford drug treatment for their cancer they think that the Medicare system should pick up most of the bill. Just because they have Medicare doesn’t mean
they get health care.”
When asked how those advocating the cuts would feel if people died another member of the group said “Look, these people are probably going to die anyway, so continuing to treat them would just be a waste of money. That’s the type of government waste we were sent toWashington to end.”
When asked how those advocating the cuts would feel if people died another member of the group said “Look, these people are probably going to die anyway, so continuing to treat them would just be a waste of money. That’s the type of government waste we were sent to
The group was
asked if, as part of the Sequester, health care for members of Congress such as
themselves would be cut. “That would be short sighted” Congressman Walter “Killer”
Judd said, adding “we need to be at our healthy best in order to follow up with
cuts in child care, nutrition programs, housing assistance and other wasteful
Federal spending.”
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