HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
BEFORE THE US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
October 5, 2004
Reject a National Prescription Database
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Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to HR 3015, the National All Schedules
Prescription Electronic Reporting Act.
This
bill is yet another unjustifiable attempt by the federal government to
use the
war on drugs as an excuse for invading the privacy and liberties of the
American
people and for expanding the federal government’s disastrous
micromanagement
of medical care.
As a physician
with over 30 years experience in private practice, I must oppose this
bill due
to the danger it poses to our health as well as our liberty.
2004 Ron Paul 74:2
By creating a national database of prescriptions for controlled
substances, the
federal government would take another step forward in the war on pain
patients
and their doctors.
This war has
already resulted in the harassment and prosecution of many doctors, and
their
staff members, whose only “crime” is prescribing legal medication,
including
opioids, to relieve their patients’ pain.
These prosecutions, in turn, have scared other doctors so that
they are
unwilling to prescribe an adequate amount of pain medication, or even
any pain
medication, for their suffering patients.
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Doctors and their staffs may even be prosecuted because of a patient’s actions
that no
doctor approved or even knew about.
A
doctor has no way of controlling if a patient gives some of the
prescribed
medication away or consumes a prescribed drug in a dangerous
combination with
illegal drugs or other prescription drugs obtained from another source.
Nonetheless, doctors can be subjected to prosecution when a
patient takes
such actions.
2004 Ron Paul 74:4
Applying to doctors laws intended to deal with drug kingpins, the government has
created
the illusion of some success in the war on drugs.
Investigating
drug dealers can be hard and dangerous work.
In comparison, it is much easier to shut down medical practices
and
prosecute doctors who prescribe pain medication.
2004 Ron Paul 74:5
A doctor who is willing to treat chronic pain patients with medically
justified
amounts of controlled substances may appear at first look to be
excessively
prescribing.
Because so few doctors
are willing to take the drug war prosecution risks associated with
treating
chronic pain patients, and because chronic pain patients must often
consume
significant doses of pain medication to obtain relief, the prosecution
of one
pain doctor can be heralded as a large success.
All the government needs to do is point to the large amount of
patients
and drugs associated with a medical practice.
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Once doctors know that there is a national database of controlled substances
prescriptions that overzealous law enforcement will be scrutinizing to
harass
doctors, there may be no doctors left who are willing to treat chronic
pain.
Instead of creating a national database, we should be returning
medical
regulation to local control, where it historically and constitutionally
belongs.
Instead of drug warriors regulating medicine with an eye to
maximizing
prosecutions, we should return to state medical boards and state civil
courts
review that looks to science-based standards of medical care and
patients’
best interests.
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HR 3015 also threatens patients’ privacy.
A
patient’s medical records should be treated according to the mutual
agreement
of the patient and doctor.
In
contrast, HR 3015 will put a patient’s prescriptions on a
government-mandated
database that can be accessed without the patient’s permission!
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Instead of further eroding our medical privacy, Congress should take steps to
protect
it.
Why should someone be prevented
from denying the government and third parties access to his medical
records
without his permission or a warrant?
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One way the House can act to protect patients’ privacy is by enacting my
Patient
Privacy Act (HR 1699) that repeals the provision of federal law
establishing a
medical ID for every American.
Under
the guise of protecting privacy, the Health and Human Services
so-called medical privacy regulations allow medical researchers,
insurance agents, and government officials access to your personal
medical
records — without your consent!
Congress
should act now to reverse this government-imposed invasion of our
medical
privacy.
2004 Ron Paul 74:10
Please join me in opposing HR 3015 — legislation that, if enacted, will make us
less
free and less healthy.