HON. RON PAUL
OF TEXAS
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, March 2, 2006
2006 Ron Paul 7:1
Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to introduce the Treat Physicians Fairly Act, legislation
providing tax credits to physicians to compensate
for the costs of providing uncompensated
care. This legislation helps compensate
medical professionals for the., costs imposed
on them by federal laws forcing doctors to provide
uncompensated medical care. The legislation
also provides a tax deduction for hospitals
that incur costs related to providing uncompensated
care.
2006 Ron Paul 7:2
Under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) physicians
who work in emergency rooms are required to
provide care, regardless of a persons ability
to pay, to anyone who comes into an emergency
room. Hospitals are also required by
law to bear the full costs of providing free care
to anyone who seeks emergency care. Thus,
EMTALA forces medical professionals and
hospitals to bear the entire cost of caring for
the indigent. According to the June 2/9, 2003
edition of AM News, emergency physicians
lose an average of $138,000 in revenue per
year because of EMTALA. EMTALA also
forces physicians and hospitals to follow costly
rules and regulations. Physicians can be fined
$50,000 for technical EMTALA violations!
2006 Ron Paul 7:3
The professional skills with which ones earns a living are property. Therefore, the
clear language of the Takings Clause of the
Fifth Amendment prevents Congress from
mandating that physicians and hospitals bear
the entire costs of providing health care to any
group.
2006 Ron Paul 7:4
Ironically, the perceived need to force doctors to provide medical care is itself the result
of prior government interventions into the
health care market. When I began practicing
medicine, it was common for doctors to provide
uncompensated care as a matter of charity.
However, laws and regulations inflating the
cost of medical services and imposing unreasonable
liability standards on medical professionals
even when they where acting in a volunteer
capacity made offering free care cost
prohibitive. At the same time, the increasing
health care costs associated with the government-
facilitated overreliance on third party
payments priced more and more people out of
the health care market. Thus, the government
responded to problems created by its interventions
by imposing the EMTALA mandate on
physicians, in effect making health care professionals
scapegoats for the harmful consequences
of government health care polices.
2006 Ron Paul 7:5
EMTALA could actually decrease the care available for low-income Americans at emergency
rooms. This is because EMTALA discourages
physicians from offering any emergency
care. Many physicians in my district
have told me that they are considering curtailing
their practices, in part because of the
costs associated with the EMTALA mandates.
Many other physicians are even counseling
younger people against entering the medical
profession because of the way the Federal
Government treats medical professionals. The
tax credits created in the Treat Physicians
Fairly Act will help mitigate some of the burden
government policies place on physicians.
2006 Ron Paul 7:6
The Treat Physicians Fairly Act does not remove any of EMTALAs mandates; it simply
provides that physicians can receive a tax
credit for the costs of providing uncompensated
care. This is a small step toward restoring
fairness to physicians. Furthermore, by
providing some compensation in the form of
tax credits, the Treat Physicians Fairly Act
helps remove the disincentives to remaining
active in the medical profession built into the
current EMTALA law. I hope my colleagues
will take the first step toward removing the unconstitutional
burden of providing uncompensated
care by cosponsoring the Treat Physicians
Fairly Act.