The Fatal Prescription Pad

The Fatal Prescription Pad

It’s well known that the most expensive medical technology in America is a doctor’s ballpoint pen. Doctors call for hundreds of billions of dollars in unnecessary tests and procedures every year. This has become a major thrust in healthcare reform. But now we discover that the prescription pad can also be deadly.

Can Dying Be a Peak Experience?

Does end-of-life care prolong life or does it prolong suffering? Should it be a part of health-care reform?

As a humane gesture, comforting people at the end of their lives is valuable and has been part of the hospice movement, not to mention pastoral care, for a long time. As anyone who has spent time with the dying knows, it’s the family who is most distraught; the person who is actually nearing the end has generally come to terms with his situation and found some measure of peace.

Can Dying Be a Peak Experience?

Does end-of-life care prolong life or does it prolong suffering? Should it be a part of health-care reform?

As a humane gesture, comforting people at the end of their lives is valuable and has been part of the hospice movement, not to mention pastoral care, for a long time. As anyone who has spent time with the dying knows, it’s the family who is most distraught; the person who is actually nearing the end has generally come to terms with his situation and found some measure of peace.

Can You Change The Past?

By Robert Lanza and Deepak Chopra
Can decisions we make now change the past?  Modern physics tells us that particles possess a range of possible states, and that it’s not until the actual act of observation that they take on real physical properties. Until this occurs there cannot be a past. Even eminent physicists Stephen Hawking and John Wheeler (one of Einstein’s last collaborators) agree it can be no other way.

Reinventing the Body, Resurrecting the Soul

Dear Readers and Friends,

In our quest to grow and evolve, we all run into obstacles. We meet resistance. Change proves stubborn and at times impossible. Anything that I can do to overcome these obstacles is a contribution I never wish to pass up.

In my new book I address the most difficult obstacle of all: the body.

A Fix-It President Hits a Wall — and It’s Us

It would be difficult to imagine a more eloquent and timely case for health care reform than the one being made by Barack Obama. He has staked his early presidency on fulfilling one of his major campaign promises. Everyone agrees — not counting extremists — that his recent address to Congress was masterful. Yet an ABC poll quickly showed that 78% of respondents don’t believe the President’s proposed reforms will help them personally, and over 80% don’t believe it will lower their costs.

This fix-it President, who also has the gift of eloquence and an electoral mandate, has hit a wall. That wall has more to do with the future than just health care.

Why Health-Care Reform Won’t Reform Health Care

Like most people, I was encouraged and energized by President Obama’s stirring speech to Congress last week. With rare candor, he told the truth about the three C’s of reform: costs, coverage, and character. The last C was the most emotionally charged. Staring lawmakers and citizens in the eye, the President essentially said, “Is America a society that squanders $900 billion on a dishonest war but refuses to spend the same amount to give its citizens affordable health care?” Because of the massive counter-efforts by lobbyists and the resistance of the right wing, we’re holding our breaths on the answer to that question.

The Medical Myth of “More Is Better”

A doctor who’s in the thick of the current health-care debate made a crucial point when he told me that the real issue shouldn’t be limited to medical insurance reform rather an entire medical-care reform. It’s been rightly said that the most expensive technology in American medicine is the doctor’s pen, because with a flourish of the hand he can order an unnecessary test or surgery.  Some kind of insurer must pay for that, so simply providing more coverage will not bring healthcare costs to economically sustainable levels, nor will it ensure better health to society.

Health Care and Daniel in the Liars’ Den

We were told from the start that health-care reform would be tough. On one side stands the public, with its tangled needs for medical care. What would be best for them? President Obama’s town meetings have outlined the basics: lower costs, universal coverage, and a public plan to compete with private insurers. Among advanced countries, only the U.S. lacks those things. On the other side stand vest interests — doctors, insurance companies, hospitals, and pharmaceutical giants — who have their own needs. It goes without question that money is the first, overriding almost everything else. Doctors speak out for high quality of care, but what they really mean is maintaining the current backbreaking level of surgeries and new drugs.

What the Oldest Soldier Said

A story crossed the Atlantic last week about funeral services for England’s last surviving veteran of World War I. Born in 1898, Harry Patch was 111 when he passed away last month in a nursing home.  The rites for him attracted as much attention for the fact that soldiers from Belgium, France, and Germany attended as for his great age and symbolic status. Mr. Patch was especially eager that former enemies should meet; he had grown vocally anti-war in his last years. The New York Times quoted him as saying “Too many died. War isn’t worth one life.”  World War I was ignited for the slimmest of reasons, like our own Iraq War, but with staggeringly more casualties: 900,000 Britons alone.

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