GA
Congressman Norwood reintroduces
Patients' Bill of Rights Legislation prior to death
Feb
13, 2007--Rep. Charlie Norwood (R-Ga.) reintroduced
the original version of legislation (HR 979) to
create a "patients' bill of rights" before he
returned to Georgia last week to receive hospice
care, the
Atlanta
Journal-Constitution reports.
The legislation -- originally authored in 1998 by Norwood,
House Energy and Commerce Committee Chair John
Dingell (D-Mich.) and Rep. Greg Ganske (R-Iowa) --
would allow patients to file lawsuits against health
maintenance organizations for improper medical
decisions.
According to a statement from his office, Norwood, who has
declined to continue treatment for non-small cell
lung cancer, "acknowledged he will not be able to
further impact debate on the legislation but was
confident Chairman Dingell and other supporters
would see the bill passed into law this session."
The bill in 1999 passed the House, but it was
rejected by the Republican-controlled Senate. In
2001, a different version of the legislation was
approved by the Senate, but the bill lost Democratic
support because of a compromise Norwood accepted to
avoid a presidential veto.
The legislation has been introduced in a slightly different
form every year since 2001. In a December 2006
opinion piece that appeared in a number of Georgia
weekly newspapers, Norwood wrote, "There is no
reason we can't pass the original, uncompromised
bill with a veto-proof majority. ... If the
Democrats can use their new majority to pull that
off, they will and should score big with the
public."
John Stone, spokesperson for Norwood, said that an
analysis of returning Congress members indicates
that the legislation will have an easier chance of
passage. "It appears we have enough to see one of
those 300 votes in the House, 60 votes in the Senate
kind of deals," Stone said (Baxter,
Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, 2/13).