Source: Waco Tribune-Herald Section: Editorial, Opinion Contact: Sun, 2 Aug 1998 Author: John Young, Opinion page editor Note: John Young's column appears Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. TYING PHYSICIANS' HANDS Congress Shouldn't Meddle On Calls To Ease Dying People's Pain Medical doctors need to make decisions about medical treatment, not politicians. This is especially true when doctors are caring for terminally ill patients who are suffering unbelievable pain. Unfortunately, the Lethal Drug Abuse Prevention Act would require the Drug Enforcement Administration to second-guess doctors when they prescribe drugs to relieve the intractable pain of dying patients. The bill would be a leap backward. What is needed is to remove second-guessing bureaucrats who interfere with doctor-patient relationships. The bill is designed to prevent doctor-assisted suicides by requiring that DEA agents revoke the DEA licenses of doctors whose prescriptions assist in a patient's death. The bill may play well on the campaign trail, but it should be rejected for several reasons. For starters, the Supreme Court ruled last year that the issue of doctor-assisted suicides should be left to the states, not the federal government. That appears to be a reasonable decision. This bill, sponsored by Republicans Rep. Henry Hyde of Illinois and Sen. Don Nickels of Oklahoma, is a way to get around the Supreme Court decision and place the doctor-assisted suicide issue back among Washington politicians and bureaucrats. The citizens and their elected representatives in the various states should be in the best position to tackle this difficult issue. Another, perhaps more pressing, reason to oppose this bill is the chilling effect it will have on physicians who are asked by their terminally ill patients for relief from unbearable pain. Under the proposed Lethal Drug Abuse Prevention Act, doctors who administer drugs to help relieve the suffering of a dying patient know they will be second-guessed by federal agents if the patient dies, which is inevitiable since the patients on death's door most likely need relief from agonizing pain. This ill-conceived bill would be a special setback for terminally ill Texans because the Lone Star state has been in the forefront in the United States in authorizing doctors licensed by the Board of Medical Examiners to administer controlled and dangerous drugs to help relieve patients' suffering. It's called the Intractable Pain Act. Just as doctors and health-care providers are learning more about easing the last days of dying patients, this bill would be a tragic setback. People deserve all assistance possible to leave this life with dignity, which is why the Congress should reject the Lethal Drug Abuse Prevention Act. - ---