Pubdate: Sun, 08 Aug 1999 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Seattle Times Company Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Author: Carol M. Ostrom, Seattle Times staff reporter Note: For additional information on the proposed Pain Relief Promotion Act of 1999 go to http://thomas.loc.gov/ DOCTORS WARY OF BILL'S CURBS ON PAIN RELIEF If Congress approves a measure prohibiting doctors from prescribing lethal doses of controlled substances, dying patients will need to make room for another chair at the bedside for the drug-enforcement agent, Northwest doctors warn. "It basically gives the Department of Justice the ability to decide what is good medical care and what is not," said Dr. Richard Kincade, president of the Oregon Medical Association (OMA). "That, to us, is unacceptable." The Pain Relief Promotion Act of 1999 received substantial support in Congress before lawmakers broke for their August recess. The American Medical Association and the National Hospice Organization both support the bill. But leaders of both the OMA and the Washington State Medical Association (WSMA) say they believe the bill will have a "chilling effect" on doctors' willingness to prescribe adequate pain-relieving medication for terminally ill patients. The Oregon doctors have opposed the bill. And while the Washington State Medical Association hasn't taken an official stance, WSMA leaders of the association say they have no doubt its members overwhelmingly oppose it, based on prior positions against government intrusion in the doctor-patient relationship. Some dying patients have "very severe pain" in their final weeks or days, said Dr. Sam Cullison a family-practice physician from Seattle who serves on WSMA's executive committee. That organization opposes assisted suicide. "We know as physicians that the proper amount of pain relief in those circumstances is whatever amount is required to relieve the pain," Cullison said. "After the fact, is someone from the (federal Drug Enforcement Administration) going to look at the chart and discern whether the pancreatic cancer is the cause of death or the pain-relief medication? Are they going to decide whether pain-relief medications hastened death - and to what extent? Is it a second? A minute?" These are areas in which there is great disagreement among medical professionals, said Cullison. "Our leadership has no confidence that the DEA could sort out those gray areas," he said. "We'll have to add another chair to every hospital room so there's a place for the DEA agent to sit and watch everything that the physician is doing." Sponsors of the bill, which include U.S. Sen. Don Nickles, R-Okla., and House Judiciary Chairman Henry Hyde, R-Ill., have said they have no intention of going after doctors. The AMA's legal consultants have indicated they believe doctors aren't in danger from the bill. The newest version notes that pain relief is a "legitimate medical purpose" for administering a controlled substance, "even if the use of such a substance may increase the risk of death." But the proposed law also adds: "Nothing in this section authorizes intentionally dispensing, distributing, or administering a controlled substance for the purpose of causing death or assisting another person in causing death." Kincade, the Oregon Medical Association president, said the OMA's legal review of the bill concludes there isn't adequate protection for doctors who use controlled substances for pain relief in terminally ill patients. The OMA has been officially neutral on the issue of assisted suicide, Kincade said. This is an important issue in Oregon, Kincade said, where many physicians read Oregon voters' decision to twice pass bills legalizing assisted suicide as a negative commentary on doctors' ability to manage such pain. After a years-long educational campaign, doctors there began to use morphine and other pain-relieving medications more freely, Kincade said. In 1996, Oregon led the nation in per capita medical use of morphine. Now, many doctors are particularly sensitive to pain control in end-of-life care, he said. "We are really fearful that physicians will back off on adequate amounts of pain control with controlled substances in end-of-life care," said Kincade. Many Northwest doctors see the measure as a thinly disguised attempt to do away with assisted suicide. Only Oregon has passed a law allowing physicians to assist with suicides. But elsewhere, some doctors now believe that they are legally safe providing doses of pain medication that ultimately result in a patient's death, so long as the doctor's primary intention was to relieve pain. The bill's sponsors have denied the legislation is an attempt to overturn Oregon's law, noting that there are other substances that can be used for physician-assisted suicide. But assisted-suicide supporters are not convinced. They point to a section of the bill noting that state laws authorizing assisted suicide shall be given "no force and effect." "The intent of this bill is to eliminate use of controlled substances in assisted suicide," Kincade said. There is no question, he added, that the bill's larger goal is to eliminate assisted suicide completely. "The act will shut down Oregon's law," predicted Michael Bonacci, executive director of Compassion in Dying of Washington, which supports dying patients and their families. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck