For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
June 22, 2001
Embargoed for Release
Until 10 06 A.M. Edt Saturday, June 23, 2001 Radio Address by the President to the Nation the President Good Morning. Here in Washington, We Are Nearing Some Important Decisions on the Health of Americans. Congress Will Soon Vote On a Patients' Bill of Rights, to Help Patients Get the Treatment They Deserve Without Delay Or Legal Haggling. I Want That Bill to be Strong And Effective. a Woman Should Be Able to Visit Her Gynecologist, and Parents Their Children's Pediatrician, Without Going Through a Gatekeeper. A Person Should Be Able to See a Specialist When He Or She Needs One, and to
get emergency treatment at the nearest emergency room.
If an HMO denies the treatment you need, then
you should have the right to an immediate, impartial appeal to a panel
of doctors. If the panel rules in your favor, you should
receive your treatment, period. If the HMO ignores the
findings, you should be able to go to court. The system
should not favor HMOs, and it should not favor trial
lawyers. It should favor patients, with quick action to make
sure they get the treatment they need. Today
I want to address another kind of protection that is needed in these
times of accelerating medical progress. Just a few months
ago, scientists completed the mapping of the human
genome. With this information comes enormous possibilities
for doing good. Through a better understanding of the
genetic codes, scientists might one day be able to cure and prevent
countless diseases. As with any other power,
however, this knowledge of the code of life has the potential to be
abused. Employers could be tempted to deny a job based on a
person's genetic profile. Insurance companies might use that
information to deny an application for coverage, or charge excessive
premiums. Genetic discrimination is unfair to
workers and their families. It is unjustified -- among other
reasons, because it involves little more than medical
speculation. A genetic predisposition toward cancer or heart
disease does not mean the condition will develop. To deny
employment or insurance to a healthy person based only on a
predisposition violates our country's belief in equal treatment and
individual merit. In the past, other forms of
discrimination have been used to withhold rights and opportunities that
belong to all Americans. Just as we have addressed
discrimination based on race, gender and age, we must now prevent
discrimination based on genetic information.
My administration is working now to shape the legislation that will
make genetic discrimination illegal. I look forward to
working with members of Congress to pass a law that is fair,
reasonable, and consistent with existing discrimination
statutes. We will all gain much from the continuing advances
in genetic science. But those advances should never come at
the cost of basic fairness and equality under law.
Thank you for listening.
END
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