Oregon backs pain relief bill

Author Subject: Oregon backs pain relief bill
Chris Posted At 11:31:22 06/15/2001
Oregon backs pain relief bill

The federal proposal may help avert attacks on the state's assisted suicide law.

MIKE MADDEN
Statesman Journal
June 14

WASHINGTON — Oregon members of Congress launched a pre-emptive strike Wednesday against efforts to undo the state’s assisted suicide law, introducing legislation to encourage aggressive treatment of pain without interfering with the Oregon Death With Dignity Act.

The law, which voters have approved twice, survived a challenge in Congress last year when Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., stymied efforts to overturn it.

Though opponents of assisted suicide expect the Bush administration to try to undo the law by reinterpreting federal drug statutes, officials have taken no action yet.

The pain management bill, sponsored by Wyden, Republican Sen. Gordon Smith and Democratic Rep. Darlene Hooley, does not directly address assisted suicide. But Wyden said he hoped promoting better pain management would decrease the number of people feeling the need to take their own lives, which could help end the debate over the law.

“My hope always was that both sides in the assisted suicide debate should rally to the cause of beefing up and improving pain management because that can reduce the demand for assisted suicide, and that should be appealing to both sides,” Wyden said.

The bill provides for a broad range of efforts to support treatment of pain, from federal research to community programs designed to spread the word that patients do not need to suffer needlessly.

“For better and for worse, our health care system tends to focus more on curing diseases than on pain management,” Smith said. “So when there is no cure for an illness and effective pain management is lacking, there is often no way to adequately help a patient at all.”

Hooley hopes the bill would help improve quality of life for patients suffering from extreme pain by removing the threat that aggressive pain treatments might be under intense scrutiny.

Smith and Wyden had put pain management legislation on their annual list of projects they would tackle together, after having split on the assisted suicide question last year.

Mike Madden can be reached at (703) 276-5806.

Post Reply:
Name:
E-Mail:
Subject:

This message board has been closed in regard to posting new messages and follow-ups although pages can be viewed. Page loading time had become excessive. Please use the "Message Forum" link from our Main Page here to contribute to our new and improved forum.

[ To the IW Forum | Forum FAQ ]