Why so cheap I wonder...
Deborah
****************

Are Honors for Physicians the New Political Diploma Mill?
Doctor Named 'Physician of the Year' -- for a Fee
By BRIAN ROSS
http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/print?id=643826

Apr. 5, 2005 - The good news reached the Jamestown, N.Y., office of Dr.
Rudolph Mueller in a fax from a congressman in Washington. Mueller had been
named 2004 Physician of the Year.

"My secretary came running in and said, 'Dr. Rudy, look at what you've won,
you're Physician of the Year,' " said Mueller, an internist.

 But to receive the award in person at a special two-day workshop in
Washington last month, Mueller found out that he would have to make a $1,250
contribution to the National Republican Congressional Committee. It was a
disturbing discovery, he said.

 "To actually buy your award and it's not from your peers or from your
patients or from the community that you serve, it's really deceptive," said
Mueller, author of "As Sick As It Gets: The Shocking Reality of America's
Healthcare, A Diagnosis and Treatment Plan." "It's not being honest, it's
just not right."

 To see what the award process was all about, Mueller sent in his $1,250
contribution and ABC News paid for his travel to Washington for the
scheduled events March 14-15, which included a tax-reform workshop as well
as appearances by House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, and President
Bush.

 Mueller soon found he was not the only winner. There were hundreds of
Physicians of the Year present, many of whom found the criteria for being
selected equally as opaque.

 "You know, nobody knows, so don't feel bad about it," Mueller said one
attendee told him. "I think that more than likely it's to get us Republicans together under the pretense that maybe you will work a little harder to keep
Republicans in office."

 Another winner was more blunt. "I don't think it's worth it from the
standpoint of your own qualifications, but I think it's worth it to support
the party," he said. "Basically it's one big monstrous donation to the
party."

 "It's like the old diploma mills," said Fred Wertheimer, president of
Democracy 21, a government watchdog group. "It's the kind of scam that we've
seen congressional investigations look at when they take place in the
private sector. But here, since members of Congress are doing it, we're not
going to see any investigation."

 Investing in the Party

 The Republicans, under the direction of DeLay, came up with the idea for
the awards five years ago as a means of helping to raise funds for the
congressional campaign efforts for their party.

In fact, signs reading "A Celebration of the House Republican Majority" and
"Moving America's Agenda" decorated the hotel ballroom where last month's
events were held.

 A Republican congressional spokesman said DeLay stopped direct involvement
in the program two years ago, but the majority leader was the guest speaker
this year at the awards ceremony luncheon, giving a speech that included
proposals well-tailored to the doctors' interests.

 "We need to reform our legal system so that predatory personal injury
lawyers can't clog our courts and drive doctors out of business with abusive lawsuits," he said. "Today in America, a doctor in a small town is trying to
determine how he can continue his practice after learning of his new higher
malpractice premiums."

 Mueller said most of the talk at the sessions was about marketing, lawyers
and taxes, and that he was met with silence when trying to raise the issue
of the lack of affordable health insurance.

 "This is the real crisis," Mueller said he told the congressmen on one
panel at the events. "Please, I am begging you."

The congressmen said nothing and quickly called for a question from another
Physician of the Year, Mueller said .

 Later that day, Bush spoke at the NRCC dinner, thanking the attendees for
their "investment" in the party. "You're making a wise investment about the
future of this country, an investment made upon principle, an investment
made upon freedom, an investment that will help us stay a prosperous nation,
and an investment that will allow each and every American to rise to his or
her own God-given talents," he said.

 And some of the other winners told Mueller that his $1,250 fee to the NRCC
was a wise investment indeed. He should use the award as a marketing tool,
they said, as an impressive honor he could tell patients. And on the
Internet, ABC News found physicians across the country doing just that --
listing NRCC's Physician of the Year among their honors and credentials.

 Wertheimer warned that the award was misleading and that they should add
the award was given "because I paid for this certificate, not for anything
else that happened."

 A Republican spokesman said there were thousands of doctors around the
country content with their Physicians of the Year awards, and that there was
nothing about the program to apologize for.

 ABC News' Rhonda Schwartz, Simon Surowicz and Jessica Wang contributed to
this story.

Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures




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