New York Post

War on Men: Bam’s New Cancer Policy

- BETSY McCAUGHEY

IF you’re at risk of prostate cancer — in other words, if you’re male — the best place to be is the United States, where survival rates are highest in the world. But not for long, if the Obama administra­tion gets its way in curtailing a test that flags prostate cancer before it spreads.

The administra­tion wants to penalize doctors who routinely order the PSA blood test. Under a proposed policy, those doctors will get demerits for being considered overspende­rs, while doctors who skip the test will be rewarded with a high “quality” rating from the government — and be paid more.

The Obama administra­tion claims less care is better. That’s double talk. An editorial in the current issue of the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n points to a sudden, disturbing drop in prostateca­ncer detection since 2011, when the United States Preventive Services Task Force recommende­d against using this simple test. Worse, the journal predicts more prostateca­ncer deaths due to the drop.

The task force — 16 government appointees — tried to argue that the test does more harm than good. Some men with high PSA scores undergo retests and biopsies only to find out they don’t have cancer. Or they endure the side effects of radiation and surgery even though their cancer is slowgrowin­g and not lifethreat­ening.

The task force claims the test’s “harms” outweigh the “benefits.” Not so fast. Of course it’s distressin­g to get a call that you need to get retested because of a high PSA score, but that “harm” is nothing compared to being told you have cancer that could’ve been caught and stopped years earlier.

Women go back to their doctors all the time for repeat mammograms. It beats dying of breast cancer.

Male patients aren’t pushed into biopsies or treatment on the basis of a single abnormal PSA score anyway, explains Dr. John Williams, a New York urologist. Doctors also consider a patient’s age, his prostate’s size and other factors.

In truth, the Obama administra­tion is more concerned with cutting care than preventing cancer deaths. Guided by that warped philosophy, the task force told women in their 40s not to get mammograms, and advised women 50 and over to settle for a mammogram every two years, instead of annually.

The task force’s crass calculatio­n was that 1,900 women in their 40s have to be screened to save one life. Not worth it, they said. Fortunatel­y, cancer physicians and patientadv­ocacy groups rebelled against that nickelandd­iming. That was in 2009. They need to mobilize again to defeat the assault on prostateca­ncer screening. Even without these new proposed penalties on doctors, the task force’s misguided opposition to PSA tests already has caused thousands of avoidable deaths, according to David Penson, a urological surgeon at Vanderbilt University. Many doctors stopped the test, allowing cancer to spread undetected.

“This is a warning,” says Dr. Anthony D’Amico of the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. “It is likely that men will develop more advanced prostate cancer before it is diagnosed and be less likely to be cured.”

Similarly, the JAMA editorial warns of advanced prostateca­ncer deaths “associated with the decline in PSA screening that has occurred following the USPSTF recommenda­tion.” That’s proof the task force is dead wrong.

Who in their right mind would consider skipping this test to be a sign of “quality” care?

But it’s part of a pattern. Obama’s signature health law awards “quality” points to the hospitals that spend the least per senior, even though these are the hospitals where seniors are least apt to survive an illness.

Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, the Obama administra­tion’s healthpoli­cy architect, says he has no desire to live beyond 75, so he’s foregoing all treatment, including PSA tests. He’s entitled.

But the rest of us who value life, including our own, need to know the facts. The Obama administra­tion’s war on PSA tests is, in Williams’ opinion, “a coldhearte­d decision based on cost.” It’s a war on men.

Betsy McCaughey is author of “Beating Obamacare” and a senior fellow at the London Center for Policy Research.

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