Saturday, July 17, 2010

Feds to Monitor Obesity as White House Promotes Obama Cook to Senior Position

Here is another excellent reason to repeal obamacare. The government has absolutely no business digging into our medical records. That information should be between the doctor and the patient... period. Isn't confidentiality part of the oath doctors take? If so, the federal government is asking all doctors to break their oath.

How does a cook suddenly get a senior policy advisor position? I guess if you are a friend of obama you will be taken care (at the tax payer's expense) one way or another. When obama's house of cards starts to collapse though, you will see these people scrambling like ghetto cockroaches when the light goes on.

That collapse can't happen soon enough for me...

From FoxNews

As the Obama administration sets its sights on overweight Americans, demanding obesity ratings for all citizens by 2014, the White House has promoted the Obamas' personal cook to a senior advisory position.

Sam Kass, the 20-something Chicago chef, is now the White House "Food Initiative Coordinator," Kass' title reportedly was upgraded last month from food initiative coordinator to senior policy adviser for health food initiatives. His duties have not changed.

The change comes as the Health and Human Services announced this week that under the stimulus law, health care providers must establish "meaningful use" of electronic health records to qualify for federal subsidies or risk seeing their Medicare and Medicaid payments slashed. The electronic health records must include Americans' body mass index, or BMI, height and weight.

Critics say the BMI is unreliable and the ratings will lead to more government intrusion.

Supporters say the ratings will serve as motivation for weight loss.

"The fact we're now tracking BMIs', I think knowledge is power for us," nutrition expert Mitzi Dulan told Fox News."There are a lot of people that don't know their BMI and it's denial.

Dulan noted that a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that $147 billion is spent annually on obesity-related costs, or 10 percent of medical costs.

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