U.S. Has Contingency Plans for a Draft of Medical Workers

CAL/AAEM News Service calaaem_news at yahoo.com
Thu Oct 28 01:42:06 PDT 2004


U.S. Has Contingency Plans for a Draft of Medical Workers

By Robert Pear, New York Times, October 19, 2004
Submitted to CAL/AAEM News Service by Dr. Paul Windham	
 

WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 - The Selective Service has been updating its contingency plans for a
draft of doctors, nurses and other health care workers in case of a national emergency
that overwhelms the military's medical corps. 

In a confidential report this summer, a contractor hired by the agency described how such
a draft might work, how to secure compliance and how to mold public opinion and
communicate with health care professionals, whose lives could be disrupted.

On the one hand, the report said, the Selective Service System should establish contacts
in advance with medical societies, hospitals, schools of medicine and nursing, managed
care organizations, rural health care providers and the editors of medical journals and
trade publications.

On the other hand, it said, such contacts must be limited, low key and discreet because
"overtures from Selective Service to the medical community will be seen as precursors to
a draft," and that could alarm the public.

In this election year, the report said, "very few ideas or activities are viewed without
some degree of cynicism." 

President Bush has flatly declared that there will be no draft, but Senator John Kerry
has suggested that this is a possibility if Mr. Bush is re-elected.

Richard S. Flahavan, a spokesman for the Selective Service System, said Monday: "We have
been routinely updating the entire plan for a health care draft. The plan is on the shelf
and will remain there unless Congress and the president decide that it's needed and
direct us to carry it out." 

The Selective Service does not decide whether a draft will occur. It would carry out the
mechanics only if the president and Congress authorized a draft.

The chief Pentagon spokesman, Lawrence T. Di Rita, said Monday: "It is the policy of this
administration to oppose a military draft for any purpose whatsoever. A return to the
draft is unthinkable. There will be no draft."

Mr. Di Rita said the armed forces could offer bonus pay and other incentives to attract
and retain medical specialists.

In 1987, Congress enacted a law requiring the Selective Service to develop a plan for
"registration and classification" of health care professionals essential to the armed
forces. 

Under the plan, Mr. Flahavan said, about 3.4 million male and female health care workers
ages 18 to 44 would be expected to register with the Selective Service. From this pool,
he said, the agency could select tens of thousands of health care professionals
practicing in 62 health care specialties.

"The Selective Service System plans on delivering about 36,000 health care specialists to
the Defense Department if and when a special skills draft were activated," Mr. Flahavan
said. 

The contractor hired by Selective Service, Widmeyer Communications, said that local
government operations would be affected by a call-up of emergency medical technicians, so
it advised the Selective Service to contact groups like the United States Conference of
Mayors and the National Association of Counties.

Doctors and nurses would be eligible for deferments if they could show that they were
providing essential health care services to civilians in their communities.

But the contractor said: "There is no getting around the fact that a medical draft would
disrupt lives. Many familial, business and community responsibilities will be impacted."

Moreover, Widmeyer said, "if medical professionals are singled out and other
professionals are not called, many will find the process unfair," and health care workers
will ask, "Why us?"

In a recent article in The Wisconsin Medical Journal, published by the state medical
society, Col. Roger A. Lalich, a senior physician in the Army National Guard, said: "It
appears that a general draft is not likely to occur. A physician draft is the most likely
conscription into the military in the near future."

Since 2003, the Selective Service has said it is shifting its preparations for a draft in
a national crisis toward narrow sectors of specialists, including medical personnel.

Colonel Lalich, citing Selective Service memorandums on the subject, said the Defense
Department had indicated that "a conventional draft of untrained manpower is not
necessary for the war on terrorism." But, he said, "the Department of Defense has stated
that what most likely will be needed is a 'special skills draft,' " including care
workers in particular. 

That view was echoed in a newsletter circulated recently by the Selective Service System,
which said the all-volunteer force had "critical shortages of individuals with special
skills'' that might be needed in a crisis.

The Selective Service and Widmeyer held focus groups this summer to sample public opinion
toward registration and a possible draft including medical personnel. People from a
variety of professions, including doctors and nurses, were questioned.

The report summarized the findings this way:

"There was substantial resistance to the notion of a call-up of civilian professionals
that would send draftees to foreign soil."

A draft of civilian professionals was seen as unworkable because "training would be
inadequate to transform groups of people who had never worked together into cohesive
units."

People are apprehensive about the length of service that might be required. The
"occupation of Iraq has proved more costly, in terms of dollars and lives, than most
Americans expected." Members of the National Guard are "serving tours of duty far longer
than many ever anticipated."

People believe the government has the ability to "find whomever it needs" in a crisis, by
using a "master database" if necessary.

President Bush and Mr. Kerry have said they oppose a draft. "Forget all this talk about a
draft," Mr. Bush said at the second presidential debate, on Oct. 8 in St. Louis. "We're
not going to have a draft so long as I'm the president."

But Mr. Kerry said, "You've got a backdoor draft right now" because "our military is
overextended" as a result of policies adopted by Mr. Bush.

Bryan G. Whitman, a spokesman for the Defense Department, said: "The all-volunteer force
has been working very well for 30 years. There is absolutely no reason to go back to a
draft."



=====
Cyrus Shahpar & Brian Potts 
Managing Editors, CAL/AAEM News Service 
UC-Irvine



		
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