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15071


Date: February 12, 2025 at 16:20:53
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: would you like nearly unlimited medical care for $54 a month?

URL: https://prospect.org/health/2025-02-12-aging-members-congress-office-of-the-attending-physician/


tough shit, I guess.

Aging Members of Congress Refuse to Disclose Details of Their Top Secret
Hospital

"The Office of the Attending Physician gives politicians nearly unlimited
medical care for about $54 a month.

BY DANIEL BOGUSLAW FEBRUARY 12, 2025

👆Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) receives a COVID-19 vaccine
from Dr. Brian Monahan, attending physician to Congress, in her office in
Washington, December 18, 2020.

After a presidential election that saw an 82-year-old commander in chief
unable to complete sentences in a debate or instill confidence in the public that
he could carry out his duties, elected leaders in Congress are faring no better.

In the past two months alone, 82-year-old Rep. Kay Granger (R-TX) was
discovered to be living in an assisted-living facility with a dementia ward in her
final months in office; 74-year-old Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) won a high-
profile leadership position on the House Oversight Committee after revealing
he is battling highly terminal esophageal cancer; 82-year-old Sen. Mitch
McConnell (R-KY) fell twice on Capitol Hill just months after blacking out during
a press conference; 84-year-old former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) fell and
broke her hip in Luxembourg; and 76-year-old Rep. John Larson (D-CT)
appeared to suffer a stroke on the House floor. (Larson’s staff has said it was a
bad reaction to a new medication.)

What has eluded attention is the highly secretive hospital, housed on Capitol
Hill and funded by taxpayers, that provides both emergency and primary care
to an aging political class, which some have come to describe as a
gerontocracy. It also runs classified programs known only to some members of
Congress.

More from Daniel Boguslaw


In 2023, Congress designated $4.2 million to the Office of the Attending
Physician (OAP), a Navy-staffed hospital with multiple branches spread across
Capitol Hill. The current attending physician, Dr. Brian Monahan, who serves as
a rear admiral in the Navy, oversees a staff of dozens of Navy doctors, nurses,
and technicians whose primary responsibility is providing care to members of
Congress and the Supreme Court.

And while the office has long justified its existence by providing emergency
care for an increasingly brittle class of politicians, it also quietly serves as a dirt-
cheap clinic for elected officials, some of whom have voted to slash Medicare
and Medicaid and abolish the Affordable Care Act, potentially taking coverage
away from tens of millions of Americans.

Meanwhile, the OAP is more responsive than any treatment available to normal
people. When McConnell fell recently, he emerged within hours in a wheelchair.
It’s unknown precisely whether it came from the Office of the Attending
Physician, but it’s a safe bet, because it takes the average Medicare patient a
face-to-face examination and a written prescription from the provider, plus a
Medicare Part B application from your local Social Security office, access to an
approved durable medical equipment supply store, in some cases a home
evaluation, and a co-pay of 20 percent of the cost to secure such equipment.

McConnell’s office did not respond to a request for comment about whether he
pays into the OAP program, or whether his wheelchair came from the OAP.

According to a Congressional Research Service report from last year, it costs a
member of Congress just $650 a year for nearly unlimited medical care. That
includes not only access to on-site X-rays, lab work, and physical therapy, but
also free referrals to Washington-area military hospitals, which provide the best
care in the country free to members, also on the taxpayer’s dime.

This subsidized concierge service is separate from a congressperson’s
insurance coverage. But at $54 a month for top-class care with no other co-
pays or deductibles, it’s a pretty good deal for the men and women who dictate
what kind of options the rest of us have.

In an attempt to understand more details about the functioning of the OAP, the
Prospect requested comment from every member of the House Committee on
Administration, which oversees the program.

Every committee member—Republican Reps. Bryan Steil (R-WI), Barry
Loudermilk (R-GA), Morgan Griffith (R-VA), Dr. Greg Murphy (R-NC), Stephanie
Bice (R-OK), Mike Carey (R-OH), Laurel Lee (R-FL), and Mary Miller (R-IL), and
Democratic Reps. Joe Morelle (D-NY), Terri Sewell (D-AL), Norma Torres (D-
CA), and Julie Johnson (D-TX)—did not respond to a request for comment on
the full list of members who paid for OAP services, and the 2024 and 2025
cost of those services.

Perhaps part of the committee’s hesitation is due to the fact that over the past
ten years, local Washington pharmacists have said they fill prescriptions for
things like Alzheimer’s drugs written by staff in the Office of the Attending
Physician. In addition, three current and former Hill staffers confirmed to the
Prospect that there are multiple sitting members struggling with symptoms of
dementia and taking medication to combat its effects.

ASIDE FROM THE OFFICE OF THE ATTENDING PHYSICIAN, members of
Congress have access to Obamacare health plans. In 2017, Jeffrey Frank
detailed the multi-decade fight that led to Congress losing access to the cushy
Federal Employee Health Benefits Program (FEHBP), a similar but better health
care marketplace that Obamacare was based on. Despite a Democratic-led
push to extend the federal marketplace to all citizens in the 1990s, the silver-
tongued whisperings of Newt Gingrich and industry lobbyists convinced
President Clinton to abandon his health care reform efforts. After the midterm
wash in 1994, Gingrich and the GOP managed to deprive tens of millions of
Americans of health care for another decade-plus.

As Frank writes, after the passage of the Affordable Care Act, “the comfortable
choices that were available for more than fifty years were suddenly transferred
to the slightly murky passageways of Obamacare. And it follows that, if the
Affordable Care Act is repealed, members of Congress would be able to return
to the federal plan that they, like millions of federal employees, were so fond of.
Twenty million other Americans won’t.”


Whispers that the GOP’s war on Obamacare is secretly being motivated by
their desire to return to the FEHBP lose some of their strength when one
considers the fact that for much less per month than the average cellphone bill,
they can receive free health care from the best doctors in the world.

As ABC reported in 2009:

Rep. Steve Kagen of Wisconsin—one of 15 medical doctors in Congress—is the
only member of either the House or Senate who has no health insurance
coverage. Kagen, a Democrat and advocate for health care reform, said he
turned down the plan he was offered through the Federal Employee Health
Benefits Program.

“I said, ‘I’ll tell you what. I respectfully decline. Until you can make the same
offer to everyone that I have the honor of representing, I just don’t think it’s fair,’”
Kagen said he told the congressional staffer who reviewed the plan with him in
2006.

But while Kagen has touted in campaign advertisements and news interviews
that he has no health insurance coverage, he has openly admitted he used OAP
services. In January, for example, he paid more than $4,000 out of pocket for
outpatient arthroscopic knee surgery. After the procedure, he said, he used the
attending physician’s office and staff to assist him with physical therapy.

Those who have worked at the OAP, however, said the services are far more
advanced than what is available at most companies. One former staff member,
who asked not to be named, described the OAP as “the best health care on the
planet.”

As Elon Musk gears up to make good on the long-held Republican promise of
wresting not only Obamacare, but also Medicare and Medicaid, from millions,
he should also pay attention to the OAP, and consider giving members of
Congress a taste of their own medicine."


Responses:
[15083] [15088]


15083


Date: February 20, 2025 at 20:08:30
From: The Hierophant, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: would you like nearly unlimited medical care for $54 a month?


with the repubs in control, I sincerely doubt musty musky
will even be looking at this benefit, totally leaving it
intact.


Responses:
[15088]


15088


Date: March 01, 2025 at 09:56:05
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: good


if you and I don't qualify, neither should Nancy.


Responses:
None


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