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Below is message from ASA President Alex Hannenberg regarding the proposed current Senate Health Care Reform Bill. I didn't see anyone else post it, so I thought I would to see if anyone here has some thoughts regarding this issue.
"Dear Colleagues:
ASA continues its proactive involvement in the current health reform debate. We remain committed to supporting legislation that expands access to health insurance coverage for all Americans while ensuring that anesthesiology remains a strong and vital physician specialty.
To that end, we have recently communicated our views to the U.S. Senate leadership about legislation currently under consideration. We believe that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, H.R. 3590, the Senates version of health reform legislation, contains a number of meaningful health insurance market reforms that represent an important step forward in expanding insurance coverage. Like H.R. 3962, passed by the House of Representatives several weeks ago, this bill contains a public health plan with voluntary participation and negotiated fees. Regrettably, however, the bill includes other provisions that pose a grave threat to our specialty. Accordingly, ASA must oppose the legislation as currently written.
On Nov. 4, ASA joined a coalition of surgical societies to communicate our concerns with proposals under consideration. At that time, a formal bill had not yet been introduced. In the letter, we and the surgical community outlined a number of concerns that we sought to have addressed. The letter can be found on the ASA website.
The Senate leadership has backed away from provisions penalizing physicians deemed high resource utilizers. However, the Senate did not address our other serious concerns, and most of the flawed provisions remain in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act as introduced in the Senate, as H.R. 3590.
Consequently, just yesterday the surgical community, joined by ASA, sent a second letter to the U.S. Senate leadership restating its concerns and expressing its opposition to the bill as currently written.
The specific concerns outlined by the coalition include:
Establishment and proposed implementation of an Independent Medicare Advisory Board empowered to make across-the-board cuts to physician payments
Mandatory participation in a seriously flawed Physician Quality Reporting Initiative (PQRI) program with payment penalties for non-participation
Reductions in payments to anesthesiologists and other physicians to fund bonus payments to primary care physicians and rural general surgeons
Creation of a budget-neutral value-based payment modifier which CMS does not have the capability to implement and places the provision on an unrealistic and unachievable timeline
Requirement that physicians pay an application fee to cover a background check for participation in Medicare, despite already being obligated to meet considerable requirements of training, licensure, and board certification
The so-called non-discrimination in health care provision that would create patient confusion over greatly differing levels of education, skills and training among health care professionals while inappropriately interjecting civil rights concepts into state scope of practice laws
The absence of a permanent fix to Medicares broken physician payment system and any meaningful proven medical liability reforms
At this time, ASA continues to look for opportunities to modify the bill as the Senate moves forward with the amendment process. In addition, we will continue working to ensure that any new health insurance options not be based on Medicare rates but instead allow for fair negotiated payment levels, and have the fewest possible government interventions.
Weeks of work lie ahead before the Senate bill reaches its final form. ASA will continue working with key Senators to address our concerns with the legislation. Please stay informed about latest developments by checking the ASA website, joining the ASA Grassroots Network, and following us on Facebook and Twitter. We need your help as the legislative process moves forward.
I ask that you reach out to your Senators to voice your concerns about H.R. 3590. Please use the ASA CapWiz Action Center to email your Senators.
Please feel free to contact staff in the ASA Washington office if you have questions. Also, you may use the following links for additional information:
ASA CapWiz Action Center
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Bill language
CBO analysis
ASA/Surgical Coalition letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Dec. 1)
ASA/Surgical Coalition letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Nov. 4)"
"Dear Colleagues:
ASA continues its proactive involvement in the current health reform debate. We remain committed to supporting legislation that expands access to health insurance coverage for all Americans while ensuring that anesthesiology remains a strong and vital physician specialty.
To that end, we have recently communicated our views to the U.S. Senate leadership about legislation currently under consideration. We believe that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, H.R. 3590, the Senates version of health reform legislation, contains a number of meaningful health insurance market reforms that represent an important step forward in expanding insurance coverage. Like H.R. 3962, passed by the House of Representatives several weeks ago, this bill contains a public health plan with voluntary participation and negotiated fees. Regrettably, however, the bill includes other provisions that pose a grave threat to our specialty. Accordingly, ASA must oppose the legislation as currently written.
On Nov. 4, ASA joined a coalition of surgical societies to communicate our concerns with proposals under consideration. At that time, a formal bill had not yet been introduced. In the letter, we and the surgical community outlined a number of concerns that we sought to have addressed. The letter can be found on the ASA website.
The Senate leadership has backed away from provisions penalizing physicians deemed high resource utilizers. However, the Senate did not address our other serious concerns, and most of the flawed provisions remain in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act as introduced in the Senate, as H.R. 3590.
Consequently, just yesterday the surgical community, joined by ASA, sent a second letter to the U.S. Senate leadership restating its concerns and expressing its opposition to the bill as currently written.
The specific concerns outlined by the coalition include:
Establishment and proposed implementation of an Independent Medicare Advisory Board empowered to make across-the-board cuts to physician payments
Mandatory participation in a seriously flawed Physician Quality Reporting Initiative (PQRI) program with payment penalties for non-participation
Reductions in payments to anesthesiologists and other physicians to fund bonus payments to primary care physicians and rural general surgeons
Creation of a budget-neutral value-based payment modifier which CMS does not have the capability to implement and places the provision on an unrealistic and unachievable timeline
Requirement that physicians pay an application fee to cover a background check for participation in Medicare, despite already being obligated to meet considerable requirements of training, licensure, and board certification
The so-called non-discrimination in health care provision that would create patient confusion over greatly differing levels of education, skills and training among health care professionals while inappropriately interjecting civil rights concepts into state scope of practice laws
The absence of a permanent fix to Medicares broken physician payment system and any meaningful proven medical liability reforms
At this time, ASA continues to look for opportunities to modify the bill as the Senate moves forward with the amendment process. In addition, we will continue working to ensure that any new health insurance options not be based on Medicare rates but instead allow for fair negotiated payment levels, and have the fewest possible government interventions.
Weeks of work lie ahead before the Senate bill reaches its final form. ASA will continue working with key Senators to address our concerns with the legislation. Please stay informed about latest developments by checking the ASA website, joining the ASA Grassroots Network, and following us on Facebook and Twitter. We need your help as the legislative process moves forward.
I ask that you reach out to your Senators to voice your concerns about H.R. 3590. Please use the ASA CapWiz Action Center to email your Senators.
Please feel free to contact staff in the ASA Washington office if you have questions. Also, you may use the following links for additional information:
ASA CapWiz Action Center
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Bill language
CBO analysis
ASA/Surgical Coalition letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Dec. 1)
ASA/Surgical Coalition letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Nov. 4)"