This week, the House passed legislation to permanently reform the way Medicare pays physicians.H.R.3961, the Medicare Physician Payment Reform Act of 2009 will repeal a 21 percent fee reduction scheduled for January 2010 and replace it with a stable system that ends the cycle of threats of ever-larger fee cuts followed by short-term patches. Permanent reform of physician payments in Medicare will guarantee that Medicare beneficiaries continue to enjoy the excellent access to care that they do today. It will also follow the President’s lead by ending a budget gimmick that artificially reduces the deficit by assuming physician payments will be cut by 40 percent over the next several years even though Congress has consistently intervened to prevent those cuts from occurring.
By fixing this system in a responsible way, we are ensuring that our seniors have reliable access to their doctors and the primary care they need. This bill tackles seniors’ main concern – preventing pay cuts that could encourage doctors to stop seeing Medicare patients. It builds on the historic health insurance reform bill the House passed earlier this month, which will lower premiums, extend the solvency of Medicare by five years, improve preventive and primary care for seniors, and close the “donut hole” gap in prescription drug coverage.
H.R. 3961 is supported by a wide range of organizations representing patients, doctors and other providers, including the American Medical Association, AARP, the Military Officers Association of America, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the American College of Physicians, the American College of Surgeons, the Center for Medicare Advocacy, the Medicare Rights Center, and the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare.
Permanent physician payment reform:
- Preserves seniors’ access to their doctors with a guaranteed update in 2010 by replacing the pending 21 percent fee cut with an update for 2010 based on the Medicare economic index while a new payment system is being put in place.
- Keeps doctors’ pay steady through fairer growth targets, which are achieved by wiping away accumulated deficits from current spending targets to provide for a fresh start, but still holds physicians accountable for spending growth. Excludes items not paid under the Medicare physician fee schedule such as chemotherapy drugs and laboratory services from revised growth targets.
- Promotes primary care that can keep you healthier longer by providing an extra growth allowance for primary care services to promote access to primary care practitioners in Medicare and throughout the health care system.
- Encourages integrated care so your doctors communicate on your care through Accountable Care Organizations, which incentivize physicians to take responsibility for improving quality and reducing costs. Accountable Care Organizations may “opt out” of the national spending targets and establish their own organization-specific targets.
2 comments:
The Medicare Physician Payment Reform Act of 2009 is a righteous remedy for prior Congressional foolishness, but let's not forget what your motivation was for passing this legislation: a bribe to the AMA for endorsing your terrible Health Care Bill.
Why do physicians deserve a raise if every other profession goes through layoffs and pay cuts? Only in the physician profession, the person graduating from the bottom of the class is assured of a STABLE income of 200K+ per year. The physician shortage is going to get worse as we add 46M uninsured into univeral health coverage.
The key to reducing medical costs is encouraging competition by increasing the number of doctors. There is a shortage of medical colleges but this is solvable using foreign medical schools. We still cannot increase the physican supply since the number of first year residencies (required for CA licensure) has been limited to 22,000 per year for a very very long time. This number should be close to 50,000. Allow first year residency to be completed overseas in the same approved foreign medical school teaching hospital. This will motivate OUR CITIZENS to study in medical colleges overseas and qualify as physicians. There is no need to cede these high paying jobs to FOREIGN citizens. This solution requires NO FINANCIAL OUTLAYS. Such US citizen foreign medical graduates will be taking up the same USMLE examinationssteps 1 to 3, just like US medical graduates.
To summarize, in the short term, recognize foreign residencies for the FIRST YEAR alone. For the long term, increase medical colleges and residencies in the US. Unfortunately, the state medical boards that approve residency programs are dominated by doctors (8 out of 12 in CA)! This is how the physicians maintain their monopoly. Withhold funds from the health care reform package to states that do not raise the number of residency positions.
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