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Last Updated: Oct 11, 2012 - 10:22:56 PM
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ACP urges Congress to vote 'yes' on comprehensive health reform legislation

Mar 18, 2010 - 4:00:00 AM
As has been the case throughout the long debate on health reform, ACP's support for the final votes to allow reform to become law is based on policy, not politics. We didn't determine the process chosen by the majority party to move the legislation to a final vote, nor the actions of the minority party in trying to stop it from becoming law, continued Dr. Stubbs. Like most Americans, we would have preferred that health care reform be done on a bipartisan basis with broad support, but the political environment regrettably has not allowed this to happen. Our support for getting the legislation over the finish line is based solely on how consistent it is with key ACP policies, not on the process or the politics involved.

 
[RxPG] Washington, March 18, 2010 - The American College of Physicians, representing 129,000 internal medicine physician and medical student members, said today that Congress should cast the final votes needed to get comprehensive health care reform enacted into law. Without reform, ACP said, tens of millions of Americans stand to lose access to affordable health care and out-of-control spending will trigger an unprecedented fiscal and budgetary crisis.

ACP said that H.R. 3590, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which will serve as the basis for a final bill, has essential policies to expand coverage to almost all legal U.S. residents, increase funding for programs to train more primary care physicians, increase Medicare payments for office and other outpatient visits by general internists and other primary care physicians, and accelerate pilot-testing of innovative payment and delivery system reforms to improve outcomes and reduce unnecessary cost. A related corrections bill will increase the subsidies to help people buy coverage, provide equitable funding to all states to offset most of the cost of expanding Medicaid to the poor- and near-poor, and increase Medicaid payments for evaluation and management services by primary care physicians, among other changes supported by ACP.

The Senate bill, with the improvements to be voted on by Congress, will advance long-standing ACP policies to provide all Americans with access to affordable health insurance coverage, said ACP President Joseph W. Stubbs, MD, FACP. It fills gaps in our current system by providing families and small businesses with competitive and portable private sector options to buy affordable coverage, providing subsidies when they need help, and ending egregious insurance company practices that deny patients with pre-existing conditions access to affordable coverage. ACP has long advocated for such reforms, and we are pleased that they will be in the final bill.

Dr. Stubbs noted that the bill also includes some important first steps to begin to reverse a catastrophic shortage of primary care physicians, but that it falls short in this and other important respects.

He added, We will continue to urge Congress to make improvements through subsequent legislation to ensure that all primary care physicians can qualify for Medicare payment bonuses, some of whom may be excluded under the current language [in the Senate bill]. Dr. Stubbs noted, Medicare and Medicaid payments need to be permanently increased to ensure access, not just to primary care but for other services provided by internists. Congress must also permanently end the cycle of Medicare physician payment (SGR) cuts.

ACP also believes that Congress should have the final say, by a simple majority vote, on accepting or rejecting cost-cutting recommendations from an unelected Medicare payment advisory board to be created by the legislation.

Is the current legislation perfect? Does it meet all of ACP's objectives? Of course not, said Dr. Stubbs. But it will expand coverage, improve reimbursement for primary care, help train more general internists and other primary care physicians, and begin to institute other essential reforms to make health care more accessible and affordable for many millions of people. It deserves a 'yes' vote on that basis. But even after it becomes law, the work of improving our health care system will continue.

As has been the case throughout the long debate on health reform, ACP's support for the final votes to allow reform to become law is based on policy, not politics. We didn't determine the process chosen by the majority party to move the legislation to a final vote, nor the actions of the minority party in trying to stop it from becoming law, continued Dr. Stubbs. Like most Americans, we would have preferred that health care reform be done on a bipartisan basis with broad support, but the political environment regrettably has not allowed this to happen. Our support for getting the legislation over the finish line is based solely on how consistent it is with key ACP policies, not on the process or the politics involved.

Finally, Dr. Stubbs pointed out the consequences if the current legislation fails:




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