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DJP Update May 13, 2010 Cari and Rob Show today Noon Central and more on “Doc fix” and health system reform & CBO; PIAA etc.

DJP Update May 13, 2010 Cari and Rob Show today Noon Central and more on “Doc fix” and health system reform & CBO; PIAA etc.

In Chicago at the Physician Insurers Association of America (PIAA) meeting. Leadership Camp was yesterday and Annual Meeting today through Saturday. Looking forward to talk by the talented Dr. Mark B. Constantian, MD, FACS this morning. His topic is “Reading Between the Lines of Healthcare Reform.” You will recall him from a previous DJP Update. Many other fine talks scheduled.

If time permits, listen in to my interview on the Cari And Rob Show today. See Internet link and time below in tweet. They may have Podcast posted there later.

http://www.cariandrob.info/about-the-show

Next week, I will attend the Annual Congress of The National Patient Safety Foundation in Orlando.

Off to the meeting now!

Wait, one more thing: CBO revises estimate on cost of new health legislation. More expensive! No kidding. You haven’t seen anything yet. Now over a trillion.

http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=88D32603-18FE-70B2-A87C810C44C84BDC

CBO Letter: http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/114xx/doc11490/LewisLtr_HR3590.pdf

Some recent tweets from DJPNEWS at: www.Twitter.com/DJPNEWS

——–

I will be on @CariAndRob Show Thur May13 11:00 am MDT (12CDT) live on Internet at: http://tinyurl.com/359qrtd topic#hcr & #DocFix

about 8 hours ago via web

Gov pushes for draconian price-fixing docs=loss of access; Need #liberty to balance-bill; listen DC!http://tinyurl.com/32pckf3 #hcr

about 24 hours ago via web

#GraceMarieTurner Op-Ed #IBD more disaster in details new health law. #hcr http://tinyurl.com/262pkeb

9:27 AM May 11th via Echofon

RT @WSJopinion Epstein: ObamaCare’s Phony Medicaid ‘Deal’: ..new health law unconstitutionally coerces the states.http://on.wsj.com/cWodBB

11:12 AM May 10th via Echofon

Liberty = sacrifice and courage as documented in the excellent HBO series “The Pacific”. Freedom is not free. Thanks USA military!

11:55 PM May 9th via Echofon

One can’t continue deliver service for pay less than cost RT @texmed Medicare Meltdown: What Mass. Physicians Are Saying http://goo.gl/ZRrz

5:26 PM May 7th via Echofon

Hmm.. RT @galeninstitute #ObamaCare..supposed..expand#healthcare.Instead, companies..forced to cut it -http://bit.ly/a5zCjv #tcot #hcr #hc

2:04 PM May 7th via Echofon

Attack saying “AMA wants to muzzle your doctor”; but AMA never muzzled me re my criticism nor did they try. http://tinyurl.com/29yo5hm

11:05 PM May 6th via web

New health system law #hcr: “Ugly future”? see “According to Plan” #IBD http://tinyurl.com/2wy7uog

10:47 PM May 6th via web

——-

Stay well.

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates. Twitter is free and takes minutes to join. Put email in and pick password. Great source of breaking news and you don’t flood your email with it. You can get free app for BlackBerry or IPhone etc and you check on tweets when you want.

Here is a sample recent tweet from DJPNEWS:

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2241 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
To join the list, send me an email stating “Join DJP Update” To get off the list, state “Remove DJP Update”. Best to put in Subject line so I can do immediately.

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DJP Update 4-29-2010 Some tweets covering size of new healthcare law & a tip on how to transfer data BlackBerry to Mac; & Jazz Fest! And vote Saturday! Met a Pulitzer winner!

DJP Update 4-29-2010 Some tweets covering size of new healthcare law & a tip on how to transfer data BlackBerry to Mac; & Jazz Fest! And vote Saturday! Met a Pulitzer winner!

If you take the Senate bill, amendments, reconciliation etc and put it all together you end up with 2,828 pages and 396,848 words for Public Laws 111-148 & 111-152. Of course, there will be regulations written for much of the bill and this will be gigantic! I predict it will be greater in length than tax code and subject to more litigation. Meanwhile, millions remain uninsured even if this bill is enacted as written. Costs will not go down and payments for doctors will be mandated lower as time goes on. Gravity exists.

Finally found a program that allowed me to get my notes from my Palm that were now in my old BlackBerry transferred to my Mac! I had two programs that promised to do that but they never worked for Memos and notes in the Palm and BlackBerry. Some but NOT ALL would be transferred and those that got transferred would be DUPLICATED! So frustrating. Finally, the new PocketMac 5.0 works to transfer all of the memos and notes. It even allows the transfer for the memos to go to Entourage and than is what I did so as not to mess up my “NOTES” in Mac MAIL program in event a glitch. Transferred them all! I had over a 1000 notes that ended up being doubled by old program. I wanted those notes because all of my notes that I wrote over the years for my book, “On Leadership…” were in those notes. Some were not used and are available for next book as long as I didn’t lose them in old PDAs.

Now notes safe and backed up on external drives. Progress!

Info on PocketMac is at: http://www.pocketmac.net/

Plea: If you live in Jefferson Parish, be sure to vote Saturday. See below. The coroner, Dr. Bob Treuting, is a med school classmate of mine from Tulane and he is doing a great job as coroner. But no money, no mission. This is not a new tax, just a continuation of the special 1-mill property tax that supplies over half of the coroner’s office budget. Read the article linked in the tweet.

Finally, I did an interview with Dr. Sheri Fink following Hurricane Katrina regarding disaster preparation and the importance of communication via gadgets, texting, etc. It turns out she read my book, “On Leadership…” and gave it a 5 star review at Amazon. Now the Pulitzer Prizes for 2010 have been announced and she won the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Journalism! My interview did not deal with the story that lead to her Pulitzer. She had the highest high-tech mini-recorders with her. More than one!

See details of her Katrina chronicle about doctors and a hospital http://www.pulitzer.org/citation/2010-Investigative-Reporting

And now the tweets! I hope you find them interesting. Never to old to learn from the young about poetry as you will note in one tweet. And watch out what you underline on KINDLE!

Tweets at: www.Twitter.com/DJPNEWS

• Wonder how large new #hcr laws P.L.111-148&111-152 with the amends? I took new law PDF>text>WORD=2828pg &396,848wd Wait for regs!12 minutes ago via web

Good news! PocketMac 5.0 for BlackBerry allowed me to transfer all memos (over 1000) from BB to Mac Leopard. Prev ver failed.about 3 hours ago via Echofon

A new NOLA mayor is proof that Hope Springs Eternal: May 3, 2010 Inauguration of New Orleans’ Mayor-elect Mitch Landrieuabout 6 hours ago via Echofon

Outstanding poem! RT @BillGates Possibly the most interesting GatesNotes post yet, but I may be slightly biased… http://bit.ly/bk69fXabout 7 hours ago via Echofon

@GalleyCat Invasion of privacy by Kindle with publishing of highlighting! Sent by @DJPNEWSabout 7 hours ago via Echofon in reply to GalleyCat

Actor #SteveMartin plays banjo today with “SteveMartin&TheSteepCanyonRangers” today at#NewOrleansJazzFest 3:55pm GentillyStageabout 7 hours ago via Echofon

More info about importance voting Sat to renew 1-mill property tax for Coroner’s Office Jefferson Parishhttp://tinyurl.com/26s8d3410:58 AM Apr 28th via web

Vote Sat, May 1 renew 1-mill prop tax, ½ coroner’s budget, so excellent JeffersonParish DrTreuting can investigate suspicious deaths etc10:53 AM Apr 28th via web

——-

Stay well.

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates. Twitter is free and takes minutes to join. Put email in and pick password. Great source of breaking news and you don’t flood your email with it. You can get free app for BlackBerry or IPhone etc and you check on tweets when you want.

Here is a sample recent tweet from DJPNEWS:

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update/

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2241 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
To join the list, send me an email stating “Join DJP Update” To get off the list, state “Remove DJP Update”. Best to put in Subject line so I can do immediately.

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DJP Update 4-21-2010 When current government schemes fail to control medical costs, blame it on the doctors! As predicted in previous DJP Updates.

DJP Update 4-21-2010 When current government schemes fail to control medical costs, blame it on the doctors! As predicted in previous DJP Updates.

Here is an editorial in the New York Times that is favorable to the Massachusetts plan but the editorial verifies that costs are not contained and gives a comparison to the latest scheme in Washington, DC. The editorial suggests price-fixing as a solution to escalating costs. Always the end result of government control of medicine. First the government interferes with the marketplace and then blames failure on the doctors. Here is a hint that folks in our government should consider.

Government can take all payments away from the doctors or the doctors can work for free and the system will still fail to contain costs! Gravity doesn’t cease to exist because it is ignored. Put the patient in control with the doctor as trusted advisor. Publish fees, allow health insurance purchases across state lines, write policies in plain English, encourage Health Savings Accounts, and more. (More aslo includes real tort reform!) That will work.

True competition is what made America great, not government micro-management. And stop using funny math and flawed statistics. I am tired of hearing that Cuba has better medical care than America. Not true! Stop quoting the flawed and rejected WHO statistics of a study that no longer is repeated. We are on a path of fiscal bankruptcy. One day the bills become due. Borrowing money and printing money is a temporary measure that leads to disaster.

Only folks using YOUR tax money would continue and enlarge a failed Medicaid system. Give those individuals on Medicaid vouchers to purchase insurance in the marketplace. Don’t give them the illusion of coverage.

Hello! What about “Pay for Performance” for legislators and folks in Congress. Every time they make a promise about transparency, fair play, saving money, etc. and they fail to meet the performance measure set by a panel of citizens who work for a living and pay taxes, their pay is cut. These citizens know what it means to meet payroll and pay rent and all the myriad of expenses that one must cover with the sale of a product and have some left over for new equipment and innovation. That would make them reasonable experts to sit on the panel. Use experienced folks. Those in Congress who miss a certain number of benchmarks will active mandatory resignation. Give a quiz on what is in a bill. If those in Congress do not get a passing grade, the vote doesn’t count. Think about it. In Medicine we test procedures and drugs before we use them on patients. We don’t experiment. That is what Congress is doing and that is why the public’s rating of Congress is dismal! Leadership has at its core: integrity. Never forget that.

One last point that I repeat over and over. When the doctors decide the government scheme doesn’t pay enough to meet expenses, the doctor will exit the plan or go into foreclosure. But the government will then mandate participation as a condition of maintaining one’s medical license. When that happens, we no longer will have Liberty!

Looks like some legislators already thought of this approach:

——-

[Senate bill 2170 and house bill 4452] would require physicians and all other health care providers to accept 110% of Medicare rates for health insurance for small businesses. For physicians, acceptance of set rates would be as a condition of licensure! Moreover, physicians would have to accept all such patients – and such rates – if they participate in any other plan offered by that insurer.

——-

Check out Massachusetts House Bill 4452 at: http://www.mass.gov/legis/bills/house/186/ht04pdf/ht04452.pdf

filed on 1-28-2010. Regardless of what happens now with this bill, it shows the thinking!

———-

Read the entire NYTimes article so you can form your own opinion as to what the NYTimes is advising. Then call your friends in Massachusetts and ask them what they think about the plan and if they are happy. Make a note and call them again in six months. Let’s gather information in the manner of Dr. John Snow whose work gave birth to Epidemiology.

By the way, I disagree with the first paragraph quoted below where it is stated that the “new national reform law includes many provisions designed, over time, to reduce costs, …”

No way!

Get involved in the American experience. Study candidates. Ask tough questions. But do your homework first so you can quickly identify misinformation being spun to you. Then go and vote! The genius of America is our freedom and the ability to peacefully throw out of office those who fail our trust.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/21/opinion/21wed1.html

EDITORIAL

Health Care Reform and Massachusetts

New York Times

Published: April 20, 2010

SOME EXCERPTS:

——-

It also needs to figure out how to rein in the escalating costs of medical care and health insurance. The new national reform law includes many provisions designed, over time, to reduce costs, but Massachusetts will have to move sooner.

——

State leaders have commissioned studies and held hearings to come up with more fundamental solutions. Legislative leaders seem determined to end within five years the prevailing fee-for-service system, in which doctors and hospitals are paid for the volume of care they provide whether or not it is high quality or needed.

One possible substitute might be a system in which groups of doctors and hospitals are paid a fixed sum to provide whatever care a patient needs over the course of a year. There are also proposals in the Legislature to let the government regulate provider payments as a temporary solution, and some experts think regulation may be the most effective way to tame costs in the long run.

Massachusetts’s experience offers some useful lessons for the national reform effort….

———-

Stay well.

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates. Twitter is free and takes minutes to join. Put email in and pick password. Great source of breaking news and you don’t flood your email with it. You can get free app for BlackBerry or IPhone etc and you check on tweets when you want.

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update/

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2240 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
To join the list, send me an email stating “Join DJP Update” To get off the list, state “Remove DJP Update”. Best to put in Subject line so I can do immediately.

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DJP Update 4-20-2010 Read & view original words of individual in context rather than talking heads’ summary

DJP Update 4-20-2010 Read & view original words of individual in context rather than talking heads’ summary

A quick update with a plea to go to original documents or video when evaluating someone.

Here is one example. Dr. Donald Berwick is President Obama’s nominee to head up CMS of HHS. That important agency has a lot to do with Medicare and Medicaid payments as you already know. Many of us know of Dr. Berwick’s pioneering work advocating quality. No doubt you will see lots of info pro and con about any nominee but you should use your own experience with the individual PLUS read and view original sources rather than accepting someone else’s conclusion. Here is a link to Dr. Berwick’s site at IHI: http://www.ihi.org/ihi and his Wikipedia bio is at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Berwick

Toward that end, here are some references for you to add to your research.

The first is an interview by the president of the American Health Lawyers Association with Dr. Berwick. He discusses, among other things, his view of NICE in the United Kingdom. You also will note the discussion of information technology (IT) and privacy at the link. I posted a link below to that interview on Twitter today.

“The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence in the UK, for example, is widely disparaged in the U.S., but it is completely unfairly disparaged. It’s a brilliant organization, precisely existing to look at all comparative information and understand what works and what doesn’t.”

———–

www.twitter.com/DJPNEWS

DJPNEWS

Prez AmerHealthLawyersAssn AHLA interview Nov2009 with #DonBerwickMD, CMS of HHS nominee/PrezObama http://tinyurl.com/y2l288l

———-

Also see his interviews in “Money-driven Machine” videos, “Opening Sequence” and “Intensive-Care 2” at:

http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_18969.cfm

———

CMS Website is: http://www.cms.gov/

One may agree or disagree with Dr. Berwick’s views and that is the American way, but reach your conclusion on the true facts and not some distortion.

With your knowledge and experience dealing with Medicaid and Medicare, you no doubt realize that whoever heads CMS has a herculean task. Not sure why anyone would want to tackle that bureaucracy. Good luck to Dr. Berwick in his adventure with CMS.

One last thing. Imagine if everyone on Medicaid got voucher for health insurance and had an array of private insurance they could buy across state lines PLUS privately contract with physicians without penalty. There could be a lot smaller CMS staff and doctors would stay in practice!

———-

Stay well,

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates. Twitter is free and takes minutes to join. Put email in and pick password. Great source of breaking news and you don’t flood your email with it. You can get free app for BlackBerry or IPhone etc and you check on tweets when you want.

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update/

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2240 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
To join the list, send me an email stating “Join DJP Update” To get off the list, state “Remove DJP Update”. Best to put in Subject line so I can do immediately.

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DJP Update 4-18-2010 A potpourri of recent DJPNEWS tweets & some special recommendations; LAGNIAPPE: must read quotes from 1949 book re government control of medicine

DJP Update 4-18-2010 A potpourri of recent DJPNEWS tweets & some special recommendations; LAGNIAPPE: must read quotes from 1949 book re government control of medicine

Be sure to go to the links and read these two articles “Why the Wild Bird Sings” and “I think, therefore I will not be gagged”; reflect on implication for listening and applying science! And of course, “Gotcha” and the “NHS” articles.

——-

http://twitter.com/djpNEWS

DJPNEWS

Study history & monitor current gov systems #hcr“NHS bars woman after she saw private doctor” #TheTimes http://tinyurl.com/y6e5jpp

3 minutes ago via web

Read! #TheTimes “I think, therefore I will not be gagged” author #SimonSingh freedom of speech advocate http://tinyurl.com/y2ymhwk

10 minutes ago via web

Pulitzer Prize-winning #KathleenTurner praises Sen @ScottBrownMA as “indep.” & a “good guy” FaceTheNation http://tinyurl.com/y5lq4x6

18 minutes ago via web

Senator @ScottBrownMA the equivalent of “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington”? Watch him on Meet the Press http://tinyurl.com/y83lpt8

20 minutes ago via web

Thanks! RT @B_Ivory #FF @DJPNEWS ..current news health reform & other update notif.. w/ the gov ..im ..reading his book “On Leadership”

about 13 hours ago via Echofon in reply to B_Ivory

Pearls for #musicians “Why the wild bird sings” #Times of London & lesson listening hidden meanings http://tinyurl.com/y5wro9t

about 17 hours ago via web

More on #hcr includes #NYT readers- Overhaul Law: Gotcha By Grace-Marie Turner of @galeninstitute http://tinyurl.com/y5l9wet

——-

LAGNIAPPE: Some quotes from 1949 book, “Compulsory Medical Care and The Welfare State” by Melchior Palyi mentioned in previous DJP Update. The book was a gift from Dr W. Juan Watkins.

The author makes the case for an objective analysis and the scientific approach when evaluating medical systems in different countries.

Chapter Eight: “The doctors are, of course, the key figures of governmentalized medicine.” …. “Even the cost of administration is dependent in part upon the degree of control over the profession. And what is more important than all cost problems–the welfare of the patient is in the doctor’s hands.”

“Governmentalized health services sooner or later run into the iron curtain of mountainous costs. the easiest way out is to curtail honoraria, denouncing the doctors as profiteers. That may or may not be true, but it is both popular and money saving.” …

“As to the young specialist in Britain, his chances are equally reduced unless he enjoys a bureaucratic existence and the political game. To start a new private practice is virtually out of the question. The same holds in many other compulsory systems. Wherever the doctor is being paid by the authorities and not by the patients, the outcome of compulsion is a set of fees that does not cover the investment in expensive instruments. This has the additional effect that could scarcely have been unintended: it forces the patient into governmentally controlled dispensaries which can afford the investment–at the taxpayer’s expense.”

Chapter Nine: Here is an excerpt from a conversation with a “distinguished member of the Netherlands’ ‘social’ bureaucracy”:

Question: “How much time can a practitioner devote to each of them?”

Answer: “We figure on an average of three minutes per consultation. What is wrong with that? An experienced physician does not need more time on the average.

Question: “That includes the time devoted to paper work such as fulling out forms for sending the patient to a specialist or to a hosptial, writing out prescription, etc.?”

Answer: “It does.”

Also in Chapter nine, in subsection entitled, “Doctors’ Surrender”

“The source of greatest weakness in the doctors’ position is the fact of their readiness to compromise. A minority of them actually advocates compulsion, and even the majority is willing to cooperate, if only on its own terms.”

… “Instead of taking the position of principle, they argue about technicalities and honoraria, ….

“They overlook two more things, as a rule. Once the principle of compulsion is accepted, the amount and terms are not being determined by the doctors or upon their advice. And even if the terms conform at the outset with the professional proposals, the schemes expand sooner or later far beyond the original intent.”

“In the recent case of Britain, one reason why the doctors’ resistance broke was the fact of defection in the medical ranks themselves. When it came to the showdown on the Bevan scheme, 35 per cent of the profession, including the tip leadership of the British Medical and Dental Associations, capitulated. (A chief executive of the latter has been promptly promoted to a high rank in the Ministry of Health.)”

The author ends that chapter with this comment:

“The moral of this story is that in the final analysis the doctors can blame themselves if they lose out–if their incomes are reduced at once by 25 per cent on the average, as under Bevan, and their professional standards lowered in an unmeasurable fashion–just as a nation can blame itself if it foregoes its liberties, be it by submitting to intimidation or by letting itself be bribed into ‘collaboration.'”

—–

DJP comment: The excerpts remind us that we must study history. And we must get the facts and use scientific analysis. You be the judge as to whether history is repeating itself.

——

Stay well,

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates. Twitter is free and takes minutes to join. Put email in and pick password. Great source of breaking news and you don’t flood your email with it. You can get free app for BlackBerry or IPhone etc and you check on tweets when you want.

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update/

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2240 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
To join the list, send me an email stating “Join DJP Update” To get off the list, state “Remove DJP Update”. Best to put in Subject line so I can do immediately.

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DJP Update 4-14-2010 Quick update via tweets; Surprises abound as people read the health bill!

DJP Update 4-14-2010 Quick update via tweets; Surprises abound as people read the health bill!

Here are the tweets I sent today. Check out the links.

http://twitter.com/djpNEWS

DJPNEWS

Haste = waste & mistakes #hcr “The Monster That Ate Congress” #Taranto #BestOfTheWeb #WSJ 4-13-2010 http://tinyurl.com/y2ebvd7

less than 5 seconds ago via web

DJPNEWS Congress gets surprise! #hcr Next time read bill before passing! Lose FEHBP? Costs up? You were warned! http://tinyurl.com/yyftyvy

about 3 hours ago via Echofon

DJPNEWS Homework! Do before passing laws! Via @CatoInstitute #hcrnow that the bill has passed? Check headlines http://bit.ly/bTKBgS

about 3 hours ago via Echofon

DJPNEWS Not good! RT @Senate_GOPs Health Law Bans New Doctor-Owned Hospitals, Blocks Expansion of Existing Ones http://bit.ly/d2sZZp

about 3 hours ago via Echofon

——

Stay well,

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates.

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update/

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2234 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
To join the list, send me an email stating “Join DJP Update” To get off the list, state “Remove DJP Update”. Best to put in Subject line so I can do immediately.

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DJP Update 4-12-2010 More on the price-fixing SGR cloture vote today; A comment on ethics; A comment on character; A GA state senator speaks out!

DJP Update 4-12-2010 More on the price-fixing SGR cloture vote today; A comment on ethics; A comment on character; A GA state senator speaks out!

ITEM ONE: A MESSAGE FROM AMA ABOUT SGR

From: hod.advocacy.update@enews.ama-assn.org

Subject: Senate Invokes Cloture on Temporary SGR Patch

April 12, 2010 5:13:42 PM CDT

This afternoon, the Senate invoked cloture on the motion to proceed to H.R. 4851 by a vote of 60-34, which extends a number of expiring programs, including a reprieve from the 21 percent Medicare physician payment cut that was originally scheduled to take effect on January 1. Other expiring programs addressed by the bill include extended unemployment insurance benefits and COBRA subsidies for the unemployed. As of press time, no bipartisan deal has been reached to facilitate quick passage of H.R. 4851. In the absence of such an agreement, under Senate procedure, a vote on final passage of the bill may not occur until the end of this week.

As you know, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) instructed its carriers to refrain from processing any claims for services provided on or after April 1 for 10 working days, to minimize administrative complications and other disruptions that would result from calculating payments that reflect a rate reduction that Congress is expected to overturn. That 10 day grace period expires on Wednesday, April 14. If Congress fails to pass H.R. 4851 or similar legislation by close of business on Wednesday, Medicare law will require carriers to begin processing claims for services provided in April with the 21 percent cut. That said, we still expect Congress to pass legislation that retroactively restores payments to levels in place prior to April 1.

————

DJP COMMENT: How long are physicians going to tolerate these abuses by Congress? How long will it take for AMA to realize that their “seat at the table” was a loser deal.

Here are my predictions. First, a repeat of what I have said before: one cannot let the other person in negotiations frame the debate! Currently the debate is framed that Congress has the right to set physicians’ fees. AMA gives us the impression that a “permanent fix” is a win and AMA defines permanent fix as a change from the SGR price-fixing formula to some other price-fixing formula! A Medical Economic Index formula is just one example of another losing proposition if it represents price-fixing and doctors cannot balance-bill. If doctors can’t privately contract without penalty, doctors lose!

With that background, it is my considered opinion that there will not be a “permanent fix” before November elections. The most doctors can expect is the delay in implementation of the cuts in payment of doctors’ fees. That is all doctors can expect as long as doctors continue to genuflect to the apparent power-wielders currently in Congress. What will happen if the leadership of AMA continues on the current path is continued servitude of doctors to Congress. Remember, only doctors can fix the aneurysms, transplant the hearts, and all of the wonders of modern science that skilled bright doctors learned after many, many years of training.

Doctors have the key to the current shackles. We just need the courage to say enough is enough. Stop playing games with our patients and our profession. And a message to AMA: Stop selling the good deal we all got with passage of this disaster bill. The latest letter from AMA says, “32 million uninsured American will gain access to health coverage”….”No lifetime caps…..” and on and on. Of course premiums will go up or the companies will go out of business. We need real competition, not central-planning.

But when does this expansion of coverage start. Today? No. Is it a plan for the majority like Congress? No, it is multiple schemes but it includes the failed Medicaid for millions. The payment is so low the patients have trouble finding doctors. But today for implementation of Medicaid expansion? No! Not until 2014! Wonder if all of these delayed dates have anything to do with elections?

One last comment: In the end, the government will not lower the cost of medical care with the present law. The next step will be to blame doctors. Then doctors will be told that they must comply or their medical license will be removed. Save some of these predictions as I don’t know if I have much more time to spend going to meetings and being told “we know better.”

——–

ITEM TWO: ETHICS

And if you are not depressed yet, read what might be in store for the future if government gets full control of Medicine. Read what these authors state. One co-author is Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, advisor to the President and brother of Rahm Emanuel, chief of staff in White House.

Read this Lancet article yourself to confirm I am not making this up or misquoting. And note the date of the article: 2009.

EXCERPTS:

Principles for allocation of scarce medical interventions

Govind Persad, Alan Wertheimer, Ezekiel J Emanuel

Allocation of very scarce medical interventions such as organs and vaccines is a persistent ethical challenge. We

evaluate eight simple allocation principles that can be classifi ed into four categories: treating people equally, favouring

the worst-off , maximising total benefits, and promoting and rewarding social usefulness. No single principle is

sufficient to incorporate all morally relevant considerations and therefore individual principles must be combined

into multiprinciple allocation systems. We evaluate three systems: the United Network for Organ Sharing points

systems, quality-adjusted life-years, and disability-adjusted life-years. We recommend an alternative system—the

complete lives system—which prioritises younger people who have not yet lived a complete life, and also incorporates

prognosis, save the most lives, lottery, and instrumental value principles.

Lancet 2009; 373: 423–31

Department of Bioethics,

The Clinical Center, National

Institutes of Health, Bethesda,

Maryland, USA (G Persad BS,

A Wertheimer PhD,

E J Emanuel MD)

Correspondence to:

Ezekiel J Emanuel,

Department of Bioethics,

The Clinical Center, National

Institutes of Health, Bethesda,

—————-

Second Excerpt:

Many thinkers have accepted complete lives as the appropriate focus of distributive justice: “individual human lives, rather than individual experiences, [are] the units over which any distributive principle should operate.”1,75,76 Although there are important differences between these thinkers, they share a core commitment to consider entire lives rather than events or episodes, which is also the defining feature of the complete lives system.

Consideration of the importance of complete lives also supports modifying the youngest-first principle by prioritising adolescents and young adults over infants (figure). Adolescents have received substantial education and parental care,

investments that will be wasted without a complete life. Infants, by contrast, have not yet received these investments. Similarly, adolescence brings with it a developed personality capable of forming and valuing long-term plans whose fulfi lment requires a complete life.77 As the legal philosopher Ronald Dworkin argues, “It is terrible when an infant dies, but worse, most people think, when a three-year-old child dies and worse still when an adolescent does”;78 this argument is supported by empirical surveys.41,79 Importantly, the prioritisation of adolescents and young adults considers the social and personal investment that people are morally entitled to have received at a particular age, rather than accepting the results of an unjust status quo. Consequently, poor adolescents should be treated the same as wealthy ones, even though they may have received less investment owing to social injustice.

———-

DJP Comment: If that doesn’t make you ill, then perhaps we have a vastly different view of medical ethics! If only this was a bad dream. But it is their recommendation and it portrays a sad time for infants! I think I remember the history of such schemes in countries that did treat people differently. Dangerous to allow those in power to determine what will be done with your life.

———

ITEM THREE: A Debate about the character of our country.

Read a debate at: http://incharacter.org/pro-con/president-obama-said-the-health-care-debate-was-about-the-character-of-our-country/

concerning the statement of President Obama that the health care debate was about the character of our country.

Read both the “Yes” and the “No” at the link above. I believe Heather R. Higgins nails the “No” extremely well. Heather R. Higgins is chairman of the board of the Independent Women’s Forum and vice chairman of the board of the Philanthropy Roundtable. Here is her view:

———

One of collectivism’s many false promises is that somehow it improves the character of a people. If this were true, Eastern Bloc countries would have been the most virtuous of all. The fact that this was manifestly not the case – indeed that the inverse seems to hold, at least when judging by metrics such as personal charity — should cause us pause. As we move to create a system wherein people think that “everyone can live at everyone else’s expense” (to quote Bastiat), we are likely to witness the erosion of the country’s character.

The recently-passed health care legislation is arguably the most significant example: not only will it fail to improve the national character (as proponents have promised), it in no way reflects our current character. If implemented this law will undermine that character as surely as it will the quality of our heath care.

There is a distinctive American national character, well described in the Pew global surveys. It emphasizes personal freedom, a willingness to tolerate large differences in personal wealth, a strong religious base, a larger number of voluntary associations, and certain key virtues: a high level of charitable contributions, a more intense work ethic than one finds in Europe, a higher level of patriotism, and a faith that views hard work and individual responsibility as key to success.

In contrast, the health bill is premised on the idea that people should expect to be taken care of. This law is more aligned with the sentiments of a European social democracy where hard work is devalued and income inequalities condemned. In the health bill, personal freedom and individual choice are replaced with bureaucratic dictates, one-size-fits-all parameters, and the removal of responsibility and consequence from individuals. Citizens are infantilized as wards of the state. But that’s only the beginning of the adverse consequence that this travesty will have on our national character.

Some damage has already been done. The process of the law’s passage was itself sordid and contrary to basic principles of integrity and good government. Not only was it replete with self-serving deals, it employed deliberately misleading accounting gimmicks to feign fiscal probity. Selfishly self-serving, immediate gains will be paid for by future taxpayers. In whose estimation, outside of thuggish dictators who also share the “by any means necessary” vice, is such corruption and short-sightedness admirable?

Proponents of the law sold it as virtue. Yet what virtue is there in being charitable with someone else’s money? The law further presumes that those who work in government are somehow more virtuous (and wiser) than the rest of us: that they are better positioned to make life and death decisions about care and to decide how much of our income we must allocate to insurance, regardless of our specific circumstance.

Yet in fact, human failings are just as inevitable and predictable, maybe more so, among those endowed with government’s power. Just in the last weeks we have learned of self-serving bureaucrats at the Veterans Administration, a political patronage system controlling access to Chicago’s schools, and that government workers have granted themselves significantly higher salaries than those holding comparable private sector jobs. Our founders wanted to keep government from becoming our master precisely because they understood power’s ability to corrupt.

Specific provisions of the law will clearly encourage vice: guaranteed issue, for example, is certain to induce many who otherwise would have responsibly bought insurance to abstain until care is needed. Yet most profoundly, the entire structure of government-run healthcare is designed to replace our current character — personal responsibility, obligation, gifts and gratitude — with rights, claims, and a sense of entitlement.

For any readers who assume, condescendingly, that conservatives who object to government run programs are selfish, penurious, harsh, and uncaring, let me assure them that conservative concerns rest on the recognition that, as history has consistently shown, they not only don’t work, they make things worse. Instead of realizing the utopian promises that are used to sell them, they eventually, invariably, create new, often more severe problems.

We don’t have to look to ex-Soviet states, South American dictators or to Europe’s soft, ambition-robbing socialism, to learn this lesson. You can look to our nation’s own founding, which was run as an early version of “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need.” Plymouth Colony’s experience is typically taught as an economic parable of the tragedy of the commons. Yet those economic effects were caused by the system’s devaluing of virtue. Remove both positive and negative consequences for actions, and you diminish human spirit and ambition. You rob individuals of the capacity and inclination to act charitably, as well as to strive for excellence. Plymouth was only saved when they returned to a character model that valued individual responsibility and voluntary personal, rather than mandatory collective, charity.

Today, Americans are the most charitable people in the world. Yet what will happen to this instinct as we replace gratitude for a gift with a mentality of entitlement, and the obligation of the citizen to take care of his neighbor with the expectation that government will protect all? We should expect people to curtail giving, and more to look for handouts. And as charity suffers, the government burden will grow.

The ethic of individual responsibility has made America exceptional. We don’t think that we are better than anyone else, but ever since our Declaration of Independence , we’ve understood that essential to maximizing each individuals potential is limiting government’s duties to securing our rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. And because we see rights as being eternal (not created by government), and a birthright of each person, we value the individual life–from the most premature baby to the most senior citizen–embracing the belief that if you wish to fight to preserve your precious and valuable life, that you have that inalienable right.

The health care legislation contemplates panels deciding for you whether you have sufficient quality of life, and collective arbitrary decisions on what “society” can “afford”. That moves us to the utilitarian European model, where the elderly are pressured not to take up hospital beds and, really, to not be selfish but go die faster. And that makes sense: if you think that the government, not the patient, decides who gets treated, then government also gets to determine who should die.

Ironically, collectivism erodes the social fabric precisely to the extent that it enables people to evade both responsibilities and consequences. That’s why ultimately, the great failing of this health care bill isn’t that it will fail to control cost, erode the quality of care, and result in rationing, but that it will destroy the virtues that make America exceptional.

—————–

One more reading assignment. Check out the statement today by Senator Preston W. Smith in the Georgia Senate. My son alerted me to this speech and I retweeted it.

http://twitter.com/djpNEWS

Powerful message RT @MagCapitol Sen. Smith’s speech to the Senate today. www.prestonsmith.org/default.asp?pt=newsdescr&RI=177

Here are a couple of EXCERPTS:

———

Address to the Georgia State Senate

Senator Preston W. Smith

April 12, 2010

Abraham Kuyper once said, ”When principles that run against your deepest convictions begin to win the day, then battle is your calling and peace has become sin. You must at the price of dearest peace lay you convictions bare before friend an enemy with all the fire of your faith.” Today I rise to speak during our debate about the process by which this bill and others come before our Senate body for consideration. As you may know, when I was elected in my late twenties, I was the youngest member of the State Senate then serving. Today, four terms later, I am still the youngest member of the Senate, although I am now equal to, or greater, in seniority to the majority of our members.

——-

Moreover during the debate on House Bill 307, the President Pro Tem argued that we should take from those who have two coats and give to those who have none. This is almost as pure a definition of wealth redistribution and socialism as you can possibly craft. And the fact that such a system is passed under threat of the government penalizing you with a worse result is also a central tenant of a socialistic system. If a person voluntarily surrenders his coat to someone less fortunate, that is an example of Christian charity. But, if they are forced to do so in some ‘Robin Hood’ scheme by the government, that is a nearly perfect example of socialism in action.

But it is really not about the issue. You can spin that anyway you want. Reasonable people can reasonably disagree about the best policy. I am a conservative. That means something to me. I believe in limited government with lower taxes, free enterprise, personal responsibility and a strong defense. I also believe that we have allowed ourselves to become far too dependent upon government to provide the needs of our society. I do not apologize for that belief.

Let me share one analogy with you. If you go out into the woods and build a fenced-in pen, you would never be able to get a deer, wild boar or any other wild animal to voluntarily enter that pen and cage himself. But there is a very simple way to accomplish the same goal. Place some food for the animal to eat. After a couple of weeks, continue place the food in the same place while you begin construction on the pen. On the last day, place the food in the same place and leave the gate open. The wild animal will voluntarily enter the pen to eat the food and you can close the gate. The same animal that would never have surrendered his freedom to enter a cage, will voluntarily do so once it has become dependent on your handout. We became great as a nation of free men who once placed a high value on our liberty. And the survival of our Republic depends upon the retention of those freedoms.

In feudal times, the surfs in medieval Europe only paid 1/3 of their income to the King and no textbook considers them free men. Yet today, many Americans pay more than 50% of their income to the governing authorities through combined federal, state and local taxes. When are we going to blow the whistle and say, “Enough!” The founders of our country would never have agreed to our enslavement to a government so big as to give you everything you want and so powerful as to take away everything you have. But, over time, like that wild and free animal, we have sacrificed our freedom at the alter of security. We have become so dependent upon the provision of Government to meet every need that we find ourselves in a cage having voluntarily surrendered our precious liberties for the solace of servitude.

————

Members of the Senate, hear me now. If this raw exercise of power can be used to crush me today, it will be used on you tomorrow. If your votes are controlled, why are you here? We have seen this type of leadership exercised just last year in the House of Representatives. We know where that leads. And, those that so easily forget the lessons of our history are certainly condemned to repeat them.

We have men and women fighting and dying around the world to preserve our freedoms. You give lip service to their heroism but you mock their sacrifice when you don’t even allow us to vote the conviction of our conscience freely. How has it possibly gotten to this point where people are so afraid of our so-called leaders that they will give up their vote and the voice of their constituents in order to maintain some position. Are you really controlled that easily? Some might say that your position of influence is important to represent your district, but how can that possibly be if the price of maintaining the position is giving up that voice of your constituents. (DJP emphasis added)

Is this really America? Can you really condemn the backroom arm twisting and deals cut in Washington DC when you do the same thing here? Last week, we heard that voting for this was one of the “tough votes.” That it took “courage” – that it was “leading” and “governing.” This was despite overwhelming evidence that Georgians don’t want us to raise taxes. That is precisely what President Obama was criticized for arguing to twist arms and get votes to pass a healthcare bill that the majority of Americans opposed. He said the time had come to govern, to lead, to make the tough choices – meaning to pass something that was against the will of the very constituents that elected them. That is precisely what happened here on Thursday night.

And, I will tell you something else. I firmly believe that when you attempt to improperly influence a legislator’s vote through promises of reward or threats of recrimination, I believe it is unethical, immoral and illegal. I have a constitutional right to vote for my constituents and I should never be subject to bullying, intimidation or harassment because anyone wants to force me to cast my vote in some other way. That constitutional right is not diminished or superseded by a caucus position on an issue. That is one of the rawest forms of political corruption. And it must stop if our government is going to regain and earn the trust of her citizens.

To my leaders, I say, “Is your title that valuable to you? That you would punish those who stand on principle even if you quietly agree with them?” When you lay down at night, do you revel in being a leader when that leadership means you crush your friends who have faithfully stood beside you just because they are convicted not to vote for a tax increase?

———-

You recruited me to be an independent voice and a man with a backbone of steel who would not cave in to pressure. I shared with you my conviction on the issue of raising taxes. Rather than respecting that, you sought to break my will with a procedural move and in doing so have forced me to choose my principle or my caucus. You are proud of my intellect when you agree with me but are quick to dismiss my conviction when I won’t yield to your will. Georgia’s citizens expect and deserve true leaders today. They deserve people of principle who will stand up and vote their conscience regardless of the consequences.

People still marvel at why no republicans seemed to stand up and call their leaders out in Washington when they had the majority. They all seemed to mindlessly walk in goose-step fashion regardless of the consequences. I have experienced the pressure of a patronage system and I know why. No one wants to be bought, traded, coerced, intimidated, or harassed into voting against their conscience. And the consequences are severe.

But if someone had stood up and voiced concern over their direction, Republicans probably would not be in the situation we find ourselves in Washington today. I did not want to lose my chairmanship of Judiciary. I believe I have worked hard and earned the respect of my colleagues on both sides of the isle in that role. But, I will never allow any assignment to become so valuable to me that I would violate my word, vote against the conviction of my conscience, or cease being an independent voice for my constituents.

———–

But, if you don’t respect the people of Northwest Georgia enough to let their voice be heard through my independent representation of them, then perhaps you should take your chairmanship and give it to a puppet who will feel indebted to you and is willing surrender his constituents’ voice. I do not need your position to have respect. And, I do not need your title to have honor.

———–END

DJP: Read the entire speech to put it in context.

——–

In the next DJP Update, I will try to include a discussion of the book, “Compulsory Medical Care and the Welfare State” by Melchior Palyi written in 1949. Dr. Juan Watkins sent it to me.

Stay well,

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates.

RECENT TWEETS and RETWEETS by DJPNEWS:

Cloture but vote to delay perm fix of SGR doctor pay a loser. Need private contracting&no penalty! Via @SenateFloorhttp://bit.ly/ceV0gN

about 1 hour ago via web

Powerful message RT @MagCapitol Sen. Smith’s speech to the Senate today. www.prestonsmith.org/default.asp?pt=newsdescr&RI=177

about 1 hour ago via web

Had a great group of #Tulane med students today in my seminar “Leadership in Medicine” Impressive students yesterday too in PublicHealth

9:06 PM Apr 8th via web

Chart questioning the cost of health care overhaul in @NYTimes http://tinyurl.com/yjw2fnb Thanks @Grace-MarieTurner @Galen alert

8:58 PM Apr 8th via web

Thanks! RT @B_Ivory Dr. Donald Palmisano, 2003-4 Pres AmerMedAssoc. just gave a great speech in my class, great discussion on hlt reform..

9:31 PM Apr 7th via Echofon

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update/

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2234 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
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DJP Update 4-6-2010 A few more comments about “Health System Reform” that passed Congress; and Yes, AMA needs to be saved!

DJP Update 4-6-2010 A few more comments about “Health System Reform” that passed Congress; and Yes, AMA needs to be saved!

Foreword: For those who plan to write and say, “You lost. The bill passed. Get over it.” Let me tell you in advance that I did not lose. The American public lost. Doctors lost. The Fool’s Gold soon will be apparent. Facts don’t cease to exist because they are ignored. Actions have consequences. I persist in writing about this because I want to see the best medical care the world has ever seen remain on this planet. Sure there are problems with financing in our current system and it could have been fixed but the Congress is making it worse and it will affect more than just Medicine. It affects our viability as a leader of Nations. ALSO, I want to see the AMA survive! It is on a path of disaster at present.

Now for the news.

A few comments from Senator Reid on the healthcare legislation

Senator Reid in interview with Greta Van Sustern

http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,590482,00.html

EXCERPT:

————-

Senator Reid:

Now that the legislation passed, it is amazing how much different people attitude is. I mean traveling on an airplane people are so nice to me. We have people — it wasn’t that way before.

———

REID: But remember, the Nebraska deal was terrific for our country. Why do I say that? Because now everybody has a Nebraska deal. Every state in the union has the Nebraska deal.

———

DJP Comment: That should make us all feel better. Wonder where the money comes from?

———

And now U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa has a few questions

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0410/35413.html

A top House Republican is investigating the legislative deals the White House and Democratic leadership cut with special interest groups while crafting the new health care reform law. And California Rep. Darrell Issa is not happy with the American Medical Association’s terse response to his questions.

———-

This is interesting too!

Texas physicians petition Congress to fix Medicare funding

http://www.star-telegram.com/2010/04/05/2090970/texas-physicians-petition-congress.html

BY DIANNA HUNT

dhunt@star-telegram.com

EXCEPT FROM ARTICLE

April 5, 2010

This time, you could read their signatures.

In bold, clean strokes, North Texas physicians inked their names to a statewide petition drive Monday urging Congress to permanently fix the gap in Medicare funding that they say could cripple the system.

The petition by the Texas Medical Association, launched Monday in seven locations across Texas including Fort Worth, warns congressional leaders that some physicians could be forced to stop accepting Medicare patients if a permanent fix cannot be worked out.

The group is urging Texans from all walks — not just doctors — to sign the online petition at www.MeAndMyDoctor.com. Medical societies in 10 other states have agreed to join the Texas initiative, and another 30 state groups have expressed interest, officials said.

“My colleagues and I want to continue to take care of our Medicare patients,” said Dr. Susan Rudd Bailey, a Fort Worth allergist and president-elect of the state association. “This is a problem that Congress has known about for a long, long time.”

A 21.2 percent cut in Medicare payments to physicians went into effect April 1 after the latest in more than a decade of stopgap measures from Congress expired. A new temporary measure is expected to be approved in the next week or two in Washington, but physicians say that is not enough.

“We need more than Band-Aids,” Dr. William H. Fleming III, a Houston neurologist and president of the state association, said at an event in Houston. “We need more than sutures. We need a complete transplant … Medicare patient access to care is in jeopardy across Texas and America, and we must send a clear message to our leaders how urgently we need them to step up and stop the Medicare meltdown now.”

Texas officials are hoping to deliver a petition with 1 million signatures to Congress and the White House…..

————-

DJP Comment: One has to wonder why the TMA has to be the leader in this. More power to TMA. Why can’t all of Medicine do it together. Is this a comment on AMA?

Meanwhile, at the AMA Website on the rotating screen of home page, AMA puts this headline under an AMA posted video:

AMA President James Rohack on why the health-care bill is good for doctors and patients.

This video is featured on AMA Website but when one clicks the link, it goes to:

http://video.foxbusiness.com/v/4119172/ama-pres-on-health-bills-impact-on-doctors/?playlist_id=87062

Unfortunately, the video is inoperative.

Too bad.

————-

Meanwhile, on AMA Website, the following is noted giving links to articles

http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/road-doctor-rohack.shtml?plckController=Blog&plckBlogPage=BlogViewPost&UID=21ae8cdf-e382-40c9-87cf-32c8561d0531&plckPostId=Blog%3a21ae8cdf-e382-40c9-87cf-32c8561d0531Post%3a5e4907de-6017-4925-ad97-9896707b14d2&plckScript=blogScript&plckElementId=blogDest

EXCERPT FROM ON THE ROAD WITH DR. ROHACK posted 4-5-2010

Patients in line to benefit from health reform law

When I do see patients, I usually get some questions about the historic health reform act signed into law two weeks ago by President Obama. In general, patients should benefit from the new law.

Two specific news accounts I’ve seen recently explain what the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act means for our patients. A week ago the Houston Chronicle showed what reform will mean for six different patients. And on Easter Sunday the Chicago Tribune profiled four people in various circumstances. Generally, the reports show the new law is a boon for patients.

Meanwhile, the AMA’s Web site explains how reform impacts physician practices, as well as what it means for patients (PDF). Plus, you can read the Q&A from last week’s Department of Health and Human Services webinar. Finally, be sure to subscribe to the AMA’s HSR Insight to learn more about the reform act.

As I’ve noted before, the new law is not perfect. And the AMA will continue to work to improve it.

————–

DJP COMMENT: I think it is obvious why AMA membership is in a steep decline.

Also, check out this earlier letter.

Unfortunately, this 2009 letter looks like a relic on AMA Website:

http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/advocacy/current-topics-advocacy/practice-management/balance-billing.shtml

Balance Billing

Under Medicare, certain physicians may opt to bill patients a portion of what Medicare does not cover for medical services. This is called “balance billing” but Medicare strictly limits how much physicians may balance bill their patients. Many private payers also restrict or prohibit physicians from balance billing their patients.

Representative Tom Price (R-GA-6) has sponsored a bill, H.R. 1384, supporting the AMA’s stance on balance billing.

Letter to Rep Price supporting his introduction of HR 1384 balance billing legislation March 18, 2009

http://www.ama-assn.org/ama1/pub/upload/mm/399/balance-billing-price-letter.pdf

———

DJP Comment: Where was AMA’s tough stand on this issue in the recent health system reform debate? Did you see any ads in the newspapers or on TV despite the millions spent on advertising by AMA during the health system debate in Congress? The question now: Will AMA accept another price-fixing formula to replace the SGR or will AMA fight for AMA policy, the right to balance-bill; the right to privately contract without penalty? Remember, that is among the AMA’s highest advocacy priorities and can keep doctors in practice regardless of what Congress decides to pay. To move from one set of chains to another is not acceptable. We need to save AMA before the membership completely evaporates. There are those who are willing to step into the void of leadership regarding putting the patient in control with the doctor as trusted advisor. Now is the time to save AMA. Now is the time to speak up. Many thousands of physicians say it is too late to save AMA. But I am an optimist. Now is the time to get ready for the AMA Annual Meeting in June. Enough of the platitudes. Meanwhile, the game-playing and funny math in Congress have not stopped the 21% cut in Medicare payments to doctors! Keep the word “Liberty” in mind with all negotiations and advocacy!

————

Stay well,

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates.

RECENT TWEET by DJPNEWS:

A caution RT @TheEconomist New column: Barack Obama has made history. But he can still make mistakes: http://econ.st/cd8Us6…

about 14 hours ago via Echofon

Thanks, interesting article! RT @Sonodoc99 @DJPNEWS Happy Easter! Also, there’s this lagniappe. http://tinyurl.com/yeaj26j

1:52 PM Apr 2nd via Echofon

Mandate Vs Liberty Rt @WSJopinion ObamaCare and the Constitution: If Congress can force you to buy insurance…http://on.wsj.com/bpL4Yk

7:13 PM Apr 1st via Echofon

A view from afar RT@TheEconomist Democrats and Republicans alike are taking a gamble on health reformhttp://econ.st/9TSDB7 …

8:48 AM Apr 1st via Echofon

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update/

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2226 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
To join the list, send me an email stating “Join DJP Update” To get off the list, state “Remove DJP Update”. Best to put in Subject line so I can do immediately.

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DJP Update 3-22-2010 MORE BAD NEWS! Georgia Supreme Ct rules medical awards cap unconstitutional

DJP Update 3-22-2010 MORE BAD NEWS! Georgia Supreme Ct rules medical awards cap unconstitutional

http://www.insurancejournal.com/news/southeast/2010/03/22/108346.htm

Insurance Journal

Georgia Supreme Court Rules Medical Awards Cap Unconstitutional

March 22, 2010

EXCERPT:

The Georgia Supreme Court has struck a cap on medical malpractice awards imposed in 2005 as part of a package of legislative tort reforms.

The state’s high court said the law limiting noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases violates the constitutional right to a trial by jury.

The decision applies retroactively.

The court acknowledged that its ruling might be at odds with those in other states but commented that those decisions are governed by “less comprehensive constitutional jury trial provisions.”

All seven justices concurred in whole or in part with the decision, which was written by Chief Justice Carol Hunstein…

(Go to link above for entire article)

—————–

Soon there will be lack of access to care in many states because of rulings like this and action by Congress yesterday. The trial attorneys get rich on contingency fees of 33 1/3 to 50% of the awards and patients lose access to care in their hour of need. Looks like Texas will have to hire more folks at the Board of Medical Examiners to process applications for doctors moving there just as they did after they passed the outstanding cap law in 2003 AND changed the constitution of Texas with Proposition 12 so that the constitution of Texas states caps on non-economic awards are permitted. That ends the debate. The Federal Constitution doesn’t limit awards. The problems always arise in the state constitutions.

Imagine if ALL doctor organizations had said, “WE WON”T SUPPORT ANY SO CALLED “HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM” IN CONGRESS WITHOUT PROVEN MEDICAL LIABILITY REFORM! AND THAT IS JUST THE STARTING DEMAND.” Doctors are being used by politicians. When will organized Medicine learn!

I am in San Antonio, Texas to speak to the American Association of Plastic Surgeons at their annual meeting. I will speak on medical liability reform as a part of ideal health system reform. This Georgia decision will cause me to make sure I don’t forget to take my blood pressure medicine.

———

Meanwhile, the world of tweets is going wild with comments about the health system bill passed in Congress last night. Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana is active with tweets today and I retweeted them:

http://twitter.com/djpNEWS

RT @JindalNews GovJindal Urges AG to Join Fight Against Unconstit HealthCare Mandates-Says State Will Opt Out o…http://twurl.nl/w4vgyz

22 minutes ago via Echofon

RT @BobbyJindal Nationalhealthcare bill bad for LA & bad for America. Huge overreach..potentially unconstitutional http://twurl.cc/2cqr

——-

AMA tweets too and here is one today where AMA retweets an article that explains why the doctors “like the Obama Health Care Bill”.

AmerMedicalAssn RT @USNews: The Obama health care bill explained: Why the doctors like it. http://bit.ly/bSGs3V

Here is an excerpt from that article:

———

This enthusiastic diagnosis of the healthcare bill comes from the American Medical Association. Now, I have been a national political reporter for over 20 years, for most of that time in Washington. And I can tell you this: If the AMA endorses a healthcare bill, you can rest assured that the legislation is not some left-wing radical ploy that will crater the healthcare system and send us down the road to communism. The doctors like their tee-off times; have fought liberal proposals for national health insurance for 60 years, and most recently played a role in torpedoing Hillary-care during the Clinton years. They are a powerful lobby, and played a key role in writing this bill. So did those other “socialists,” the drug companies. And that commie front for left-wing seniors, AARP.

You may not like the bill for other reasons–if you are a business owner and don’t want to have to provide health insurance to your employees, or a rich family that doesn’t like the tax on your Wall Street returns–but whatever it is, Obama-care ain’t socialism. In fact, the nation’s doctors say it is good medicine.

——–

I think I have entered an alternative universe. Why isn’t AMA sending out messages like The Heritage letter about the bill. At least, why is not the AMA pointing out what Heritage had to say about the bill so we can get balanced reporting. Read The Heritage Foundation comments at:

http://blog.heritage.org/2010/03/22/morning-bell-repeal/

Here is an excerpt:

——-

Instead of empowering families and individuals to make their own choices, Obamacare empowers the bureaucracy to make those decisions for them. It is this unelected bureaucracy, unanswerable to the electorate, that will determine the content of health benefits packages, including medical treatment and procedures, and how much will be paid for those services. Yesterday’s legislation brings us one step closer to fully government-run medicine, with expanded government power over the financing and delivery of medical services that is sure to ration care in the name of cost control.

You will hear the left say this new entitlement will be popular with the American people. Do not believe them for a second. Yes, 32 million people will gain the theoretical right to health insurance. But over half of that coverage comes from placing at least 16 million more Americans into Medicaid, an unpopular and overextended welfare program that already rations care.

Americans will not stand for it. The American love for liberty prevailed in our founding, and will prevail once again.

——–

The only hope now is to defeat the reconciliation bill in the Senate and then ask President Obama to veto the Senate bill on his desk and start over. If the reconciliation bill fails, all of the special deals will remain in the Senate bill and the Public will demand a veto! Finally, remember only the doctors can do the high-tech operations. The family of Medicine needs all of the doctors, including the skilled specialist who do miracles every day removing tumors, aneurysyms, transplanting organs, and more!

Now comments are coming out of Senators’ offices about the reconciliation vote. Here is one that I retweeted:

DJPNEWS: Via @rollcall RT @DavidMDrucker: Sen. Ben Nelson a “no” vote on#HCR reconciliation.

I must end this note and meditate. Rome is burning.

Stay well.

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates.

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update/

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2223 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
To join the list, send me an email stating “Join DJP Update” To get off the list, state “Remove DJP Update”. Best to put in Subject line so I can do immediately.

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DJP Update 3-21-2010 Congress & Health System Reform: Dreams & Deals & possible surprises in the big vote today!

DJP Update 3-21-2010 Congress & Health System Reform: Dreams & Deals & possible surprises in the big vote today!

Health System Reform debate continues in Congress and key votes will be taken tonight. Truly a day to remember. It will be remembered by some as dreams fulfilled and other as deals galore. Of course the historians who look at what happened today will proclaim that it is amazing that few who voted really understood the true meaning of what was in the bill and it is shocking that obvious flaws in reasoning were not deal-killers. And I say that regardless of whether you believe this is the path to government takeover of Medicine or you wish that Congress had done more, namely institute a single-payer.

Obviously this Senate bill modified by the amendments in the House are not budget neutral or save money. If the bill did reduce the Federal deficit, there would not have been a need to add in the “savings” from government taking over the student loan business. And of course, the so called “doc fix” is not in the bill. This truly is a shell game and the Public now is disgusted with the activities in Congress. As for the proposed immediate benefits, more people will be on Medicaid. A failed system that is bankrupting states will now have more people put on the program as another unfunded mandate on states despite promises to pay some additional money for a while. Look at Medicaid, look at TennCare, look at Dirigo Health in Maine and try to learn some lessons. Another lesson is unfolding in Massachusetts. Why not let they experiment come to a conclusion? Meanwhile, the lawsuits will start from multiple state attorney generals asking the courts to rule the law unconstitutional because they believe the Supremacy Clause doesn’t apply when the Federal government violates the Constitution.

The family medicine doctors will get Medicaid payments to equal Medicare payments. So the chains will be lengthen a little and they will be given more exercise room in the prison. Meanwhile, the SGR supposedly is promised to be changed in the future. But no private contracting without penalty. That would be a rational solution to restore Liberty. Too bad all of this wasn’t delayed for a month to give President Obama the opportunity to go on his Australian visit and learn from the Australians who are paying 30% of the private insurance costs to get more people out of the public system AND the Australian government allows private contracting without penalty. They allow balance-billing of what the government doesn’t pay.

As for keeping the youngsters longer on the parents’ policy and eliminating limits and preexisting conditions, what about the increase in premiums for that? If you give more coverage the cost will go up. If you price-fix, eventually the insurance company stops selling policies just like doctors increasing limit Medicaid and Medicare patients in their practice because the cost of delivering care is more than the government payment. That is basic economics just like gravity exists on Earth. And I won’t even get into the increase in IRS agents etc.

There are real problems in the health delivery system because of the medical insurance system, government involvement and mandates and the current tax system that discriminates against individuals. Pre-existing conditions are just one of the problems that are real concerns and need to be fixed but the current bill is not the correct fix.

As for negotiating, note that those groups who got what they want, withheld their support until they got it. AMA gave the support for the equivalent of vaporware. And now calling it qualified support is embarrassing, in my opinion. No private contracting without penalty. We still have that prohibition in Medicare & Medicaid and the new law, if passed, will continue the same. No medical liability reform. More government involvement, the creation of the unelected, unaccountable Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB), and much more bad news.

As for saying it was the ethical thing to do, I agree ethics is extremely important and one should make sure that any proposed law protects the patients and does what is in the best interest of the patient. Remember AMA ethical principle number 3:

III. A physician shall respect the law and also recognize a responsibility to seek changes in those requirements which are contrary to the best interests of the patient.

So if you conclude the law or proposed law is not in the best interest of the patient, you have an obligation to oppose it. And over 500,000 physicians through their organizations have said to vote NO on this bill in Congress. The public is against this bill in multiple polls. But the train rushes on to passage.

Specific AMA policy could have fixed the problems in the health delivery system. Instead, we are going to adversely affect the medical miracles being done every day in America. Nurses and other professionals will not be able to take over and do the heart transplants, brain surgery, and all of the other technological advances. Our superbly trained and experienced physicians who do quality work working with state of the art equipment is why leaders in other countries, like the Canadian Premier of Newfoundland & Labrador, come to the USA. Premier Danny Williams recently went to Miami for his heart procedure. See article below.

———-

http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5h0QC7bditrEb3wYz_6_b-gsGGDxA

EXCERPT from ARTICLE in 2010 about Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams

‘My heart, my choice,’ Williams says, defending decision for U.S. heart surgery

———-

Taxes will increase, deficits will increase, unemployment will increase and in the end, doctors will be blamed. Count on it. Meanwhile, there are people in the USA who want to get jobs. There are people in other parts of the world who want to destroy us and they probably are laughing at our focus and Congressional antics as they plot. And we play games in Congress. Shell games of hidden taxes and illusory savings and Humpty Dumpty language riddles. What will our allies think of our word and promises as they watch how we treat each other in Congress. Sad day for us. And the day the doctors are blamed, one must be alert to government mandating that as a condition of maintaining one’s medical license, doctors must participate in government programs filled with mandates and price-fixing. Eternal vigilance is in order.

BUT this drama is not over. Consider this possible scenario and surprise. The House passes the Senate bill tonight and it goes to the President. Meanwhile, the reconciliation “fix” passes the House and when it gets to the Senate, the Parliamentarian suddenly appears as the oracle who opines that some of those items, important to Democrats who gave their vote because of those “fixes”, are not allow under the rules! Remember the “Byrd Rule” in the Senate. Wow! Wouldn’t it be nice to know what the Parliamentarian thinks of all of these “fixes” and whether they will be allowed BEFORE the vote on the Senate bill and the reconciliation bill in the House. Otherwise, the Senate bill is the law of the land as soon as the President signs it. Democrats in the House ought to be very careful and demand that they see the ruling of the Parliamentarian BEFORE they vote!

Here is a link at ABC News that discusses a theory akin to that.

http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2010/03/senate-fight-starts-gop-says-senate-parliamentarian-will-kill-fixits-bill.html

Stay well.

Donald

P.S. Stop by http://twitter.com/djpNEWS and sign up for DJPNEWS to get tweet alerts that may not make it into DJP Updates.

Recent sample tweets by DJPNEWS

Congress shell game=low poll#s RT @Senate_GOPs: AP: Medicare fix would push health care into the red http://bit.ly/ahEoPZ #tcot #hcr

8:01 PM Mar 19th via Echofon

No need of funny math of #Congress if patients & docs allowed to privately contract fees & no penalty! Liberty! Medicare forbids! #hcr

Also, recent selected DJP Updates can be found at: http://www.donaldpalmisano.com/html/djp_update/

Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD
Intrepid Resources® / The Medical Risk Manager Company
5000 West Esplanade Ave., #432
Metairie, Louisiana USA 70006
504-455-5895 office
504-455-9392 fax
DJP@donaldpalmisano.com
www.donaldpalmisano.com
www.onleadership.us

This DJP Update goes to 2223 leaders in Medicine representing all of the State Medical Associations and over 100 Specialty Societies plus some other friends.
You can share it with your members and it has the potential to reach 800,000 physicians.
To join the list, send me an email stating “Join DJP Update” To get off the list, state “Remove DJP Update”. Best to put in Subject line so I can do immediately.

Read More