DJP Update 5-5-2011 Congressional hearing today on the SGR mess: a leader emerges; LAGNIAPPE
House Energy and Commerce Committee Health Subcommittee held a hearing on alternatives to the SGR Thursday, May 5 at 10:00 am Eastern
A young warrior physician leader has emerged. Dr. M. Todd Williamson, a Georgia neurologist, gives the answer to the broken SGR mess. The answer is long-standing AMA policy, namely, the right to balance-bill without penalty any fee agreed upon by patient and physician, regardless what government pays in Medicare. He represented over 90,000 physicians whose organizations below to the Coalition of State Medical and National Specialty Societies. All of these organizations sit in the AMA House of Delegates. Also 3 former AMA presidents Drs Johnson, Palmisano, & Plested, are non-voting honorary members of this Coalition.
This is the answer to the SGR mess. Don’t advocate for longer chains. Cut the chains and restore liberty. That ends the problem of finding a doctor. The evolving access to care crisis will end.
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Here is Dr. Williamson’s testimony:
http://mag.org/pdfs/williamson_testimony_050511.pdf
NOTE the 3 points in this EXCERPT from the testimony:
The Coalition of State Medical and National Specialty Societies is therefore convinced that the key to preserving our Medicare patients’ access to quality medical care is overhauling the flawed Medicare payment system, and to address the problem, Congress should include the Medicare Patient Empowerment Act as an essential part of any Medicare reform. This legislation would:
–Establish a new Medicare payment option whereby patients and physicians would be free to contract for medical care without penalty;
–Allow these patients to apply their Medicare benefits to the physician of their choice and to contract for any amount not covered by Medicare; and
–Physicians would be free to opt in or out of Medicare on a per-patient basis, while patients could pay for their care as they see fit and be reimbursed for an amount equal to that paid to “participating” Medicare physicians.
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Here are some articles about the testimony and other comments. (Thanks to Katie Orrico for sending 3 of these articles to me.)
From the BNA Health Care Daily
Private Contracting, Bundling Among Ideas Offered to Fix Physician Payment System
Private contracting and bundling were among an array of ideas presented by witnesses before a House subcommittee hearing May 5 as possible methods to reform the Medicare physician payment system.
“Although we cannot afford the current rate of spending on physician services, we also know that, if the pending 29.4 percent fee cuts are allowed to go into effect, a large number of doctors will be forced out of Medicare and a large number of Medicare beneficiaries will lose access to care,” House Energy and Commerce Chairman Fred Upton (R-Mich.) told the hearing.
The Subcommittee on Health hearing was intended to examine potential models to reimburse physicians for Medicare services that focus on “value and quality.”
Crafting a solution to the situation, in which the sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula has led to substantial cuts for almost the entire decade—and will lead to the nearly 30 percent cut as of Jan. 1, 2012—is on the committee’s “short list” this summer, Upton said.
However, just offering doctors the same amount that they are current receiving through 2020 will cost $275.8 billion, according to a committee memorandum that cites the Congressional
Budget Office.
Bipartisan Effort
Recognizing the bipartisan effort, subcommittee Chairman Joe Pitts (R-Pa.) said that “all of us agree on the need for a new payment system and there are a lot of good ideas about what an ideal payment system should look like.”
The committee has “taken a big step today in moving beyond previous discussions of the deficiencies of the sustainable growth rate system to an examination of the payment delivery system that we need and how to get there,” Pitts said.
Full committee ranking member Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) said that just filling in the payment gap created by the SGR is inadequate. “We must work toward a new way of paying for care, for physicians and all providers, that encourages integrated care.”
However, Waxman cautioned members not to shift SGR payment problems onto beneficiaries.
He referred to letters sent May 4 to the committee from AARP and the Medicare Rights Center opposing proposals “that would increase cost sharing under the guise of ‘private contracting.’”
The subcommittee heard from five physicians on a witness panel of seven who offered ideas for replacing the SGR, as well as changing the current fee-for-service system that is said to reward service volume rather than quality.
Private Contracting
Representing the Coalition of State Medical and National Specialty Societies, M. Todd Williamson said his group supports a bill (H.R. 1700), introduced May 3, that would establish a Medicare payment option for patients and practitioners to contract for Medicare fee-for-service items and services.
The bill would allow patients to apply their Medicare benefits to the physician of their choice and to contract for any amount not covered by Medicare.
“Physicians would be free to opt in or out of Medicare on a per-patient basis, while patients could pay for their care as they see fit and be reimbursed for an amount equal to that paid to participating Medicare physicians,” according to Williamson, a neurologist from Atlanta.
Medicare should pay its share of the charge and allow the patient to pay the balance, according to his testimony. “It is reprehensible for a physician to be subject to civil and criminal penalties if he or she doesn’t collect a patient’s copayment, as is now the case.”
In their letters, both the AARP and the Medicare Rights Center objected to the proposal.
“AARP strongly opposes relaxing the current Medicare rules related to balance billing and/or private contracting because they would do nothing more than shift costs onto Medicare beneficiaries,” Nancy LeaMond, an AARP executive vice president, said.
“Not only do private contracting and balance billing shift costs onto beneficiaries, but neither does anything to improve the quality of care delivered,” she said. “While this may provide more fiscal certainty to the federal government, it would produce tremendous financial insecurity among those on Medicare, who would have no limits on what their doctors could charge them.”
Similarly, Joe Baker, president of the consumer organization Medicare Rights Center, expressed “grave concerns” about allowing physicians to enter into contracts with beneficiaries and “balance bill” them for cost sharing.
He said that “out-of-pocket spending for Medicare patients is already burdensome and increased from 11.8 percent in 1998 to 16.2 percent in 2006.”
Baker said that such a proposal would “serve to fundamentally undermine the purpose of the Medicare program by unraveling the protections against high costs that prevent people from accessing the care they require” and could spread to other providers, such as hospitals.
Invitation to Associations
The hearing came after the committee invited physician groups to offer ideas about reworking the system.
In his testimony, American Medical Association President Cecil B. Wilson emphasized his organization’s three-prong approach of repealing the SGR, implementing a five-year period of stable payments, and transitioning to choices of new payment models.
The choices could include gainsharing, in which groups of providers work together to manage care and are eligible to share in any cost savings, and payment bundling programs across providers and episodes of care, he said.
Meanwhile, the AMA and specialty and state medical societies have formed a Physician Innovator Committee for those who are participating in payment and delivery innovations to share expertise and resources, Wilson said.
“The Leadership Group can allow the physician community to begin immediately to develop the knowledge base on the next generation of physician payment models and not have to solely rely on formal evaluation studies whenever they are issued by the government,” Wilson said.
Bundled Payments
Michael Chernew, a professor of health care policy, Harvard Medical School, spoke in favor of a bundled payment system, rather than fee-for-service.
“A more bundled system that pays for an episode of care or provides a global budget can allow more flexibility for providers and obviate the need for purchasers—such as Medicare or private insurers—to micromanage payment systems,” according to Chernew, a member of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, who said he was speaking for himself.
“Moreover, such a bundled system can facilitate cost containment strategies that avoid slashing per unit price when volume rises, as the SGR does,” he said.
Chernew offered as an example the Alternative Quality Contract, implemented by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts as part of one of its health maintenance organizations. The system uses a global payment rate in which a provider system receives a budget to cover the costs of providing all of an enrollee’s care.
Former Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Mark McClellan also spoke in favor of bundled payments.
“Under way in several cities right now, Medicare’s Acute Care Episode demonstration pays hospitals and physicians a prospectively fixed amount for a bundle of services that includes both Medicare Part A and Part B, for selected inpatient orthopedic and cardiac procedures,” McClellan, director of the Engelberg Center at the Brookings Institution, said.
“Formal evaluation of the ACE project is not yet complete, but sites are observing significant reductions in episode costs while maintaining or improving quality,” he said.
Democratic committee members urged re-examination of a bill (H.R. 3961) passed by the House in 2009 that would have reformed the system through separate target growth rates and conversion factor updates for two categories of service: evaluation, management, and preventive services; and all other services.
Asked by former committee Chairman John Dingell (D-Mich.) about the possible impact of his legislation, the witnesses unanimously agreed that if H.R. 3961 had been signed into law, doctors would not be facing a 29.4 percent cut in reimbursements in January 2012.
Another subcommittee—the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health—is scheduled to hold a hearing on same topic May 12.
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CQ TODAY ONLINE NEWS – HEALTH
May 5, 2011 – 4:35 p.m.
Will May Be There for ‘Doc Fix,’ But Not the Money Yet
By Emily Ethridge, CQ Staff
The first committee hearing of the year on fixing the Medicare physician payment system yielded no shortage of ideas — except how to pay for it.
House members of both parties say they are committed to bringing legislation to fix the long-troubled system to the floor by fall. But a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing Thursday demonstrated the difficulty of coming to terms with the huge price tag any permanent solution would carry, especially during a period of growing fiscal austerity.
Lawmakers and witnesses largely sidestepped the question of how to pay for a fix, something that tripped up negotiations on even short-term patches last year. Congress acted five times to stop the cuts in reimbursement rates in 2010, ultimately enacting a one-year patch in December. But when that runs out on Jan. 1, 2012, Medicare officials say, payments will drop by 29.4 percent.
Any solution will cost hundreds of billions of dollars. Simply maintaining the current system, without any updates to the payment rate, would cost $275.8 billion through 2020, said Health Subcommittee Chairman Joe Pitts, Pa.
Provider groups at the hearing emphasized that the problem with the payment formula, known as the sustainable growth rate (SGR), would only grow more expensive with time.
“The SGR is a failed formula. The longer we wait to cast it aside, the deeper a hole we dig,” said American Medical Association President Cecil B. Wilson.
Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton agreed, saying a lack of action would threaten Medicare beneficiaries. He added that finding a solution would be on the committee’s “short list” of legislation to take up this summer.
“Although we cannot afford the current rate of spending on physician services, we also know that if the pending 29.4 percent fee cuts are allowed to go into effect, a large numbers of doctors will be forced out of Medicare and a large number of Medicare beneficiaries will lose access to care,” said Upton, R-Mich.
SOME CONSENSUS
Despite the challenges, Pitts sounded an upbeat note, “I think we’ve taken a big step today . . . to an examination of the kind of delivery system we need and how to get there.”
At the hearing, the medical specialty groups testifying offered similar plans: repeal the SGR, enact a series of stable payments for a five-year period and use that time to do several demonstration projects aimed at finding and enacting a new payment method.
Rep. Bill Cassidy, R-La., questioned where the money to enact such changes would come from, criticizing the Democrats’ health care overhaul law (PL 111-148, PL 111-152) for using savings in the Medicare program for purposes other than fixing the payment formula.
“Now that the savings from Medicare have been used outside of Medicare, how will we pay for this?” Cassidy asked.
The groups’ proposals came in response to a bipartisan request last March for ideas from medical organizations.
Several witnesses also voiced support for a measure (HR 1700) introduced this week by Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., that would allow Medicare beneficiaries to contract with physicians and pay them out of their own pockets, outside of the traditional Medicare payment schedule.
Wilson said the legislation would give beneficiaries more choice in providers, increase the number of physicians who accept Medicare patients and help maintain the Medicare program.
Todd Williamson, a Georgia neurologist and spokesman for the Coalition of State Medical and National Specialty Societies, agreed and said the bill should be included along with other fixes to the physician payment system.
“Every physician will become accessible to every Medicare patient,” if the bill becomes law, said Williamson in a summary of his remarks to the committee. “Private contracting is a key principle of American freedom and liberty.”
But AARP, which did not have a representative testify at the hearing, opposes Price’s bill, saying it would essentially shift costs to beneficiaries.
“AARP strongly opposes the idea of allowing physicians to charge beneficiaries whatever they want, which would essentially pass much of the $330 billion cost directly on to Medicare beneficiaries,” AARP Executive Vice President Nancy LeaMond wrote in a letter to the committee, referring to the estimated cost of fixing the system over 10 years.
A ‘FIXABLE PROBLEM’
Despite the differences in opinion, members emphasized they felt a solution this year was possible.
“It is a fixable problem if we really mean it when Mr. [John D.] Dingell, Mr. [Frank] Pallone [Jr.] and Mr. [Henry A.] Waxman say the same general things as Mr. Upton and Mr. Pitts and people like myself,” said Joe L. Barton, R-Texas, referring to committee members who made the request for proposals in March.
But the best summary of the obstacles ahead may have come at a Health Affairs breakfast Thursday, where Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp, R-Mich., said he would take up the physician payment issue in his committee, whose Health subcommittee has scheduled a hearing for May 12. Camp added that he wanted a fix that would last several years to buy time for a more permanent solution.
When Camp was asked about how to pay for it, a staff member interrupted and joked there would be a suggestion box at the back of the room.
Joanne Kenen contributed to this story.
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CQ HEALTHBEAT NEWS
May 5, 2011 – 4:59 p.m.
New Era May Be Dawning of Testing Doc Pay Methods
By John Reichard, CQ HealthBeat Editor
While a House subcommittee hearing Thursday morning yielded no clues in the unending mystery over how Congress will fund an overhaul of the Medicare physician payment system, it did reveal a consensus among physician groups that a five-year period of experimentation is needed to test new ways to pay doctors.
Republicans and Democrats at the Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee hearing appeared interested in accommodating the groups.
American Medical Association President Cecil B. Wilson urged lawmakers to follow a three-pronged approach: replace the current sustainable growth rate (SGR) payment system that has doctors expecting a 29.5 percent payment cut Jan. 1; move into a five-year period of stable Medicare payments; and use that time to test and begin adopting “new payment models that reward physicians and hospitals for keeping patients healthy and managing chronic conditions.”
Physician groups generally appear to be on board with that approach.
Harold D. Miller of the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform outlined basic ways in which payments could be changed to lower costs without rationing and to improve the quality of care. The center includes a number of leading policy analysts, health care foundations, and health care systems.
“One is to keep people well,” Miller said, “so that they don’t have costs at all; second is that if they do have something like a chronic disease, to help them manage that in a way that avoids them having to be hospitalized, and if they do have to be hospitalized to make sure that they don’t get infections, complications and re-admissions. And all of those things save money, but they also are improvements for patients and I think that patients would find desirable.”
But “the current payment system goes in exactly the opposite direction,” he continued. “Doctors and hospitals lose money whenever they prevent infections. We don’t pay for things that help patients stay out of the hospital, and in health care nobody gets paid at all if they stay well.”
You can’t fix those problems by changing fee levels or adding regulations, you do it by “putting in fundamentally different payment models,” Miller said.
Two fundamental changes are needed, he added. The first “is to pay for care on an episode basis rather than on a service-by-service basis, such as having a single price for all of the care associated with an episode” of care such as a heart attack; and also including a “warranty” so that no charges are made by providers when infections or complications occur.
“This is the same way that every other industry in America charges for its products and services — a single price with a warranty,” Miller said.
The other approach, he said, is “comprehensive care payment, which is to have a single payment for a physician practice for all of the care that a patient needs to manage the particular conditions that they have, and in that way provides the flexibility for physicians to decide exactly what the right way is for care to be delivered to that patient.
“Where these programs have been tried they have worked,” he said. Small physician practices can be “the innovators in this if we provide the right kind of support.”
Lawmakers such as Rep. Michael C. Burgess, R-Texas urged that doctors play a leadership role in retooling physician payment, and witnesses agreed.
Former Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Mark McClellan said, “No one knows better than physicians how to answer the key questions: Where are the best opportunities to improve care and avoid unnecessary costs for their Medicare patients, and how can we implement practical payment reforms that support these improvements in care?”
Doctors see opportunities every day to improve the value of care,” he said, “but are frustrated by a Medicare payment system that often works against them.”
For example, McClellan said, oncologists focus on chemotherapy because that is what generates Medicare reimbursement. But they “get little support for doing many of the things that their patients need, things like spending time working out a treatment plan that meets each patient’s individual needs; managing patient symptoms; and coordinating care with other providers.”
Harvard Medical School Professor Michael Chernew described the “alternative quality contract” (AQC) implemented by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts as a promising approach. Used in the insurer’s HMO model, it consists of a five-year contract with a physician group that agrees to provide all of the enrollee’s care. To prevent the provider from stinting on care, the AQC varies payment substantially based on quality of care assessed by 64 different measures.
M. Todd Williamson of the Coalition of State Medical and National Specialty Societies urged legislation (HR 1700) that would give doctors the option of contracting privately with Medicare patients to provide care. That approach appears to be of particular interest to the GOP Doctors Caucus in the House.
The measure would allow patients “to apply their Medicare benefits to the physician of their choice and to contract for any amount not covered by Medicare,” he testified. “Physicians would be free to opt in or out of Medicare on a per-patient basis, while patients could pay for their care as they see fit and be reimbursed for an amount equal to that paid to ‘participating’ Medicare physicians” — those who agree to accept the Medicare reimbursement rate as payment in full.
Private contracting has been controversial in the past, arousing concern that lower income Medicare patients would lose access to care.
Of course having a period of experimentation hinges on finding huge sums of “pay-fors” to put off cuts required under the current SGR payment formula. For now, Republicans and Democrats appear intent on postponing the fight over how to do that while seeking agreement on the details of policy to replace the SGR.
John Reichard can be reached at jreichard.com
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http://www.medpagetoday.com/PublicHealthPolicy/Medicare/26311
Also a video at this link. Watch it and see Dr. Cecil Wilson, President of AMA give AMA’s 3 points regarding fixing SGR. Unfortunately, no mention of private contracting & balance-billing, strong AMA policy.
SGR Reform Looks Closer than Ever |
By Emily P. Walker, Washington Correspondent, MedPage Today
Published: May 05, 2011 |
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WASHINGTON — Republicans and Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health were in rare unanimous agreement Thursday during a hearing on the Medicare sustainable growth rate (SGR) payment formula.
“Let’s all accept the premise that SGR has to go,” said Republican Rep. Michael Burgess, MD, of Texas. “We need a permanent solution that is reasonable, updatable, and only that will do.”
The formula used to determine how Medicare reimburses physicians needs to go, agreed members of Congress and witnesses at the hearing. And it needs to be replaced with a fair payment method that covers what it costs to treat Medicare patients, but also gives the physicians a little profit.
The SGR formula ties physician reimbursement to the gross domestic product; it has called for cuts in pay every year since 2002. Both sides have agreed for years that the formula needs to be changed, and, still, Congress is constantly rushing to stave off cuts at the last minute that would make huge slashes to what doctors are paid by Medicare.
At the 11th hour, a stopgap bill always passes, holding steady the fees that Medicare pays doctors for treating the sick and elderly. Then the debate resumes again, and another stopgap eventually passes.
So if there is so much agreement that SGR needs to go, why has no comprehensive, bipartisan bill passed?
Time on the legislative calendar has always run down before tackling a broader Medicare payment bill, Burgess told MedPage Today following the hearing. But this time, if the Energy and Commerce Committee approves SGR reform legislation in June, perhaps the bill could actually pass the full Congress before August recess, Burgess said.
A number members of Congress and witnesses at the hearing — five out of seven of whom were doctors — said Thursday that the time may be more ripe than ever for reforming the SGR system given the current focus on reining in Medicare spending.
One witness, Cecil Wilson, MD, president of the American Medical Association (AMA), called for replacing the SGR with a five-year period of stable Medicare physician payments that keep pace with the growth of medical practices. Eventually, Medicare should transition to “an array of new payment models to enhance care coordination, quality, appropriateness, and costs.”
President Obama signed a short-term fix in December staving off the cuts through 2011. But once that bill expires on the first day of 2012, physicians are expected to face a cut in their Medicare reimbursements of nearly 30%.
Former CMS Administrator Mark McClellan, MD, PhD, told members of Congress not to just readjust the SGR when the law expires in 2012.
“As Congress considers how to address the SGR problem this time around, I urge the subcommittee to look beyond approaches that remain tied to the existing formula simply by delaying it again, or by resetting baselines to higher spending levels,” he said. “Rather, this is an opportunity to provide better support to physicians who lead in improving care.”
Panelists and members of Congress all agreed the traditional fee-for-service model needs to be abolished.
“This dilemma touches on the fundamental problem with fee-for-service — i.e., payment is based solely on what procedure is provided to the patient, not the value of the service provided, and thus encourages volume growth,” said Roland Goertz, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians.
The panel of witnesses told members of Congress it would like to see the SGR scrapped and payments held steady for five years while various new payment models are tested out, including accountable care organizations. Ultimately, physicians and hospitals should be able to choose the payment model that best suits them, Wilson told MedPage Today.
Everyone at the hearing said it’s crucial that physicians have the main leadership role in bringing about changes in payment, and not insurance companies, hospitals, or the government.
While there is widespread agreement on dislike of the SGR, that’s not to say there are no bipartisan disagreements over reforming how doctors are paid under Medicare.
One major disagreement — which strikes at the core of the Medicare program — is that Republicans would like doctors to be able to negotiate payments with Medicare patients. So a wealthy patient could technically pay more than the Medicare rate, or not use their Medicare benefit at all and pay out-of-pocket.
It could go the other way, too, where a doctor could accept a payment of less than the Medicare rate, or a freshly baked pie even, as payment for medical treatment.
Currently, if doctors accept something other than the Medicare rate from their Medicare patients, they could face fines and even criminal prosecution.
Getting a far-reaching Medicare payment reform bill through both chambers of Congress may again prove elusive, but Burgess said he’s holding out hope that maybe this will be the year when Congress can finally stop racing against the clock to block cuts, only to have to face the issue again several months later.
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http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20110505/NEWS/305059972
MODERN HEALTHCARE ARTICLE
Doc-pay solution a high priority: Upton
By Jessica Zigmond
Posted: May 5, 2011 – 3:00 pm ET
Addressing the Medicare physician payment system is on the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s “short list of getting things done this summer,” the panel’s chairman said today during a congressional hearing on the issue.
“Although we cannot afford the current rate of spending on physician services, we also know that, if the pending 29.4% fee cuts are allowed to go into effect, a large good number of doctors will be forced out of Medicare and a large number of Medicare beneficiaries will lose their access to care,” Chairman Fred Upton (R-Mich.) said in his opening remarks during a health subcommittee hearing.
House members from both parties said they are eager to find a solution to Medicare’s current system to pay physicians for their services. They heard about a wide range of potential solutions from a seven-member panel, including former CMS Administrator Dr. Mark McClellan and current AMA President Cecil Wilson, who outlined the AMA’s three-part approach to fixing the system. Wilson said he thinks there is consensus among physician groups, and that consensus includes repealing the sustainable growth-rate formula, implementing a period of stable physician payments, and exploring options on how to structure and pay for care. On the latter, Wilson said a “one-size-fits-all” approach won’t work.
“You’ve got to adjust it to differences in geography, it’s a big country,” Wilson said after the hearing, “differences in culture, and, particularly from the standpoint of physicians and health practitioners, differences in models of care that are different in different parts of the country.”
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FINALLY, read AMA press release on this issue:
http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/news/news/ama-president-testifies-medicare-payment.page?
AMA President Testifies Before Congress, Urges Medicare Physician Payment Reforms
Recommends three-pronged approach to reform the physician payment system
For immediate release:
May 5, 2011
WASHINGTON – Today, American Medical Association (AMA) President Cecil B. Wilson, M.D., testified before the House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee, urging Congressional leaders to reform the deeply flawed Medicare physician payment formula, also known as the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR). This formula will trigger a drastic cut of nearly 30 percent on January 1.
“The SGR is a failed formula,” said Dr. Wilson. “The longer we wait to cast it aside, the deeper the hole we dig. It is past time to replace the SGR with a policy that preserves access, promotes quality and increases efficiency.”
In his testimony, Dr. Wilson recommended a three-pronged approach to reforming the physician payment system. This approach includes repealing the SGR, implementing a five-year period of stable Medicare physician payments, and laying the pathway for a new payment system.
During the five-year period, a variety of new payment models designed to enhance care coordination, quality, appropriateness and costs would be tested. This period would also provide time to carry out demonstration and pilot projects that would form the basis for a new Medicare physician payment system. Because fiscal stability is imperative, the AMA recommends positive payment updates that keep pace with growth in medical practice costs over this period.
“A replacement for the SGR should not be another one-size-fits-all formula,” said Dr. Wilson. “A new system should allow physicians to choose from a menu of new payment models that rewards physicians and hospitals for keeping patients healthy and managing chronic conditions.”
To assist with the process of testing and evaluating payment models, the AMA is working with specialty and state medical societies to form a new Physician Payment Reform and Delivery Leadership Group. This group will include physicians who are currently participating in payment and delivery innovations and other experts. By sharing expertise and resources, physicians can assess the models that will improve patient care, learn how to get programs off the ground, address challenges and determine the impact of these reforms on patient care and practice economics.
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LAGNIAPPE: Still on the road. At an airport hotel tonight in Sacramento. Fly to Columbus, Ohio at 7 a.m. and then get a ride to Cincinnati. Will speak to the Ohio Chapter of the American College of Surgeons Saturday re leadership and health system reform.
Stay well!
Donald
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