1 / 14

AMA Current Advocacy Efforts for 2009

AMA Current Advocacy Efforts for 2009. Medical Society of Mobile County Medical Association of the State of Alabama Jeff Terry, MD (jeffterry@usa.net) May 12, 2009. - Health System Reform - Coverage for the Uninsured - Medicare Physician Payment Reform - Medical Liability Reform

chul
Télécharger la présentation

AMA Current Advocacy Efforts for 2009

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AMA Current Advocacy Efforts for 2009 Medical Society of Mobile County Medical Association of the State of Alabama Jeff Terry, MD (jeffterry@usa.net) May 12, 2009

  2. - Health System Reform - Coverage for the Uninsured - Medicare Physician Payment Reform - Medical Liability Reform - Managed Care Reform - Antitrust Reform - Improving the Public Health - Patient Safety & Quality Improvement - Balance Billing - Funding Research & Medical Education

  3. AMA Priorities for Health System Reform • Expand coverage and choice • Improve quality and patient safety • Reform government programs • Reduce costs and increase value • Enhance prevention and wellness • Payment and delivery system reforms

  4. Expand Coverage and Choice • AMA Plan • Provide subsidies to low-income (e.g., tax credits) to help purchase health insurance • Make regressive tax policies more progressive • Support direct subsidies for high-risk patients (e.g., risk pools, reinsurance) • Require a greater level of individual responsibility • Implement health insurance market reforms • Continue to oppose single-payer plans • Council on Medical Service Reports

  5. Improve Quality and Patient Safety • Develop quality measures and appropriateness standards (PCPI) • Develop evidence-based performance measures that enable continual QI and are the basis for rewarding high quality, cost-effective, safe care • Support practice-based solutions (e.g., HIT, decision support, continual performance monitoring) that enable incorporating measurement into practice to support QI • Evaluate and improve PQRI (Consortium) • Facilitate physician involvement with patient safety organizations (Patient Safety Act)

  6. Reform Government Programs • Enroll SCHIP eligible children and expand eligibility to higher percentages of FPL • Eliminate existing Medicaid categorical requirements and establish uniform eligibility for all below 100% of FPL • Replace Medicare SGR with alternative update methodology & reform the Medicare program • Eliminate subsidies for Medicare Advantage • Improve physician payment levels

  7. Reduce Costs and Increase Value • Reduce the burden of preventable disease and better manage chronic disease • Support comparative effectiveness research • Address variation in the utilization of health care services, particularly at the state/regional level • Make health care delivery more efficient • Reduce non-clinical costs that do not contribute value to patient care

  8. Enhance Prevention and Wellness • Support integrated approach to encourage the adoption of healthy lifestyles for physicians and their patients • Urge the inclusion of wide range of evidence-based preventive services in insurance plans • Support adequate federal funding for biomedical research, including prevention • Encourage CBO to score the long- and short-term budget deficit reductions and costs associated with prevention • Eliminate racial, ethnic and gender disparities through infrastructure and programmatic change

  9. Payment and Delivery System Reforms • Develop physician-relevant HIT systems (e.g., interoperability) and provide incentives to build the infrastructure • Develop value-based payment methodologies (e.g., patient-centered medical home, management of chronic disease) • Pursue antitrust relief, fair physician contracting, and greater transparency • Enact medical liability reforms

  10. AMA Fully Engaged with Policymakers and Other Stakeholders • Ongoing meetings with HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and other Administration officials • Meetings with Nancy-Ann DeParle head of the new White House office for Health Reform • Provided feedback to Sen. Baucus on health system reform white paper • Testimony before House W & M Health Subcommittee and ongoing meetings with Rep. Stark’s staff • Dialogue with Speaker Pelosi’s Office • Participating in the Health Reform Dialogue Group

  11. Health System Reform=TransformationNot Incremental Change • Physicians and patients are not well-served by the status quo • Need to alter our daily focus and concentrate on working to advance HSR objectives • Some elements of reform will be beyond physicians’ current comfort level • Constructive engagement is key to success • Educate and activate physician and patient grassroots networks. Health System Reform Bulletin

  12. Click Here to become a member!

  13. Other Health Reform Items • Health System Reform Bulletin (HSRB) Senate Finance Committee – Baucus • HSRB – Specialty Societies letter – Reid • HSRB – AMA letter on insurance reform • HSRB – MedPAC and health system reform • HSRB – President’s 8 health reform goals • Congressional Health Care Caucus – This is excellent from Dr. Rep. Burgess

  14. Other Items • Right to Privately Contract Resolution • Why a new public plan will not improve American health care (excellent) • Coverage issues in health reform (excellent) • Canadian care • Defeat Obamacare • Six deal killers for national health reform • Top down or bottom up?

More Related