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ACTION ALERT: Tell Senate to Vote NO on H.R. 2

ACTION ALERT: Tell Senate to Vote NO on H.R. 2
Apr 2, 2015
If the SGR fix is a model for “repeal and replace,” Americans will be asking “What’s the difference?”

We need to stop this bill in the Senate!

The Boehner-Pelosi bill, HR 2, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA), though applauded by the usual suspects such as the AMA, is like Republicans voting for ObamaCare.

Here’s what it does:

  • Adds half a trillion dollars to the national debt
  • Puts HHS in charge of the practice of medicine
  • Destroys patients’ confidentiality by putting their records into clinical data registries
  • Requires a physician to have an NPI for patients to get their prescriptions covered, then gives the Secretary the power to invalidate your NPI and to require an NPI for all “claims submitted for items and services”
  • Creates more expensive hoops to prove that you deserve to get paid (“Merit-Based Incentive Plan System” or MIPS)
  • Opens the door to more federal coercion to participate in Maintenance of Certification by giving CMS the authority to “contract with entities” like the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) to “specify criteria” for “clinical practice improvement activities” and determine whether “professionals meet such criteria.” 

While it does repeal the SGR, it might actually reduce physicians’ pay—except possibly if they devote all their energy to compliance activities that will get them a good report card (Composite Performance Score).

Here’s what we must do before Senate returns. A vote is scheduled for April 14.

Call your Senators, both Democrats and Republicans in their DC and local offices. Tell them to vote NO on MACRA, H.R. 2. Let the SGR happen, or vote for a delay, as has been done 17 times already.  

Ask if your Senator is planning a town hall during the April recess. Consider attending or visit your Senator’s local offices to present your message in person.  Click here for upcoming townhall meetings with lawmakers we are aware of.  If you know or find out about one not on our list, please let us know (email [email protected]) and we will add it to the list.

Give your Senator a copy of the AAPS press release on H.R. 2 available here or copied below. 
 


April 2, 2015 – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Doctors Urge Senate to Reject Boehner-Pelosi ‘Doc Fix’

Before leaving for recess, the House of Representatives passed a bipartisan bill that repeals the 21 percent Medicare fee cut dictated by the Clinton-Gingrich “sustainable growth rate” (SGR), and replaces it with something far worse for doctors and patients.

The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS) urges the Senate to vote the bill (HR 2) down.

HR 2 does not repeal the Medicare price controls that began in the 1980s, which are the cause of limited access to care and misallocation of resources, notes AAPS president Richard Amerling, M.D. It gives a tiny “update” in allowed fees, which does not begin to cover the increase in practice costs.

Worse, it adds oppressive bureaucratic practice controls. It demands that doctors use an “alternative payment methodology,” which means payment for something other than doing work. This includes compliance with government directives, patient outcomes that are largely outside a doctor’s control, and “saving” money by not providing services.

After reading the 263-page bill, Kris Held, M.D., an ophthalmologist, notes the following features:

  • The MIPS (Merit-Based Incentive Plan System) with Composite Performance Scoring of physicians (a report card), which could be used to cut a physician’s pay by as much as 9 percent;
  • Interoperable electronic health records, with complete access to no-longer-confidential patient medical records by clinical data registries chosen by the Secretary of HHS;
  • A requirement, §507(4), that pharmacy claims have a valid physician National Provider Identifier (NPI); and gives the secretary the power to require an NPI for all claims submitted for items and services
  • Authority for the HHS Secretary, §507 (4)(B)(i), to establish procedures for determining validity of a physician’s NPI and thus allowing or disallowing patient access to drugs or tests ordered by that physician.

In addition, HR 2 grants CMS the authority to “contract with entities” like the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) to “specify criteria” for “clinical practice improvement activities” and determine whether “professionals meet such criteria.” This opens the door to increased federal coercion for participation in ABMS “Maintenance of Certification” (MOC) or related schemes which are harmful to the timely delivery of medical care.

“You won’t miss SGR until it’s replaced,” writes Jane Lindell Hughes, M.D., an ophthalmologist. “The system will codify ‘population based care,’ which is the purpose behind the World Health Organization’s ICD10 codes, which are mandatory by Oct 1, 2015.”

The crisis of impending severe doctors’ pay cuts provided the vehicle for tacking on provisions that, according to Dr. Held, threaten “to destroy the patient-physician relationship, the Oath of Hippocrates, and the practice of private medicine in the U.S.” Physicians cannot ethically practice under such a system.

The 21 percent cut may be what is needed for doctors to realize that “we have sold the soul of our profession to the government and third party payers,” suggested Dr. Hughes.

AAPS provides detailed information on opting out of Medicare.

The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS) is a national organization representing physicians in all specialties, founded in 1943 to preserve private medicine and the patient-physician relationship.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD PRINTABLE PDF OF PRESS RELEASE

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