Now is the time to build on our health policy victories
From the AMA board chair. By
J. Edward Hill, MD. April 7, 2003.
A message to all physicians from J. Edward Hill, MD, chair of the
AMA Board of Trustees.
March came in like a lion for the AMA and all of organized
medicine -- and we roared the rest of the month.
We started off with the first National Advocacy Conference in
Washington, D.C., during the first week in March. Those in attendance gave
us rave reviews, and organizations, inside and outside the health care
community, were impressed by our line-up of speakers -- led by President
George W. Bush.
We heard from Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, MD, (R, Tenn.), who
urged physicians to take the fight for tort reform to their Senators.
We heard from the House Ways and Means Committee chair, Rep. Bill
Thomas (R, Calif.), who was crucial in passing the fix to the Medicare
payment mistake -- as was Rep. Billy Tauzin, (R, La.), House Energy and
Commerce Committee chair, who also spoke at the NAC. And we heard from
Sen. Max Baucus, (D, Mont.), who helped achieve bipartisan consensus on
fixing the Medicare update mistake on the Senate side.
Our speakers also included Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Director Tom Scully, who urged organized medicine to bring the same focus
to battling the medical liability crisis that it applied to the Medicare
mistake; and U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona, MD, who stressed the
importance of diet and exercise, and not smoking.
Many who spoke had one thing in common -- praise of the AMA and the
Federation of Medicine for our leadership and influence on national health
policy issues such as the Medicare payment update issue and medical
liability reform. This vote of confidence makes us want to work that much
harder to reach our goals for American medicine and for our patients.
A real highlight of the conference was the speech March 4 by President
Bush, which addressed, among other vital issues, the liability crisis.
"We have a problem in America. There are too many frivolous lawsuits
against good doctors, and the patients are paying the price. ... And the
problem doesn't start in the waiting room or the operating room, it starts
in the court room," the president told us.
President Bush went on to present the case for reform -- a goal the AMA
shares:
"If harm is caused by serious misconduct, patients should also be able
to seek reasonable punitive damages. [But] without fair and reasonable
limits, the legal system looks more and more like a lottery. ... American
courts should not be serving the self-interest of personal injury lawyers;
they should be serving the cause of justice and the needs of American
patients," he said.
Judging by the warm response the president received -- he was
interrupted almost 40 times by applause -- representatives of organized
medicine who were on hand are unified by this crisis and the urgent need
to fight it.
One weapon available nationally is the HEALTH Act, which was introduced
by Reps. Jim Greenwood (R, Pa.) and Chris Cox (R, Calif.), both of whom
also spoke at the Advocacy Conference. The legislation was passed by the
House of Representatives March 13. Similar legislation is pending in the
Senate.
So it is imperative that we contact our senators -- and both
President Bush and Dr. Frist encouraged physicians to do just that.
Do it. Call your senators. Write them. E-mail them. Explain the danger
our out-of-control system poses to patient access. Ask them to support
medical liability reform.
Take two minutes to go to the AMA grassroots Web site (www.ama-assn.org/go/grassroots).
Type in your ZIP code, and you will be given contact information for your
senators.
This may be the most opportune moment for the fortunes of liability
reform in my memory -- it has the support of the president and a majority
in both chambers of Congress.
The nation's biggest newspapers, network and cable news shows have done
major stories on medical liability reform. And the AMA -- and all
physicians and patients -- are coming off policy victories that gives us
some additional momentum.
In late February, President Bush signed the Omnibus Appropriations
bill, authorizing the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services to correct
the 1998 and 1999 Medicare physician payment projection errors.
The AMA worked together with specialty, state and county medical
societies as well as group and academic medical practices toward this
victory. With your support, we averted a 4.4% cut in Medicare physician
payment and instead, physicians will get a 1.6% increase in 2003.
The calls to lawmakers, the participation in rallies, and the active
grassroots efforts paid off. And 40 million Americans now in the Medicare
program got the good news that their access to care won't be jeopardized
by an accounting error -- at least not this year. This particular fight
was won, but we cannot relent -- the struggle for Medicare reimbursement
fairness is an ongoing one.
The AMA also helped lead the charge toward another victory in Congress
when the House in mid-March passed the bipartisan Patient Safety and
Quality Improvement Act, which establishes a system where health care
errors can be reported and analyzed to improve patient safety and health
care quality.
This legislation strikes the proper balance between accountability and
confidentiality by creating a voluntary database to track errors.
We are building on this success.
We are continuing to seek solutions to the disgraceful problem of
Americans living -- and dying -- without health insurance. And to work
toward Medicare reform as proposals are made to include prescription drug
benefits, and to find ways to cope with the baby boomers as they reach
retirement age.
And of course, there is the immediate threat posed by an out-of-control
legal system -- one that has precipitated a medical liability crisis and
that is forcing physicians to stop doing high-risk procedures or to flee
from states without commonsense reforms in place.
America's physicians and our patients have powerful allies on this
issue in Congress and the White House.
But nothing is more powerful than the unified voice of organized
medicine, crying out for relief from, and reform of, a medical liability
system that decreases access for millions of patients while increasing
costs for everyone. More than ever, now is the time to make our unified
voice heard.
Dr. Hill is a board-certified family physician residing in
Tupelo, Miss. You can contact him by
e-mail
(boardchair@ama-assn.org).
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