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Surgeons Give Six Reasons Why Senate Reform Plan Will Worsen Care

Cheryl Clark, for HealthLeaders Media, November 5, 2009

The American College of Surgeons, a group representing 200,000 doctors in 20 surgical specialties, says it will fight health reform as proposed by the Senate Finance Committee, because "it will make an already-flawed system worse" in six ways.

A. Brent Eastman, MD, chairman of the ACS Board of Regents, emphasizes that the doctors are not opposed to health reform per se, and supports changes to provide cost-effective, high-quality care.

But "too many of the provisions that the Senate Finance Committee considered put patient access and quality improvement at risk," says Eastman, who also a trauma surgeon and chief medical officer at Scripps Health in San Diego.

He made the statement yesterday on behalf of 19 other professional societies, including anesthesiology, colon and rectal, endoscopic, gastrointestinal, neurology, obstetrics and gynecology, ophthalmology, orthopaedic, osteopathic, plastic, urology, and vascular surgeons. Their objections were sent in a letter yesterday to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

"This is the first time you're seeing a large group of physicians, surgical organizations stand up" to oppose this, says Christian Shalgian, ACS' director of advocacy and health policy. Though ACS has sent six or seven letters over the last year expressing objections as health reform language began to take shape, "our concerns have been quite frankly ignored."

Eastman stresses that the doctors are not opposed to health reform, and favor the recently released proposals in H.R. 3962, the Affordable Healthcare for America Act, as well as the Sustained Growth Rate formula fix, H.R. 3961.

But the groups are opposed to the Senate proposals because they contain the following six provisions:

1. It would mandate that all physicians participate in Medicare's "seriously flawed," Physician Quality Reporting Initiative, and penalize those who decline. The PQRI program, which was launched for voluntary physician participants in 2006, calls for doctors to submit quality data on how they provided 100 types of care, such as whether appropriate antibiotics were administered prior to surgery.

In exchange for volunteering the information, the doctors were to receive bonuses in their reimbursement.

However, after CMS told doctors to send in their quality data, and after doctors faithfully followed the instructions, CMS "acknowledged that the instructions were wrong; that they had made mistakes, and that they would fix the problem and come back to doctors with a clear set of instructions," Eastman says.

"That was in 2007—we are now almost to 2010—and we still haven't heard from them what that clear set of instructions are supposed to be. And now the Senate want to mandate that we participate in the program?" says Eastman.

He adds, "This doesn't make any sense, and it certainly won't improve quality."

"They would go the whole year submitting their data, but never got the bonus payments," adds Shalgian. "They'd contact CMS, which said the doctor 'didn't participate appropriately, didn't send in the right information or sent it in on the wrong form.'"

Additionally, Eastman and Shalgian, say that participating physicians have received little, if any, of the bonus payments that were promised.

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9 comments on "Surgeons Give Six Reasons Why Senate Reform Plan Will Worsen Care"


Paul Dickson, MD, CCS, CPC (11/15/2009 at 6:26 PM)
I am extremely happy to see my former organization stand up against this Issue while the AMA is led by the Pied Piper (Obama) and his cronies (Pelosi, Reid, etc.) to leap to their death over the cliffs like lemmings!
Do they really believe that they will benefit by healthcare reform led by a government who has underestimated every healthcare project since its inception. We drank the poison of Medicare/Medicaid and those of us, not me, in practice before the 1980's lived high on the hog as they say, but after then, it has been a continuous attack on our fees for services rendered! We physician will be hurt by this, you might as well drink the hemlock now, if you buy into this idea that this legislation is going to improve your bottomline!
PaulD

By the way it is no doubt that we need a change in the system, it is just not this poison, we can do better, get involved!

Rosey Abuabara (11/9/2009 at 1:12 PM)
Surgeons don't complain because they don't have the time to.. It's funny how when patients are sick they love their Doctor.. and give praise when a job is well done. You r your loved one is better.. But time to pay ur bill.. and u start crying. U do not even know how hard it is to become a surgeon. How hard is is to keep up with all the paper work.
But with less students going in to Surgery, Patients will not have to worry about that anymore. There won't be anymore. They will retire.

Patty Parker (11/6/2009 at 5:10 PM)
"Since the bottom line in any healthcare discussion revolves around physician reimbursement..."

Really? It's not about the 6th of America uninsured or the rising cost of healthcare premiums or the fact that America's healthcare suffers in measure after measure of quality?

Maybe docs should understand that healthcare is bigger than just our salaries!