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Feb.
22, 2005 |
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IMAGING
• Attention Indiana
Members: Urgent Action Required
• Troubling Tennessee
Bills Prompt Legislative Alert |
REIMBURSEMENT
• ACC Opposes Angiography
Coding Edits |
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MEDICAL
LIABILITY REFORM
• Georgia Passes
Liability Reform Legislation
•
Alliance Testifies at
Small Business Hearing on Liability Reform |
QUALITY
IMPROVEMENT
• FDA Ramps up Drug Safety
Initiatives
• House Bill Aims to
Help Physicians Adopt Health IT
• Is Your Practice
HIPAA Compliant? |
LEGISLATIVE/REGULATORY
• Senate
Introduces Aneurysm Screening Bill
• Medtronic Issues
ICD Alert
• FDA Issues Alert
on Use of Phenergan with Pediatric Patients
• ACC Cardiologist
for a Day Program Wins National Advocacy Award |
IMAGING |
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Attention
Indiana Members: Urgent Action Required
ACC members
in Indiana are urged to promptly contact
their state representatives regarding HB
1494, which passed the state's House Public
Health Committee today. The bill, which
was originally written to be a moratorium
on the construction or addition of comprehensive
care beds, ambulatory outpatient surgical
centers and hospitals, was amended during
process and now authorizes a county's governing
body to prohibit the construction of hospitals,
ambulatory outpatient surgery centers and
comprehensive care beds that they feel would
compete with county hospitals. The Indiana
Chapter of the ACC recently
sent a legislative alert to members warning
them of several
bills that posed a threat to cardiovascular
imaging. To learn how you can help, contact
stateadvocacy@acc.org.
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Troubling
Tennessee Bills Prompt Legislative Alert
A series
of imaging bills recently introduced by
the Tennessee legislature has prompted the
state ACC Chapter to issue an alert asking
cardiovascular specialists to contact their
state legislators about these restrictive
bills. The proposed legislation would limit
providers of imaging tests and place administrative
burdens on those permitted to perform
diagnostic scans. To learn more about this
legislation and what you can do to help,
visit www.acc.org/egrassroots.htm
or contact stateadvocacy@acc.org.
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REIMBURSEMENT |
ACC
Opposes Angiography Coding Edits
The ACC joined four
other specialty physician groups in requesting
deletion of recent National Correct Coding
Initiative edits to diagnostic angiography
codes relating to therapeutic interventional
radiological supervision and interpretation.
Click
here to view a joint letter to the Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
from the ACC, American
College of Radiology, Society for Cardiovascular
Angiography and Interventions, Society for
Vascular Surgery and Society of Interventional
Radiology. |
| MEDICAL
LIABILITY REFORM |
Georgia
Passes Liability Reform Legislation
Gov. Sonny Purdue signed
into law sweeping medical liability
reforms last week, including a $350,000
cap on non-economic damages awarded in medical
liability cases. Surrounded by physicians
and nurses, including ACC Georgia Governor
Vic Corrigan, M.D., F.A.C.C., Purdue signed
the bill, saying, “This is about access
to health care.” The Georgia Chapter
of the ACC worked closely with the state
medical society to move this legislation
forward, and other states may soon follow
Georgia’s lead.
Shortly
after the Georgia bill signing, the South
Carolina Senate passed a bill capping non-economic
damages at $350,000, and legislators emphasized
the need for meaningful liability reforms
to remain competitive with its neighbors.
South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford commended
the state Senate for its passage of this
“absolutely vital legislation.”
Click
here to read Sanford’s statement
on medical liability reform. |
Alliance
Testifies at Small Business Hearing on Liability
Reform
Testifying before the
House Committee on Small Business, Alliance
of Specialty Medicine representative
Thomas Gleason, M.D., related the toll of
high liability insurance rates on physician
practices across the country. An orthopaedic
surgeon from Illinois, Dr. Gleason said
his practice’s annual premiums have
increased to $5.6 million, a 250 percent
jump, since July 2002. “As a business
man, the fact that this country has gone
crazy with litigation is breaking my practice,
but as a physician
it breaks my heart,” said Dr. Gleason.
Click
here to read the Alliance’s press
statement and testimony. |
| QUALITY
IMPROVEMENT |
FDA
Ramps up Drug Safety Initiatives
Dr.
Lester Crawford has a lot on his plate
these days. The recently nominated Commissioner
of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
will be facing confirmation hearings in the
next few weeks, while overseeing implementation
of a new
independent Drug Safety Oversight Board (DSB)
and assessing the recommendations of a joint
committee tasked with judging the safety of
painkillers such as Vioxx, Celebrex and Bextra.
After
three days of hearings on the cardiovascular
risks associates with COX-2 inhibitors,
FDA advisers concluded that the popular
painkillers should remain on the market
with stronger warnings on cardiovascular
risks and stricter advertising limits. The
FDA is not bound by the recommendations
of the advisory committee, but will take
them into account while developing a regulatory
decision on COX-2 inhibitors, which is expected
this week. |
House
Bill Aims to Help Physicians Adopt Health
IT
Reps. Charles Gonzalez, D-Texas, and John
McHugh, R-N.Y., recently introduced bi-partisan
legislation that would provide tax and Medicare
payment incentives for small physician practices
to adopt health information technology, including
electronic health records, electronic prescribing
systems and evidence-based clinical decision
support
software. Click
here to learn more about the National
Health Information Incentive Act of 2005.
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Is
Your Practice HIPAA Compliant?
CMS is offering a free conference call to
help providers comply with the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
Security Rule. Providers must be compliant
with the HIPAA
Security Rule,
which governs patients’ protected health
information, by April 20, 2005. Click
here to register for this call.
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| LEGISLATIVE/REGULATORY |
Senate
Introduces Aneurysm Screening Bill
Sens. Chris Dodd, D-Conn.,
and Jim Bunning, R-Ky., introduced legislation
this week that would provide Medicare reimbursement
for an ultrasound screening that detects
potentially fatal abdominal aortic aneurysms.
Coming on the heels of a screening
endorsement by the U.S. Preventive Services
Task Force, the Senate bill would provide
the aneurysm screening for thousands of
at-risk Medicare beneficiaries, including
men and women with a history of smoking,
high blood pressure and atherosclerotic
disease. |
Medtronic
Issues ICD Alert
Medtronic recently
announced that it will voluntarily notify
physicians of a battery shorting mechanism
that may occur with some models of implantable
cardiac defibrillators and cardiac resynchronization
therapy
defibrillators. Click
here to view Medtronic’s product
warning. |
FDA
Issues Alert on Use of Phenergan with Pediatric
Patients The
FDA and Wyeth recently notified healthcare
professionals about revisions to prescribing
information for Phenergan. Labeling changes
reflect that Phenergan is contraindicated
for use in pediatric patients less
than two years of age because of the potential
for fatal respiratory depression. Click
here to read the FDA alert. |
ACC
Cardiologist for a Day Program Wins National
Advocacy Award The
ACC recently received the Showalter Group’s
2005 Political Involvement Innovation Award
for its inventive Cardiologist
for a Day program. Evaluated by public
affairs professionals from around the country,
the Cardiology for a Day program was selected
for its ability to educate legislators and
regulators about the practice realities of
cardiovascular
medicine in an interactive, engaging way.
To learn how you can get involved in the ACC’s
Cardiologist for a Day program, contact stateadvocacy@acc.org.
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