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June
27, 2005 |
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| Please
note: The ACC will be closed
Monday, July 4. The next issue of Advocacy
Weekly will be published Tuesday, July
5. |
IMAGING
• ACC
Calls for Collaboration on Imaging Issue |
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REIMBURSEMENT
• Legislators
Ask CMS to Fix Medicare Payment System
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MEDICAL
LIABILITY REFORM
• New Medical Liability
Bill Introduced in House
• Florida Signs
Liability Amendments into Law |
LEGISLATIVE/REGULATORY
• FDA Approves Racially
Targeted Heart Failure Drug |
| IMAGING |
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ACC
Calls for Collaboration on Imaging
Issue
The
ACC joined eleven other medical organizations
in sponsoring a resolution at last
week’s American Medical Association
(AMA) House of Delegates calling for
increased collaboration among medical
specialties to address the rising
volume in imaging services. The resolution,
which passed with overwhelming support,
asks the AMA to actively oppose efforts
by policymakers “to impose policies
designed to control utilization and
costs of medical services unless those
policies can be proven to achieve
cost savings and improve quality.”
The resolution also instructs the
AMA to oppose efforts to limit reimbursement
for imaging services based on medical
specialty.  |
| REIMBURSEMENT |
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Legislators
Ask CMS to Fix Medicare Payment System
In
a letter to the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services (CMS), Reps.
Bill Thomas, R-Calif., and Nancy Johnson,
R-Conn., urged CMS Administrator Mark
McClellan, M.D., Ph.D., to move away
from the current “irrational
system” used to reimburse physicians.
Emphasizing the need to move toward
a system that rewards physicians who
meet specific quality standards, Thomas
and Johnson asked about the agency’s
plans to develop quality indicators
for physicians, reporting systems
for quality data and incentives to
encourage data reporting. Thomas is
Chair of the House Ways and Means
Committee and Johnson serves as Chair
of the Ways and Means Subcommittee
on Health. |
| MEDICAL
LIABILITY REFORM |
New
Medical Liability Bill Introduced in
House
Rep.
James Sensenbrenner, Jr., R-Wisc., is
working on a bill that would revise
the current Help Efficient, Accessible,
Low Cost Health Care (HEALTH) Act aimed
at reforming the current medical liability
system. Sensenbrenner’s proposal
would remove drugs and devices from
the legislation, a concession requested
by some Democrats. The House Judiciary
Committee, which is chaired by Sensenbrenner,
is holding a hearing on the bill tomorrow.
The
Alliance of Specialty Medicine will
submit testimony outlining the impact
of skyrocketing insurance premiums on
patients’ access to care and physicians’
ability to practice.
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Florida
Signs Liability Amendments into Law
Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush, R, signed two bills
last week that stemmed from constitutional
amendments passed in November. The
first bill is based on an amendment
revoking licenses of physicians with
three or more medical malpractice
judgments. The bill specifies that
only incidents occurring after Nov.
2, 2004 and with “clear and
convincing” evidence are impacted
by the new law. The second bill impacts
the release of medical malpractice
records. The recently signed law limits
the release of records to patients
of the facility where an error occurred
and only if the patient has a similar
condition or diagnoses. |
| LEGISLATIVE/REGULATORY |
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FDA
Approves Racially Targeted Heart Failure
Drug
Last
week, the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) approved a drug proven to effectively
treat heart failure in black patients.
The agency said the decision marks
“a step toward the promise of
personalized medicine.” Approval
of the drug, known as BiDil, was based
in part on the African-American Heart
Failure Trial (A-HeFT), which showed
no benefit for the general population
of heart failure patients but a significant
benefit for black patients. Click
here to read more about the FDA
decision. |
| Questions?
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and include the name of the publication
in the subject line. |
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