Senate
Expected to Vote on Medicare in Early June The Senate is expected to vote in early June on Medicare
legislation being crafted by the Senate Finance Committee
to halt the scheduled 10.6 percent physician payment cut.
In a letter sent April 30, ACC President Douglas Weaver, M.D.,
F.A.C.C., thanked Senate Finance Committee Chair Max Baucus
(D-MT) for his efforts to halt the 10.6 percent Medicare physician
payment cut and to provide positive updates for 18 months,
as well as relief for physicians in rural areas. The letter
indicates the ACC's willingness to work with Sen. Baucus to
replace the sustainable growth rate formula with a new system
that aligns incentives for the provision of appropriate, high-quality
patient care and more accurately reflects physician practice
costs. In addition, the letter thanked Sen. Baucus for his
commitment to extending the Physician Quality Reporting Initiative.
To view a copy of the letter, visit: http://www.acc.org/advocacy/advoc_issues/rc_medicare.htm.
Members are urged to contact their senators and ask them
to support 18 months of positive Medicare physician payments,
and ask them not to use cuts to medical imaging payments to
offset new costs. To contact your senators, call the ACC's
toll-free Grassroots Hotline at (800) 210-7193.
Congress
Renews Efforts to Limit Physician-Owned Specialty Hospitals Language that would significantly prohibit the existence
and growth in physician-owned specialty hospitals is once
again making its way in the Senate, this time in the war supplemental
spending bill to be taken up by the Senate Appropriations
Committee later this week. Efforts to undermine physician-owned
hospitals have been present in other bills, such as the House
version of the mental health parity bill and the Children's
Health and Medicare Protection Act of 2007. Most recently,
efforts were made to attach similar language to the Senate
Farm Bill. The ACC opposes language to prohibit the existence
and growth in physician-owned specialty hospitals and urges
members to call their Senators and Representatives to urge
them to keep specialty hospital language from any legislation.
To contact your lawmakers directly, call the ACC toll-free
grassroots hotline at 1-800-210-7193.
Senate
Finance Holds First in a Series of Health Reform Hearings The Senate Finance Committee last week launched the
first of a series of at least eight hearings this year on
health care reform. The first hearing featured testimony from
former Health and Human Services Secretaries Tommy Thompson
and Donna Shalala. Thompson testified that initial reform
should focus more narrowly on revamping Medicare. While Shalala
disagreed with the narrow focus, she did argue that fixing
Medicare should be key component of any health system reform.
The hearings are designed to help the Finance Committee “prepare
for the challenge of building consensus.” Committee
Chair Max Baucus (D-MT) cited several “shared principles”
including universal coverage, reducing costs, payment incentives
for rewarding quality and efficiency and greater use of health
information technology as a few of the proposals “that
can transform our delivery system.” The Finance Committee
plans to have two more health overhaul hearings before hosting
a June 16 “summit” for the entire Congress. The
ACC is closely following the hearings and looking for opportunities
to provide testimony on the physician’s role in health
system reform. For more on the ACC's health care reform efforts,
visit http:\\qualityfirst.acc.org.
REGULATORY
AND PAYER
CMS
Announces PHR Pilot Program The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) last Wednesday announced a pilot to test the use an
online personal health record (PHR) by Medicare beneficiaries
in South Carolina. The project, called "MyPHRSC,"
is intended to determine future steps for PHR use by Medicare
beneficiaries, and to encourage beneficiaries to use online
resources to track health care services and improve communication
with their providers. The PHRs will be populated automatically
with key information from hospital and provider medical claims
after the patient registers and requests the information.
Prescription drug information will not be automatically entered
into the PHR but patients can choose to enter the information.
The PHR will allow the patient to control who has access to
view the information and with whom to share the information.
It also offers educational tools for patients about certain
health topics. The pilot, which began on April 4, is scheduled
to last for 12 months. For more information about the pilot
program, visit its Web site at www.MyPHRSC.com.
FDA
Reminds Health Care Professionals of Heparin Recall FDA is reminding health care professionals about
the recall of injectable heparin products and heparin flush
solutions that may be contaminated with oversulfated chondroitin
sulfate. Since the recall, contaminated heparin products have
been found in use at medical care facilities in one state,
and it is suspected that medical facilities in other states
also have not fully acted on the recall. The FDA requests
that medical practitioners and facilities review and examine
all drug and device storage areas to ensure that all heparin
products have been removed and are not available for use.
In addition, the FDA is informing medical professionals about
other medical devices that contain, or are coated with, heparin.
For more information, visit the FDA Web site here.
QUALITY
Registration
Deadline Approaches for First CBCCT Exam The regular deadline for registering for the Certification
Board of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography (CBCCT)'s first
examination for certification in CCT is on May 23, with the
exam to be held on Sept. 22. The exam will be offered in Prometric
testing centers across the country and will consist of up
to 200 multiple-choice questions, lasting four and one half
hours. Each question will include four choices, only one of
which is the correct or best answer, and some questions involve
the interpretation of images and figures. The questions are
based on a fall 2007 analysis of the practice of CCT, which
was intended to define the responsibilities, tasks and knowledge
necessary for physicians to practice in the CCT field. A tutorial
that includes sample questions is available online here.
The regular application deadline for the exam is May 23,
at a cost of $895.00. The late application deadline is July
25, at a cost of $1,095.00. The Candidate Bulletins and application
forms are available at the CBCCT Web site here.
Qualifying ACC members are encouraged to register for the
certification examination by the May 23 deadline.
STATE
Michigan
Senate Approves Smoke-Free Bill The Michigan Senate on May 8 voted 25-12 to approve
a bill that would ban smoking in all Michigan bars, restaurants
and workplaces. The Senate voted on the bill after a special
administrative procedure was used to release it from its committee
without a vote. The use of the administrative procedure to
release the bill highlights the strong pressure exerted by
state advocates for smoke-free legislation, including the
Michigan Chapter of the ACC, which held its first "Cardiology
Day at the Capitol" on April 23 to advocate for passage
of the bill. The event proved a great success, bringing together
more than 20 cardiovascular specialists and representatives
from the American Heart Association with lawmakers. After
the event, Chapter members continued their advocacy efforts
by placing calls to senators to gain support for the bill.
The House in December 2007 passed its version of the legislation,
which included exemptions -- not passed in the Senate -- for
cigars bars, casinos and bingo halls. Because the Senate version
is different than the House version, the bill must return
to the House for additional consideration. Gov. Jennifer Granholm
(D) has said she will sign smoke-free legislation.