Monday, December 28, 2009

Senate Passes Health Reform Bill

In a 60-39 party line vote, the Senate passed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in the morning on December 24.

Prior to the Senate vote, AMA President-elect Cecil B. Wilson, MD, announced the Association's backing during a Dec. 21 Capitol Hill appearance with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D, Nev.) and other top Democrats. Dr. Wilson noted that the leaders had amended the bill to eliminate some earlier provisions that had prompted AMA concerns, such as a one-year Medicare pay patch that would have led to a projected 23% cut in 2011, an elective cosmetic surgery tax and a proposed Medicare enrollment fee.

But the AMA will continue to push for additional changes to the legislation during the conference negotiations. The Association, for instance, said it will not support a final House-Senate bill unless lawmakers make key revisions to: a proposed independent Medicare advisory board that could impose pay cuts on physicians, a plan to release Medicare data in the form of physician performance reports, and a requirement that doctors participate in Medicare quality reporting or face penalties.

In order to preserve AMA backing for the health system reform bill, the Association said Congress must also demonstrate that it is on track to approve separate legislation permanently repealing the Medicare physician payment formula before the current rate freeze expires at the end of February.

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