December 17 2012
'No plausible route to entitlement reform that does not include full repeal of SGR'
(Washington) The American College of Physicians (ACP) today urged Congress to pass legislation that will "create a permanent solution to the endless cycle of Medicare physician payment cuts." Three-page letters were sent to U.S. House and Senate leaders emphasizing that "there is no plausible route to entitlement reform that does not include full repeal of the Medicare Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula."
Representing 133,000 physicians, ACP noted the issue is especially timely and critical. "Congress has a unique opportunity now, in the context of discussions on the 'fiscal cliff' and entitlement reform, to create a clear timetable and policy direction, resulting in permanent SGR repeal no later than next year, accompanied by a transition to value-based payment and delivery system reforms," David L. Bronson, MD, FACP, president of ACP told congressional leaders. "The Medicare SGR formula acts as the greatest single barrier to transition to new approaches to develop new payment and delivery models aligned with value to patients."
Specifically, ACP urged Congress to, "prevent the nearly 30 percent cut in Medicare payments to services provided by physicians that will occur after the first of the year--resulting from sequestration and the SGR formula--AND create a legislative pathway and timetable for permanent repeal of the SGR and transition to value-based payment and delivery models."
A three-step process was offered to bring about a permanent replacement for the SGR:
Step 1: Enact legislation now to stop the
scheduled Medicare cut on January 1 that would also provide
direction to the Medicare authorizing committees on a policy
framework, process, and timetable to report comprehensive
legislation to repeal the SGR and transition to value-based
payments, followed by
Step 2: Early 2013: authorizing committees would
hold hearings, consult with physician membership groups and other
stakeholders, and report legislation, no later than June 30,
2013, consistent with the policy directions required by step 1
and summarized in more detail in ACP's letter.
Step 3: No later than September 30, 2013, Congress
enacts comprehensive payment and delivery system reform
legislation, based on the bill(s) reported out of the authorizing
committees in step 2, to achieve full SGR repeal and to establish a
framework of positive incentives for physicians to transition to
value-based payment models.
"We urge you to reach agreement on legislation to: prevent the across-the-board sequestration cuts in critically important health programs," Dr. Bronson concluded, "and especially, the nearly 30 percent Medicare payment cut to physicians; establish a pathway and timetable to eliminate the SGR and create positive incentives for physicians to transition to value-based payments; preserve programs to improve Medicaid and Medicare payments for primary care and GME funding to addressing the growing shortage of primary care physicians and in many other specialties, and to achieve savings in health care spending by addressing the real drivers of excess cost."
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The American College of Physicians is the largest medical specialty organization and the second-largest physician group in the United States. ACP members include 133,000 internal medicine physicians (internists), related subspecialists, and medical students. Internal medicine physicians are specialists who apply scientific knowledge and clinical expertise to the diagnosis, treatment, and compassionate care of adults across the spectrum from health to complex illness. Follow ACP on Twitter and Facebook.