LACMA's advocacy resulted in the passage of a number of policy statements by the CMA.
The Los Angeles County Medical Association delegation to the
California Medical Association House of Delegates had an amazingly
successful and productive meeting this year. LACMA's advocacy on behalf
of our members resulted in the passage of a number of policy statements
by the CMA, including the two highlighted below:
Resolution 408-07, Balance
Billing for All Physicians, was authored by Marcy Zwelling-Aamot, MD,
former LACMA president and candidate for CMA president-elect. In part,
it states:
Resolved, that the CMA ask the AMA
to devote the necessary political and financial resources to introduce
national legislation at the appropriate time to bring about
implementation of Medicare balance billing and to end the budget
neutral restrictions of the current Medicare physician payment
structure that interferes with patient access to care; and be it further
Resolved, that this national
legislation be designed to pre-empt state laws that prohibit balance
billing and prohibit inappropriate inclusion of balance billing bans in
insurance-physician contracts...
This resolution is particularly critical in view of the impending
10-percent cuts in Medicare reimbursement scheduled for Jan. 1, 2008,
as well as the additional 3-percent cut in some urban areas due to the
GPCI adjustment. It is galling that physician practices are subject to
below-market price controls that no other industry experiences. Like
most physicians, I am increasingly bitter about facing higher practice
costs of rent, salaries, supplies and insurance, yet having no way to
obtain increased reimbursement from the Medicare population.
Now, LACMA has achieved a policy statement that the CMA must bring
before the AMA House of Delegates. We will be watching what action the
AMA takes on this important issue.
Resolution 508-07, RICO Settlement Funds and Physician Foundations, was authored by Robert Bitonte, MD, JD, LACMA treasurer. It states:
Resolved, that CMA provide a full
accounting of each foundation that received RICO settlement funds and
their precise expenditures, and provide a copy of each foundation's
work product to each county medical association and to specialty
societies.
As you know, the CMA initiated a class-action lawsuit against a
number of insurance companies that were systematically underpaying
doctors via improper claims processing, downcoding and other unfair
methods. Companies such as Blue Cross, HealthNet and Aetna settled,
resulting in sizable refund checks to individual physicians and more
than $300 million to fund foundations established to protect physicians
from predatory insurance company practices.
LACMA leaders are concerned that we have not seen any results from
the foundation money. I corresponded with the CMA CEO, as well as the
heads of the foundations and received circuitous responses with no
information. This policy requires that the CMA--which has seats on the
foundations' boards--get information about where this money is and how
it is being used, and report back to the membership.
Perhaps $30 million could fund additional lawsuits seeking to
overturn current antitrust restrictions on physician negotiation with
the insurance monopoly, which we all know is destroying medical
practice and the patient-physician relationship.
LACMA's delegation introduced 22 resolutions--12 were adopted in
either a substitute or amended form, six were referred for study or
decision by the CMA board of trustees, and only four were not adopted.
This accomplishment reflects the vigor of the delegates and the
effectiveness of those who spoke at the house.
Sadly, we did not bring a full delegation to the meeting, as a
number of delegates or alternates failed to attend. They will be
removed so that many positions will be available at the next election
cycle. I encourage participation-minded members to seek election in
their districts. If you have questions about getting involved, e-mail
me at president@lacmanet.org.