LACMA doctors make an impact at the CMA's Leadership Academy.
Whether you were interested in Wal-Mart's pending retail clinics, the
tiered physician networks begun by for-profit health plans, or the
future of U.S. healthcare in general, the California Medical
Association's May 2-4 Leadership Academy in Anaheim presented a deep
well of information and viewpoints. All the while, doctors from the Los
Angeles Medical Association made their presences known, asking
questions and joining the debate.
Judging by audience response, the most popular presentation was
author Ron Galloway's "Wal-Mart and the Future of Healthcare," which
laid out the retail colossus' likely plans for entering the retail
clinic market. Close runners-up included CMA Vice President of
Government Relations Dustin Corcoran's breakdown of the likelihood of
meaningful healthcare reform, an irreverent healthcare policy
discussion by U.S. Rep. Pete Stark, and a blistering broadside against
influences on the medical profession and organized medicine's policy
choices delivered by Harvard Medical School Professor of Medicine and
Social Medicine Arnold Relman.
Most visible among LACMA physicians and leaders was President-Elect
Howard Krauss, MD, who served as a panelist in a discussion on retail
clinics, allied health practitioners and scope of practice. In his role
as chair of the CMA Scope of Practice Forum, Dr. Krauss showed a brief
presentation lightheartedly discussing the serious topic of how
physicians are increasingly sidelined as healthcare evolves. He aimed
his critique at Medicare and Medi-Cal cuts, pay-for-performance
initiatives-which he calls "stealth fighters" fighting against clinical
judgment-payer-centered standards of care and prior approvals, to name
only a few targets.
Additionally, nearly every presenter answered questions from LACMA
physicians who lined up at the microphones to add their knowledge to
the discussion or debate a point.