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How The AMA Is Playing Healthcare Reform

By Ken Terry | Oct 24, 2009

Have you seen the new American Medical Association ads supporting healthcare reform? I’m referring to the ones in which an AMA spokesman notes that certain regions of the country have only one or two health insurers and suggests that if they had more competition, health costs would come down. The ads also specifically support a public option.

An innocent viewer might think that the AMA had fundamentally changed its position over the years. For many decades, the medical association fought any kind of reform that would increase government intervention in health care. And the right wing has called the public option the beginning of a government takeover of healthcare-the very type of “socialism” that the AMA always warned us about.

But while the AMA has conceded the inevitability of reform, it is trying to shape it to advance doctors’ goals. Take insurance competition. For the past several years, the association has been publishing the results of surveys that show there are progressively fewer health plans in each market-and in some markets, only one plan dominates. That can be a problem for employers and consumers, but it’s an even bigger threat to physicians, who have less ability to bargain with very large plans. So anything that will boost competition among insurers is good news to physicians.

How about the public option? Let’s start with the fact that most physicians hate insurance companies, which restrict their access to patients and try to influence how they practice. So from their viewpoint, a public plan patterned after Medicare would be a step in the right direction, because it would include all willing providers and would not manage care. (Medicare does deny more claims than private plans do, but that’s another story.) Not surprisingly, a majority of physicians support the public option, and so does the AMA.

But that’s just part of the AMA strategy. As AMA leaders have made abundantly clear, they would not favor a public plan that paid Medicare rates and required physicians to participate in it as a condition of Medicare participation. In fact, AMA President James J. Rohack, MD, recently boasted that the AMA had helped defeat an amendment to the Senate Finance Committee bill that would have created a government plan with both of those features.

As things stand now in Congress, a public option is starting to look more likely to be included in the final legislation. But the final House measure will probably not encompass a public plan that pays Medicare rates, and the Senate version will likely be even weaker. And none of the bills currently on the table would require doctors to participate in anything.

So the AMA figures it has nothing to lose by defending the public option. If it passes, the government may set up plans that will compete with private insurers all over the country. If these public plans have to negotiate with doctors on rates, the physicians will be in a better position with the private carriers as well. Of course, health care might cost more as a result.

If you think this is a fanciful reading, consider that the AMA’s number one priority throughout the healthcare debate has been to “fix” the Medicare payment formula that threatens to chop Medicare reimbursement of doctors by 21 percent this year and more later on. Of course, that doesn’t mean replacing the formula with something that will get costs under control in the long term. No, it means throwing it out entirely so that doctors will continue to get paid more when they do more.

The bottom line: Physicians, like every other player in the healthcare realm, are fighting for their own advantage, first and foremost.

Ken Terry, a former senior editor at Medical Economics Magazine, is the author of the book Rx For Health Care Reform. follow all BNET Healthcare posts on Twitter.

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    Of particular interest is a move within the AMA to rescind that organization's support of reform with a public option... What's up with that? Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News...

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    The New York Times is reporting that the American Medical Association will be lobbying Congress to oppose a public health insurance program, an integral part of health reform. In an attempt at damage control, the AMA has responded with a statement declaring it would support a public option if it operates like a for-profit insurance agency. In...

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    The American Medical Association is walking back from its strong opposition to the public option. This morning, the New York Times’ Robert Pear reported that in comments submitted to the Senate Finance Committee, the AMA stated that “the introduction of a new public plan threatens to restrict patient choice by driving out private insurers,...

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  •  
    1

    korydc

    10/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How The AMA Is Playing Healthcare Reform

    Hey Ken,
    Thanks for you post and I've just found your blogs about
    healthcare reform. I'm an independent health insurance agent
    in Texas and most likely will be put out of business by this
    legislation but not sure, guess have to see how it all shakes
    out.
    I talk to people everyday that I cannot insure due to a pre-
    existing condition on individual coverage and they do not have
    access to group coverage. I also talk to people everyday that
    have had a spouse reach age 65 and quit work and now they
    are without insurance and even if they are very healthy a plan
    with co-pay options for visits, preventative care, prescription
    and medical, even with a higher deductible of $3500 to $5000
    the average cost in Houston in going to be upwards of
    $500/mo. For people living on social security that's a huge
    chunk. Even if the people in an example such as that, have the
    money, often if again they are uninsurable due to pre-existing
    condition, they have not an option other than state pool and
    cost really makes that, no option. So for those reasons I'd like
    to see real healthcare reform but what is out there now is not
    that it would seem.
    Amazes me that the liberals will have us travel down the road
    that others have gone and know are going bankrupt including,
    our own Medicare system. It is ten times over budget and
    people don't think this will be as well? They did this in Mass.,
    it's not working. When will everyone on both sides of the aisle
    realize that the politicians are taking us for a ride in which the
    final destination is a brick wall and we are rapidly approaching it
    and the liberals want to just keep giving it more gas to hit the
    wall faster. Sometimes, I feel like I'm in a theme park ride, you
    know the one where you are on the roller coaster and it looks
    like you are fixing to hit a wall and then it dives under it &
    through a tunnel? I think this roller coaster is fixing to derail!

    -Losing my mind,

    Kory Cochran
    Independent Health Insurance Agent
    www.health1texas.com

  •  
    2

    ejhonda

    10/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How The AMA Is Playing Healthcare Reform

    If anyone watched the 60 Minutes special on Medicare/Medicaid fraud last night, they should realize that the current system is doomed. Any system that allows billions to be stolen in very simple ways without any meaningful oversight is bound to failure. Liberal or right wing has nothing to do with it. The problem is creating a system that is able to outsmart the thieves that infest this society and the medical field - insurers, agents, patients, providers of all sorts.

    Any system, no matter how well intentioned it is, will need to have firewalls in place to prevent the looting of the funds that currently takes place by those who operate in it. That is the real challenge, but it gets lost in all the 'liberal versus right wing' shouters who drown out any intelligent discussion and thought on the matter. Both sides are equally guilty of allowing this corruption to fester, but the right wing's answer of "just cut off the money" pretty much tosses the baby with the bathwater.

    Hopefully intelligence will prevail, but it needs all the help the American people can provide it in order to have a chance. And so far, we aren't helping it.

  •  
    3

    AK1976

    10/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How The AMA Is Playing Healthcare Reform

    Exactly EJ....regardless of what "side" you are on, Washington has NO IDEA what they are doing, they are sitting behind closed doors trying to figure out how they can "sell" reform to all the stakeholders, if there are objections - they dont change the plan of action, they simply change the name of what it is, thinking that will solve the problem.

    Let's not forget Govt has been the largest generator of fraud and waste in the current healthcare model and now they want us to believe they will not only "clean up" this "waste" but also make it more effecient moving forward. This is idealism at its finest - void of any sound evidence that it can actually be done.

    Why not prove they can cut costs before even talking about access? Accountability - where is it?

  •  
    4

    ric822

    10/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How The AMA Is Playing Healthcare Reform

    There are many reasons why medical costs are so high, among them it Government Regulations and lack of the Government paying adequate reimbursement for medical procedures through Medicare. The current legislation, the so-called "Health Insurance Reform" does nothing about either of these other than make them much worse.

  •  
    5

    AK1976

    10/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How The AMA Is Playing Healthcare Reform

    Kory you're 100% correct....

    We're dealing with people like Pelosi who makes outrageous claims like the expiration of the Bush Tax Cuts is not a tax increase, but rather a "removal of a tax decrease" huh?

    The liberals really do think Americans are a bunch of idiots, they are constantly changing the rules during the game and changing the name to cover up the fact that essentially all of the policies put into place have failed

    "Stimulus package" doesnt create jobs - so let's call it "recovery package"

    No one supports a "Govt Option", let's call it a "Public option"...ohhh "Public Option" still isnt popular?...let's call it the "Consumer Option"

    300k people lost their jobs this month, but the overall unemployment "rate" has "decreased"...how...easy...we just wont count people who have been uneployed for a long time anymore.

    This is the kind of nonesense coming out of Washington - I'm an indepedent and it's embarrassing and pathetic the spin the liberals are putting on everything to try and ram healthcare reform and their other agendas through before anyone can take notice about the details....

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