Title: What is Happening Are you Ready
1(No Transcript)
2ACS Advocacy Agenda
- Budget Neutrality
- Medicare Physician Payment
- Trauma
- Surgical Workforce
- Quality Improvement
3Comprehensive Health Reform
- Different from health reform of the 1990s
- All major health issues on the table
- Delivery System Reform
- Coverage
- Financing
4Status of Reform on Capitol Hill
- Senate Finance Policy Options released with
mark-up in June/July - HELP Committee drafting legislation with multiple
mark-ups beginning in mid-June - House committees expected to address before
August recess - Rebasing - included in House and Administration
budget resolutions
5Comprehensive System Delivery Reform Legislation
Must
- Properly allocate resources to improve patient
access to trauma and emergency services - Ensure that access to acute and surgicl care is
included in a basic benefit package for all
individuals - Lower the administrative costs in our health care
system and reallocate those resources to patient
care - Address the decreased access to care and the
costs associated with the practice of defensive
medicine caused by the lack of medical liability
reform and - Level the playing field between physicians and
insurance companies by enacting antitrust reform.
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6Delivery System Reform Must Address the Payment
System!
- Surgery responds to Senate Finance Committee
policy options proposal - College joined by 19 other surgical specialties
in comment letter - To reform Medicares payment system Congress must
first immediately eliminate the SGR. - Surgery opposes another short-term patch that
only temporarily prevents Medicare payment cuts
and does not directly address the problems with
the SGR. - Surgery opposes any measure that would finance
increased payments for certain physicians by an
across-the-board reduction in payments for all
other services. - Congress must incorporate a realistic budget
baseline that provides physicians with positive
updates.
7Addressing the SGR
- No magic bullet on the shelf for permanent SGR
solution - Separate conversion factors for service
categories - Concept took hold last year included by
Chairman Stark in the CHAMP bill - 4 service categories removes surgery from
volume targets impacted by other specialties - Primary care, EM (non-primary care), 10/90-day
globals and other
8Trauma in Health Reform
- ACS leading effort on legislation in health care
reform to help ensure the success of trauma and
emergency systems, trauma centers, and providers
- including trauma surgeons and specialists - Specific Bills Sought through Senate HELP
Committee - National Trauma Center Stabilization Act
- Improving Emergency Care and Response Act
- Emergency Care Coordination Center (ECCC)
authorization
9Surgical Workforce
- Addressing workforce shortages key component of
comprehensive health care reform - Redistribution of unused residency training
positions - focus on primary care and general
surgery - Lifting residency caps - option for addressing
emerging workforce shortages in other medical
specialties - Medicare bonus payments to general surgeons
working in rural areas - Expanding NHSC loan repayment program to surgeons
10Quality Improvements
- First step Stimulus legislation
- Included 400 million for comparative
effectiveness research - Opportunities for ACS NSQIP program
- Additional comparative effectiveness language
- Included in Senate Finance proposal
- Surgery supports well-designed clinical
comparative effective research - Opportunity for surgical clinical data registry
11Why do you need to become politically active?
- Your livelihood is at risk
- Your (and others) practice is threatened
- Your patients may not have a doctor
- You cant win if you dont play
- Even if you are on the right track, you will get
run over if you just sit there. - ? Will Rogers
12What Surgeons Can Do
- Participate in ACSPA-SurgeonsPAC
- Stay informed
- Come to Washington, DC
- Communicate with Representatives and Senators
- Get other surgeons involved
13ACSPA SurgeonsPAC
- Sits at the Table
- Covers the Big Issues
- Gets our Candidates Elected
- Gets our Lobbyists in the Door
14ACSPA-Surgeons PACGoals
- Created to
- Contribute to the campaigns of those Members of
Congress who support the Colleges legislative
goals - Gain BETTER access to high profile Legislators,
especially Committee Chairs and Leadership - Build grassroots and fundraising potential to
affect elections favorable to our legislative
goals.
15ACSPA-Surgeons PACCriteria for Political
Contributions
- The Board considers the following criteria
- in determining political disbursements
- 1. Leadership Position
- 2. Committee Assignment
- 3. Past Voting Record on OUR Issues
- 4. Medical Profession MD, DO, FACS
- 5. Likelihood to Win Polls, District
16Why Support the ACSPA SurgeonsPAC?
- Unified Voice for Surgeons on the Big National
Issues - Larger Constituency
- Established Access to Congressional Offices
- Gets our Candidates Elected to Congress
- Subspecialty PACs are important for focal issues
- Regional PACs are important at state level
17Important SurgeonsPAC Facts
- Only U.S. members can donate to the PAC
- Need for personal funds, not corporate
- ACSPA-SurgeonsPAC can solicit from over 55,000
Members - In 2005, SurgeonsPAC raised 511,644
- (average contribution 300)
- In 2006, SurgeonsPAC raised 442,700
- (average contribution 277)
- In 2007, SurgeonsPAC raised 639,000
- (average contribution 276)
- In 2008, SurgeonsPAC raised 684,509
- (average contribution 293)
18ACSPA Surgeons PAC Financial Overview
- 2007/2008 Election Cycle
- 1,322,759 raised for the 2008 cycle
- (includes both federal and non-federal receipts)
19ACSPA SurgeonsPAC Financial Overview
- 2009
- 220,283 raised so far in 2009
- (includes both federal and non-federal receipts)
- 801 Individual Contributions
- Average donation 275
20Maine Overview
- There are 293 eligible PAC donors in ME
- In 2006 9 members contributed 2,075
- 3 (231 average contribution)
- In 2007 21 members contributed 3,757
- 7 (179 average contribution)
- In 2008 17 members contributed 3,225
- 6 (190 average contribution)
21SurgeonsPAC Donations to Candidates in the
2005/2006 Election Cycle
- Contributions made to 172 Candidates, Leadership
PACs and Party Committees - Total of 594,750
- 73 given to Republicans
- 27 given to Democrats
22SurgeonsPAC Donations to Candidates in the
2007/2008 Election Cycle
- Contributions made to over 189 Candidates,
Leadership PACs and Party Committees - Total of 908,500
- 58 given to Democrats
- 42 given to Republicans
23ACSPA-Surgeons PAC
- In our second election cycle, 2007/2008, the PAC
contributed to 144 candidates up for re-election,
and 135 won. - This gives the PAC an 94 success rate in
congressional campaigns for the cycle.
24- Where do we stand?Physician Specialty
- PAC Receipts
- 2008 Cycle
252008 Election Cycle Specialty Physician PAC
Rankings(Federal Receipts Only)
26Staying Informed
- Bulletin, Surgery News, NewsScope
- Advocacy in Action
- Special Alerts
- Webinars/ conference calls
- Web portal discussion forums
27Come to Washington, DC
- Joint Surgical Advocacy Conference Jointly
sponsored with 18 other surgical groups (March
2010) - Opportunity to be educated on issues and meet
with Senators, Reps and their staff - SurgeonsPAC events
- Become Surgeon Advocates
28Contact Your Senator and RepresentativeFive
Minute Rule
- You have 2 Senators and 1 Representative
- Each has a legislative assistant for health care
- Spend 5 minutes each week and call one of them
- Offer to be a resource
- Provide them with information about what is going
on in state, district and/or hospital - Before you know it, they will be calling you for
information!
29On the Horizon for ACS in Washington
- Work is underway to construct a new Washington
office building - Will serve as a House of Surgery
- Move in date June 2010
- Joint Surgical Advocacy Conference
- March 2010
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31For more information
- Please contact
- Kristin McDonald
- kmcdonald_at_facs.org
- 202-672-1509