Camila Knowles Friday, May 3, 2013
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Transcript of Camila Knowles Friday, May 3, 2013
Camila KnowlesFriday, May 3, 2013
Washington UpdateGeorgia Academy of Healthcare
Attorneys
Congress: Is it Broken?Can it be fixed?
1. Issues
2. Challenges
3. Trust & Hope
Congress Today
Fiscal Cliff
Marketplace Fairness Act
Issues
24-hour news cycle
Fundraising requirement
Politics back home
Partisanship
Challenges
Lack of trust
Efforts to build trust
Trust v. political self-interest
Trust
Immigration Reform• On April 15, S. 744, the “Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and
Immigration Modernization Act,” was introduced by Senator Rubio and the Gang of 8.
• On April 15, 2013, S. 744 was marked up for the first time and will likely begin the amendment process is likely to begin on May 9.
The Affordable Care Act (Obamacare)• We cannot afford trillions of
dollars in new spending and debt while diminishing our care.
• The government option is the wrong option. It will eliminate competition between providers, eventually leading to a takeover that would result in delayed, denied, and rationed care.
• Bureaucrats in Washington cannot stand between patients and doctors.
Supreme Court Ruling• On June 28, after three months of reviewing the constitutionality of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (P.L. 111-148; ACA), the U.S. Supreme Court ruled a majority of the health care law to be constitutional by a vote of 5–4.
• The most controversial provision within the law, the individual mandate requiring all Americans to purchase health insurance the federal government deems appropriate, was affirmed by the court as a legal exercise of Congress's power to tax.
• However, the court ruled that the law's Medicaid expansion could not be implemented, and each state has the opportunity to decide on whether to expand its Medicaid program without fear of retribution from the federal government.
• The court's ruling does not change the fact that there have been major complications trying to implement this problem filled law.
Medicaid Expansion and Georgia
• An expansion of Medicaid coverage up to 133% of the federal poverty level (FPL) would be devastating to state budgets.
• Countless governors have spoken out against this mandate upon their states.
• If Georgia had opted for the expansion, it is estimated to have added $970 million to its budget over ten years.
ACA impact on DSH Payments
• For FY 2014 through 2020, DSH payments will be reduced by 50 percent once the rate of uninsurance in a state decreases by 45 percent.
• As the rate of uninsurance continues to decline, the states’ DSH allotments will be reduced by a corresponding amount.
• Payment reductions must be considered an overpayment to the state to be disallowed against the states’ regular quarterly draw for spending.
Graduate Medical Education (GME)• Approximately one-third of the country’s doctors are 55 or older, and
nearing retirement • Experts estimate that 130,000 new physicians would be necessary to
eliminate the current physician workforce shortage
• Georgia has 17 residency sponsoring institutions with 174 programs and 2,241 approved positions.
• Georgia’s institutions train 1,177 residents in primary care. They host 26 core residencies and 68 fellowships, numbers that would be devastated by cuts to GME.
GME Cont. • On April 18, Senator Chambliss joined Senator Isakson
and other colleagues in sending a letter to the LHHS Appropriations Chairman and Ranking Member requesting full funding for Children’s Hospitals Graduate Medical Education (CHGME).
• Hospitals participating in the CHGME program train one half of the nation’s entire pediatric workforce.
Fiscal Effort• Sequestration hit Medicare
with an across-the-board 2% cut, which began in January 2013,
• This equals more than $11 billion in cuts annually to Medicare payments for doctors, hospitals and other healthcare providers.