Attached you find a recent AMA press release highlighting the important accomplishment of our AMA and other physician groups including the American Academy of Family Physicians to STOP the looming 25% Medicare cut for ONE year . This will protect many physicians practices from financial distress and will maintain and preserve access of seniors to physicians and other healthcare professionals. Now is the time to rally behind our AMA and to join this great organization to continue working on a long-term solution of the flawed physician reimbursement formula.
Yours
Bernd
AMA Outreach Recruiter
AMA: Congress Passes One-Year Delay Of Medicare Physician Cut
Bill Now Moves to President for Signature
For immediate release:
Dec. 9, 2010
Statement attributable to:
Cecil B. Wilson, MD
President, American Medical Association
“The AMA welcomes bipartisan House passage of legislation to stop the Medicare physician payment cut for one year. Stopping the steep 25 percent Medicare cut for one year was vital to preserve seniors’ access to physician care in 2011. Many physicians made clear that this year’s roller coaster ride, caused by five delays of this year’s cut, forced them to make difficult practice changes like limiting the number of Medicare patients they could treat.
“The AMA will be working closely with congressional leadership in the new year to develop a long-term solution to this perennial Medicare problem for seniors and their physicians. This one-year delay comes right as the oldest baby boomers reach age 65, adding urgency to the need for a long-term solution before this demographic tsunami swamps the Medicare program.
“Now that the legislation has passed both the U.S. Senate and House, the bill moves to the President to be signed into law. The AMA thanks bipartisan leaders in both the Senate and House and President Obama for their leadership on this issue to preserve seniors’ health care. The joint efforts of AARP, the military community, AMA and other physician groups helped make this one year delay a reality for patients and their physicians.”
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Media contact:
Katherine Hatwell
American Medical Association
(202) 789-7419
katherine.hatwell@ama-assn.org
Brenda Craine
Director, AMA Media Relations
(202) 789-7447
brenda.craine@ama-assn.org
Follow AMA on Twitter and Facebook.
Saturday, December 11, 2010
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