Showing posts with label physician Quality Assurance Assessment Program (QAAP). Show all posts
Showing posts with label physician Quality Assurance Assessment Program (QAAP). Show all posts

Oct 16, 2009

Dueling doctors


Lansing is the site of many protests, rallies and demonstrations as constituents and advocacy groups attempt to lobby and influence lawmakers.

The budget process has spurred plenty of rallies, like the one held on Sept. 24 when doctors and human service advocates descended on Lansing to protest the Department of Community Health budget that cut the reimbursement rate to health care providers for Medicaid by 8 percent. The rate paid to doctors and hospitals that treat poor and low-income patients has been an easy target of cuts, and those providing the care are losing money to the point that they don’t want to see Medicaid patients.

Subscription only Gongwer covered the rally, and doctors, like emergency room doctor James Fox, said the 8 percent cut could crush the state’s health care system and force doctors out of practice and put ERs in jeopardy.

"Another cut to Medicaid would cause a death spiral where people will wait to get care and end up at the hospital where costs for treatment are even higher," Dr. Fox told Gongwer.

Patrick Wardell, CEO of Hurley Medical Center in Flint, told Gongwer that the 8 percent cut would result in a projected loss of about $8 million and potentially a reduction in the quality of critical care such as burn treatment, neonatal care and other specialty areas that 23 surrounding counties depend on the hospital to deliver.

“The hospital can't sustain these cuts without compromising care," said Wardell said, adding that staff would probably be one of the first areas they would trim, since it accounts for up to 75 percent of the facilities' expenses.

So on Oct. 6 the House addressed those concerns and passed House Bill 5386 that enacts the physician Quality Assurance Assessment Program (QAAP) that imposes a 3 percent gross revenues tax on physicians. Revenue collected from doctors would be matched with Federal funds bringing in $2.70 for every $1 the QAAP raises. Using these matching funds, the state would then significantly increase Medicaid reimbursement to doctors, bringing them up to Medicare standards.

Guess what? Doctors - primarily private practice doctors - are against this, and they are predicting the sky will fall if this becomes law, even though doctors who treat Medicaid patients will see significant increases in income.

In fact, the Michigan State Medical Society is sponsoring a rally of its own in Lansing on Tuesday, calling it the “White Coat Rally.” It will coincide with the first Senate committee hearing on the bill, set for 1 p.m. Tuesday Oct. 20 in front the Community Health Appropriations Subcommittee in the Senate Hearing Room on the ground floor of the Boji Tower.

The group is making dubious claims that it will push doctors out of Michigan, and asking if other professions would be willing to accept a 3 percent tax on their income. To me, the answer is yes, if I get a 3-6 percent pay raise like they will.

The result is that many providers will not only break even on the tax, they will actually earn more money from the increased reimbursements than they pay out in the tax. And the state has a track record that this works.

This is not a new idea. It is designed to mirror successful programs with hospitals and nursing homes that the state has run for several years. The concept is to assess a category of Medicaid provider, pool the revenue, match that pool with Federal Medicaid funds to create a pool 3-4 times larger, and then redistribute most of that pool back to providers in the form of higher Medicaid reimbursement rates.

The increase in the Medicaid reimbursement rate would bring doctors up to the standard Medicare rates. Doctors with a higher percentage of Medicaid patients will make more money.

The plan will encourage physicians to accept more or begin accepting Medicaid patients. This will increase access to care for our poorest citizens and should in time reduce our overall expenditures on health care due to increased primary care visits and decreased emergency room visits.

Not only will it increase income for many physicians, it will also provide an opportunity for the state to continue other vital public health programs. On top of restoring that cut and increasing reimbursements to Medicare levels, we could also restore some spending for mental health services, prevention programs, substance abuse, local public health offices and other vital programs through the Department of Community Health budget.

Oct 8, 2009

Livingston County Republicans breach the public trust

As expected, Livingston County’s state Legislative delegation is toeing the Republican line on the budgets cuts that will devastate the state, but the comments of Rep. Bill Rogers, R, Brighton, are becoming screechy.

Just minutes after that the House adjoined on Tuesday after a marathon session that lasted until almost 9 p.m. where a modest revenue increase was approved, Rogers’s staffer sent out a press release blasting the increase.

The House approved a physician Quality Assurance Assessment Program (QAAP) that assesses a 3 percent tax on doctors. Revenue collected from doctors would be matched with Federal funds bringing in $2.70 for every $1 the QAAP raises, and those matching funds would be used to increase Medicaid reimbursement to doctors, bringing them up to Medicare standards. The Department of Community Health budget just approved last month cut the reimbursement rate by 8 percent, putting hospitals in danger of going into bankruptcy and causing some doctors to stop treating Medicaid patients.

But Rogers told the Livingston County Daily Press & Argus that the increase is "a stunning breach of the public trust" that would make it harder to live and work in this state. Please.

If you want a stunning breach of public trust, how about telling high school students that if they do well on the MEAP test they will earn the Michigan Promise scholarship, but once they are enrolled in college, we take it away. That is a breach of the public trust.

He then said he was "outraged" by the proposals, which he said were introduced in "the 11th hour under the cover of darkness." He can be outraged all he wants, but the 11th hour charge is what’s really outrageous. The proposal has been around since late July.

According to the article, Rogers and Rep. Cindy Denby, R-Handy Township, both said the proposals broke an agreement between state House Speaker Andy Dillon, D-Redford Township, and Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop, R-Rochester, to balance the budget without raising taxes.

Simply not true. Dillon made the deal without the agreement of this caucus, and they both left out the second half of the agreement: Republicans would support supplemental appropriations bills to restore some of the cuts. Dillon said all along he would look to safeguard K-12 education, college scholarships, local police and fire protection and health care for children and seniors.