policies and standards of the texas medical association, the accreditation council for continuing...

44

Upload: shayna-heatley

Post on 15-Dec-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association
Page 2: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association require that speakers and planners for continuing medical education activities disclose any relevant

financial relationship they may have with commercial entities whose products, devices or services may be discussed in the

content of the CME activity.

The content of this material does not relate to any product of a commercial interest; therefore, there are no relevant financial

relationships to disclose.

Disclosure Statement

Page 3: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Identify the unique health care challenges facing Texas physicians and their patients;

Describe TMA’s recommendations to address the health care challenges facing physicians and their patients;

Discuss the advocacy actions TMA has taken to deal with the issue(s); and

Implement steps in their community to improve health care policy and legislation.

Healthy Vision 2020 Objectives

Page 4: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

1. Improve Texas’ Physician Workforce

2. Protect Physician’s Independent Medical Judgment

3. Promote Efficient & Effective Models of Care

4. Repeal Harmful & Onerous Regulations

5. Invest in Prevention

6. Protect Fair Civil Justice System

7. Provide Appropriate Funding

8. Fair & Transparent Insurance Markets

Healthy Vision 2020 Issues

Page 5: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Improve Physician Workforce

Page 6: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Texas Needs More Physicians

Page 7: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Funding Cuts Crippled Physician Pipeline

Family Practice Residency Program cut by 75%

Statewide Primary Care Preceptorship Program and the Primary Care Residency Program not funded.

State GME formula funding cut 32%

Physician loan repayment programs one eliminated; the other cut by 78%

Page 8: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Expanding Scope: Not A Workforce Solution

TMA strongly supports physician-led teams, with each practitioner bringing important skill sets and training to patient

care.

Future: Physicians will become both providers AND managers of

health care.

Page 9: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Restore funding cuts and programs.

Link undergraduate expansion with GME.

Encourage Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to evaluate workforce needs and conduct research.

Incentivize physicians to practice in rural Texas.

Reinstate physician loan repayment programs.

HV 2020 Recommendations

Page 10: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Support expansions of scope consistent with team care.

Strengthen the Texas Medical Board’s regulatory oversight of physician supervision of and delegation to nonphysicians.

HV 2020 Recommendations

Page 11: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Protect Independent Medical Judgment

Page 12: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Preserved Texas’ ban on the corporate practice of medicine.

Passed employment bills with strong protections for clinical autonomy and independent medical judgment.

First state to pass statutes specifically protecting physicians’ clinical judgment. Hospital settings include: 501(a) corporations,

rural county hospital districts, large urban hospital districts, and the newly established Texas health care collaboratives.

Physician Employment Protections

Page 13: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Nonprofit health care corporations, commonly referred to as 501(a) corporations.

Physician board of directors is responsible for all clinical matters.

Physicians now have important liability protections within a 501(a) corporation. The employed physician, “retains independent medical

judgment in providing care to patients, and the health organization may not discipline the physician for reasonably advocating for patient care.”

501(a) Corporations: SB 1661

Page 14: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Rural hospitals in counties of <50,000 population can employ physicians.

Guarantees physicians’ independent medical judgment.

Medical staff is responsible for all clinical matters – bylaws, credentialing, peer review, etc.

Ensures employed and independent physicians have same rights.

A CMO is selected by the Medical Staff The CMO has a duty to report instances of interference to TMB

Rural County Hospital Districts SB 894

Page 15: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Multiple laws were structured to meet the hospital districts statutory mission to provide care to the indigent. Applies to Harris, Bexar, El Paso, and Tarrant

counties, and the Scottish Rite Hospital in Dallas.

Allows for physician employment with strict protections.

Ensures Medical Executive Board establishes rules for all clinical matters: credentialing, peer review, quality assurance programs, etc.

Large Urban Hospital Districts

Page 16: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

New law protects patients and their physicians in new health care collaboratives.

Ensures physicians have equal say and vote in a collaborative arrangement’s governing board

Allows physicians to have: Equal say and vote in a collaborative

arrangement's governing board, Due process protections, and The ability to participate in more than one

collaborative arrangement in their community

Health Care Collaboratives

Page 17: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Patient-physician relationship jeopardized by new law and rules.

Department of State Health Services rules impose a “gag order” on physicians who participate in Women’s Health Program.

A physician, nor anyone else in the practice, cannot discuss elective abortion issues with patient.

Women’s Health Program

Page 18: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

U.S. is spending much more for older ages

Source: Fischbeck, Paul. “US-Europe Comparisons of Health Risk for Specific Gender-Age Groups.” Carnegie Mellon University; September, 2009. 

Health Care Spending at End of Life

Page 19: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

1976 (revised 1997): 2nd state to pass a law empowering families & physicians to make medical treatment decisions near the end of life.

Remarkable success in achieving 3 major goals: Improving communication and patient choice Decreasing pain and suffering, and Providing appropriate treatment without outside legal

intrusion

Legal definitions of terminal and irreversible illness.

Created a process to guide resolution of both right-to-die and medical futility disputes.

Texas’ Advanced Directives Act

Page 20: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Protect the patient/physician relationship.

Protect physician’s independent medical judgment in all employment relationships.

Strengthen new employment laws..

Respect patient’s final days (TADA, DNRs, and stop legislation to treat until transfer).

HV 2020 Recommendations

Page 21: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Right Care

Right Person

Right Time and

Right Place...

Efficient/Effective Models of Care

Page 22: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Pilot in Colorado, New Hampshire, and New York: 18% in admission rates vs. 18% non PCMH group. 5% drop in ER visits; 4% in non-PCMH

Oklahoma saw complaints about access to same-day or next-day care drop from 1,670 in 2007 (year before PCMH implementation) to 13 in 2009 (year after)

North Carolina saved nearly $1.5 billion in costs between 2007 and 2009

Medical Home

Page 23: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Promote patient-centered medical home for every Texan. A physician led team that ensures that care is:

Accessable Coordinated Comprehensive Patient centered Culturally relevant

Support PCMH model in Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial health plans.

HV 2020 Recommendations

Page 24: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Repeal Harmful & Onerous Regulations

Page 25: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

“Patient” not even mentioned in PPACA.

Act

Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act

Page 26: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Invest in Prevention

Page 27: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Texans Are Killing Themselves

Chronic diseaseChronic disease Obesity EpidemicObesity Epidemic

Page 28: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association
Page 29: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Encourage Texans to take personal responsibility for their own health.

Invest in a public health-prevention infrastructure.

Increase immunization by reducing barriers for all Texans.

Invest in obesity control.

Invest in tobacco cessation.

HV 2020 Recommendations

Page 30: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Protect Fair Civil Justice System

Page 31: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Reforms are Working

Page 32: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Preserve Texas’ landmark liability reforms.

Ensure a fair and strong Texas Medical Board.

Oppose federal preemption of state civil justice reforms.

HV 2020 Recommendations

Page 33: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Dual-Eligible Cuts

Provide Appropriate Funding

Page 34: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Most of PPACA ruled constitutional, including the controversial individual mandate.

Congress CANNOT require states to give up ALL of their federal Medicaid funding if they decide NOT to expand Medicaid.

States can keep federal share of Medicaid money for their existing Medicaid programs.

U.S. Supreme Court Ruling: Now What?

Page 35: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

$27 billion budget deficit in 2011.

HHSC forced to trim $3 billion in Medicaid (GR) for 2012-13:

$1 billion-plus, provider/health plan cuts

Medicaid HMO statewide expansion

Benefit/service reductions

Utilization management

Fraud and abuse investigations

1115 Waiver

State Medicaid Funding: A Look Back

Page 36: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Women’s Health/Family Planning

Lawmakers reduced family planning funding by $75 million — 66%.

Legislative Budget Board estimated:

20,500 more Medicaid births due to limited access to birth control.

Higher cost to Medicaid, $100,000 million.

Prohibited Planned Parenthood from participating in Women’s Health Program.

State Medicaid Funding: A Look Back

Page 37: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Physicians’ payments slashed more than 20-percent for care to poor and elderly patients. Dual-eligible patients, dependent on Medicare and

Medicaid.

Cuts eliminated Medicare Part B coinsurance and deductible payments (if it exceeded the Medicaid allowable). Before cut, Medicaid paid 20% of patient’s co-insurance.

Before cut, Medicaid paid patient’s Medicare deductible.

Medicaid payments traditionally much lower than Medicare.

Dual-Eligible Payment Cuts

Page 38: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association
Page 39: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association
Page 40: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Medicare Meltdown Redux

Page 41: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

Ensure competitive Medicaid and CHIP payments for physicians.

Repeal the dual-eligible payment cut.

Stop the Medicare Meltdown – Repeal the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR).

Repeal or modify the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB).

HV 2020 Recommendations

Page 42: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

What Can You Do?

Page 43: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

November 2012

Page 44: Policies and standards of the Texas medical Association, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the American Medical Association

QuestionsFor more information: Call (512) 370-1300