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Contact: amurphy@acc.org;
202-375-6476
August 2, 2007
American College of Cardiology Statement
on the Children’s Health and Medicare Protection Act
of 2007 (CHAMP Act)
The Children’s Health and Medicare Protection
Act of 2007 (CHAMP Act) (H.R. 3162) passed the House with
a vote of 225-204 Wednesday evening. The American College
of Cardiology (ACC) urges lawmakers to address serious concerns
about this bill’s proposed new physician payment structure.
The CHAMP Act includes much-needed proposals to head off
scheduled Medicare payment cuts to doctors totaling 10 percent
in 2008 and 5 percent in 2009, replacing them with a small
positive update in each of the two years. Without such relief,
cardiologists on average are facing a 15 percent reduction
in Medicare reimbursement in 2008.
Unfortunately, however, the bill also includes a new payment
structure based on a system of separate expenditure targets
that are arbitrarily set without taking into account the appropriate
growth of services provided to Medicare beneficiaries. This
type of structure would only perpetuate the flawed payment
system. Many services that are critical to the everyday care
of cardiovascular patients would be unfairly penalized under
a separate expenditure target system unless the targets take
into account appropriate growth.
While physicians have a responsibility to help control health
care costs through appropriate clinical use of medical services,
it is critical that Congress help to fund the development
and implementation of tools that will assist physicians in
being good stewards of limited health care resources. While
the ACC appreciates congressional efforts to stop Medicare
physician payment cuts, it is critical that any new payment
structure is fair to all physicians. The ACC urges Congress
to resolve this issue before any final legislation is passed.
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The American College of Cardiology is leading the way to
optimal cardiovascular care and disease prevention. The College
is a 34,000-member nonprofit medical society and bestows the
credential Fellow of the American College of Cardiology upon
physicians who meet its stringent qualifications. The College
is a leader in the formulation of health policy, standards
and guidelines, and is a staunch supporter of cardiovascular
research. The ACC provides professional education and operates
national registries for the measurement and improvement of
quality care. More information about the association is available
online at www.acc.org .
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