Medicare doctor pay fix prospects
brighten in Congress
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[March 25, 2015]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. House of
Representatives Speaker John Boehner said on Tuesday that prospects were
good for passage of a permanent fix to Medicare's flawed doctor-pay
formula, a move that would spare physicians from impending pay cuts.
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The Republican leader said the House was intent on avoiding
another short-term repair like the ones resorted to previously.
The plan's prospects brightened in the Senate, as well, when
Democratic Leader Harry Reid said he would look at the bipartisan
House proposal, which would change the way doctors are reimbursed
for Medicare costs. It was introduced earlier on Tuesday by Boehner
and House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi.
Last week, through a spokesman, Reid expressed opposition to
abortion restrictions on community health centers in a draft of the
proposal.
But after the bill was introduced on Tuesday and House Democrats
said the abortion restrictions will expire when the health centers'
funding does, Reid said he was willing to "wait until we see it"
before deciding his position.
A House vote on the bill is expected Thursday. Though potential
pitfalls remain, the signals from top lawmakers suggested a solution
may be near to a long-standing problem that would also show
bipartisan agreement is possible in this new Congress.
"I feel good about where we are on the doc fix," Boehner told
reporters, referring to the proposals' nickname. He said talks with
Pelosi had been productive, open and honest, and had created a "very
solid package."
The proposal would replace the current doctor payment formula with
one that has a stronger focus on quality of care.
The old formula linked doctors' pay increases to economic growth,
but it has been overridden by Congress 17 times because it
repeatedly threatened deep cuts in doctors' pay.
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Congress needs to take action by April 1 to avoid having hundreds of
thousands of doctors face a 21 percent cut in their reimbursements.
Medicare serves 54 million elderly and disabled people.
Another potential pitfall is that Senate Democrats favor a four-year
extension of funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program,
and the House proposal extends it for just two years.
The House doc fix legislation would cost an estimated $200 billion
over a decade. Lawmakers have worked out how to pay for only about
$70 billion, in part by means testing Medicare beneficiaries so
people with higher incomes pay more.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell, additional reporting by Emily
Stephenson; editing by Kevin Drawbaugh, Bill Trott, Leslie Adler and
Christian Plumb)
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