Saturday, November 07, 2009

OSMA oppose the house health bill

From Cleveland Plain Dealer, Cleveland.com:

"WASHINGTON, D.C. The Ohio State Medical Association, which represents a majority of doctors in Ohio, this afternoon [Nov. 4] announced its opposition to the current health care reform bill working its way rapidly through the U.S. House of Representatives.

The association, an affiliate of the American Medical Association, has applauded the general concept of extending health care to more Americans. But it worries about the lack of a long-term fix for the budget rules that are supposed to require Medicare cuts to physicians' fees every year.

Congress every year sidesteps this with a single-year exemption, but doctors find it waring and unpredictable. The latest House bill, which could get a vote as soon as Saturday, does not include a fix, handing the matter off to a separate piece of legislation that may or may not pass sometime. Some doctors as well as tax groups say this is duplicitous."

The OSMA says it has glaring deficiencies, it adds hundreds to the Medicaid rolls of Ohio, it will cripple hospital expansion, and it fails to curb law suits.

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