ADVERTISEMENT

Physicians Weigh In on ACA Ruling

Author and Disclosure Information

And most physician organizations indicated their continuing dissatisfaction with some parts of the law, including the Independent Payment Advisory Board, or IPAB, and the lack of any concrete malpractice reform.

The American Association of Clinical Urologists (AACU), the American Urological Association (AUA), and the Large Urology Group Practice Association (LUGPA) issued a joint statement, noting that "we are concerned that there are key aspects to this law that will, ultimately, hurt this nation's ability to provide widespread care for its citizens," including the IPAB. Mr. Shalgian said that the IPAB has been an issue for the ACS since it was first proposed.

At a press briefing called by the Republican Doctors Caucus, Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-Ga.), an ob.gyn., said that he and his fellow caucus members would work to overturn most if not all of the ACA, starting with the IPAB.

Some of Rep. Gingrey's colleagues were adamant that they'd do everything possible to overturn the law. Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.), an orthopedic surgeon, said that the ACA "violates accessibility, violates affordability, violates quality, violates choices."

Rep. Paul Broun (R-Ga.) called the Act a "destroyer." He said it would "destroy a patient's ability to go to see a doctor and get the quality care they desperately need." Added Dr. Broun, "Obamacare must be repealed. It must be replaced with some policy that will make health care cheaper for everyone, provide coverage for all Americans, and save Medicare from going broke."

With the Supreme Court's efforts in the rear-view mirror, Republicans renewed their vow to repeal all or part of the ACA; however, that's unlikely to happen as long as Democrats maintain control of the Senate and the White House.

If Republicans win a majority in the Senate in November, and if Mitt Romney wins the presidential election, there could be major change.

In the meantime, most physician groups said they would work to fix the parts of the law that were objectionable.

Mr. Shalgian said that the ACS will be exploring options for medical liability reform during the annual Clinical Congress in Chicago.

Dr. Stream of the AAFP said that such reform is essential. "The [ACA] provides a foundation for reforming our health care system, but much work still lies ahead including a permanent replacement for the Sustainable Growth Rate formula and meaningful medical liability reform," he said.

Dr. Bronson of the ACP said that the organization realizes that "even with the Supreme Court's ruling, the political debate over the ACA continues and that its future is a major issue in the 2012 election."

He added, "We hope that a day will come when the debate will no longer be polarized between repeal on one hand, or keeping the law exactly as it is on the other, but on preserving all of the good things that it does while making needed improvements," among which would be "meaningful reforms to the medical liability system."