House Bill Would Repeal Independent Pay Advisory Board
A bill has been reintroduced in the House to repeal the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) created by the health care reform law and scheduled to begin operating by April 30. Similar legislation passed the House in 2012 but was not taken up by the Senate. The new bill is H.R. 351, the Protecting Seniors’ Access to Medicare Act, a bipartisan measure introduced by Reps. David P. Roe (R-Tenn.) and Allyson Schwartz (D-Pa.) with 100 co-sponsors. It got quick support from the American Medical Association. Its president, Jeremy Lazarus, said, “IPAB is a panel that would have too little accountability and the power to make indiscriminate cuts that adversely affect access to health care for patients. Patients and physicians are still struggling with the frequent threat of drastic cuts from the broken SGR [sustainable growth rate] Medicare physician payment update formula. IPAB would be another arbitrary system that relies solely on payment cuts.” IPAB supporters say it is a fail-safe mechanism to control Medicare spending growth when Congress fails to act and it removes politics from decisions affecting Medicare providers. Opponents, including pathology and clinical laboratory groups, say the board’s unelected officials would have power over spending that historically has […]
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