U.S. House votes to boost Medicare pay to doctors

Thu Nov 19, 2009 10:28pm GMT
 
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By Donna Smith

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives voted on Thursday to boost Medicare payments to physicians in a move that could help shore up support from doctors for a sweeping Democratic-backed healthcare overhaul.

The House voted 243-183 for the bill that would stop a 21 percent Medicare pay cut for doctors next year and put in place an updated payment formula that would better reward primary care physicians and reflect the sharp increase in healthcare costs.

Democratic backers said the pay boost was necessary to ensure that the elderly enrolled in the government's Medicare healthcare program did not lose access to doctors.

Republican opponents called it a payoff to an influential doctors' group to ensure its continued support for healthcare reform. They objected to the bill because Democratic leaders did not include any measures to pay for the $210 billion 10-year cost of the legislation.

"This is nothing more than a political payoff to the American Medical Association," Republican Representative Joe Barton said.

The 250,000-member AMA linked the payment formula update to its support for healthcare reform passed by the House on November 7. The group argued that passing the Medicare bill would be a good show of faith by Congress that it was prepared to honor any new commitments made in the overhaul.

The White House backs the legislation, but the bill faces an uncertain fate in the Senate, which is about to begin debate on its version of a healthcare overhaul that is a top domestic priority for President Barack Obama.

The Senate failed to pass similar legislation in October amid growing concern over record budget deficits.   Continued...

 

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