Hundreds of emergency physicians and residents visited with federal lawmakers on Capitol Hill during ACEP’s 2011 Leadership and Advocacy Conference in Washington, D.C.
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ACEP News: Vol 30 – No 07 – July 2011ACEP members from 47 states and the District of Columbia participated in 318 meetings in Capitol Hill offices with legislators and/or their health care staff. Almost all (94) of the Senate’s 100 offices were visited, and more than half of the House of Representatives’ offices were visited.
While on Capitol Hill, the physicians discussed implementation of the health care reform law, the unstable Medicare physician payment system, medical liability reform (in particular, for physicians providing care under the EMTALA mandate), and the need to repeal the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) created in the health care reform law.
ACEP President Dr. Sandra Schneider encouraged the conference attendees to take advantage of the opportunity to enlighten the lawmakers on important statistics – specifically, that only 8% of ED visits are nonurgent (according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) and that emergency medicine represents just 2% of the health care budget (according to the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality).
“They need to know that [reducing expenditures on emergency care will not be] the salvation of health care,” she said, adding that the emergency physician’s role in the federal process is to make the law “palatable in some fashion.”
“If we fail now, we won’t be able to go back. Now is the time. We have just this window of opportunity to make it happen,” Dr. Schneider said.
Michael Dunn, a political consultant with Dunn Associates, emphasized the need for emergency physicians to ensure that the specialty is represented by educating lawmakers. “The future of emergency medicine is not going to be determined by how well you do your job. It’s going to be determined by how well you do your job in politics,” he said. “Nothing good is going to happen just because it’s right or you want it to happen. It’s worth taking some action.”
Mr. Dunn suggested that emergency physicians get involved by donating to NEMPAC, ACEP’s political action committee; by inviting their congressional representatives to visit the ED and see how the health care laws affect their constituents; and by doing something to develop a relationship with their representatives, like volunteering or hosting a fundraiser.
At this year’s conference, more than 125 residents and medical students participated, as well as leaders from the Society of Emergency Medicine Physician Assistants (SEMPA).
Awards
Three members of Congress and one Hill staff person were presented with the 2011 ACEP Congressional Leadership Award during the Conference: Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Tex.), Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger (D-Md.), and Priscilla Ross, policy director for Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.).
The annual 911 Network Member of the Year award was presented to two ACEP members: Dr. Richard Preston Wendell was recognized for his work on behalf of ACEP in educating the members of the South Carolina congressional delegation, particularly the four new freshman members, and for recruiting his South Carolina ACEP colleagues in ACEP’s advocacy activities. Dr. Alison Haddock was recognized for her efforts to engage emergency medicine residents in grassroots political advocacy.
Record Donations Made to NEMPAC During Conference
Nearly $60,000 was collected at the meeting for the NEMPAC annual campaign – a new record. Dr. Schneider recognized $34,000 in contributions donated by the partners of the Florida Emergency Physicians at the conference and thanked Dr. Vidor Friedman, a partner in the group, for encouraging his colleagues to contribute at the Give-a-Shift ($1,000) level.
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