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AARP Disappointed by
Senate’s Vote to Block Protection of Access to Medicare Doctors
S. 1776 would have preserved
access
by replacing flawed payment system
SUMMARY: Last week, the US Senate blocked critical
legislation to protect access to doctors for the 44 million Americans
who rely on Medicare. The Medicare Physician Fairness Act (S.
1776) would have replaced today’s broken doctor payment system,
which calls for a 21.5 percent cut in physician pay in
January. The bill failed to pass a key procedural vote in the
Senate today.
New Hampshire
VOTED YES TO MOVE DOCTOR ACCESS BILL TO DEBATE AND VOTE
VOTED TO BLOCK DEBATE ON DOCTOR ACCESS BILL
Gregg, Judd
X
Shaheen, Jeanne
X
“While we are
disappointed by today’s outcome, we applaud Senator Shaheen for
voting to preserve access to doctors in Medicare and bring this bill
to the floor for an up-or-down vote,” said AARP New Hampshire
State Director Kelly Clark. “This critical legislation
would have helped the millions of older Americans in Medicare have
access to the doctor of their choice by replacing the flawed doctor
payment system. We look forward to continuing to work with
Senator Shaheen and her colleagues to pass health care reform that
protects Medicare and ensures older Americans can afford quality
health care.”
Clark added: “We are
disappointed that Senator Gregg voted to block this important Medicare
bill from open debate and an up-or-down vote on the Senate
floor. This bill would permanently replace the broken Medicare
physician payment system so people in the program could continue to
see their doctor.”
AARP strongly supports the
Medicare Physician Fairness Act, introduced by Senator Debbie Stabenow
(D-MI). This legislation permanently repeals Medicare’s
flawed Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) physician payment formula, which
has required repeated Congressional action to prevent unwarranted cuts
that could harm access to doctors for people in
Medicare. Repealing the SGR will stop an unprecedented 21.5
percent pay cut that otherwise will occur in January 2010, and
additional cuts in future years.
AARP notified the
111th Congress that it was tracking roll call votes on key
legislation important to its 40 million members and reporting the
outcomes of these votes back to its members. “We believe people
make the right choices when they understand the issues and position
taken by their elected officials. AARP intends to ensure that its
members get that information,” Clark concluded.