American Academy of Family Physicians

Printer-friendly version

Share this on AAFP Connection

Share this page

Primary Care Collaborative Succeeds in Pushing Legislative Agenda

By James Arvantes  • Washington

One of the nation's largest collaboratives to support primary care has launched a campaign to make primary care and the patient-centered medical home key components in federally funded health care programs and legislation.

Rick Kellerman, M.D.
AAFP President Rick Kellerman, M.D., of Wichita, Kan., calls for a blended physician payment system during a recent primary care collaborative meeting in Washington.
The Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative, or PCPCC, a coalition that comprises the AAFP, other health groups, major employers and a consumer group, has sent legislative proposals to Capitol Hill, asking lawmakers to provide financial support for states wanting to make patient-centered medical homes a part of their Medicaid and State Children's Health Insurance Programs, or SCHIPs.

The key to reforming the health care system is a patient-centered medical home for all patients, said AAFP President Rick Kellerman, M.D. of Wichita, Kan., during a collaborative roundtable meeting here on June 11.

"We know the current system is unsustainable, and we are just happy that so many employers, insurers, policy makers and legislators are starting to get this," Kellerman said about the medical home.

AARP Joins Primary Care Collaborative

In June, the AARP, representing more than 35 million Americans, joined the Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative. In addition to AARP and the Academy, coalition members are
  • the American Academy of Pediatrics;
  • the American College of Physicians;
  • the American Health Quality Association;
  • the American Osteopathic Association;
  • Bridges To Excellence;
  • the Center for Excellence in Primary Care;
  • the Center for Health Value Innovation;
  • CVS Caremark, including CVS/pharmacy, Caremark Pharmacy Services and MinuteClinic;
  • the ERISA (Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974) Industry Committee;
  • the Foundation for Informed Medical Decision Making;
  • General Motors;
  • the HR Policy Association;
  • IBM;
  • the National Association of Community Health Centers;
  • the National Business Group on Health;
  • the National Coalition on Health Care;
  • the National Committee for Quality Assurance;
  • the National Retail Federation;
  • Walgreens Health Initiatives; and
  • Wyeth.
He pointed out, however, that "it has probably never been harder in the current health care system to provide that medical home because of payment and paperwork issues."

The PCPCC's legislative proposal, "will essentially provide a funding source for states that wish to pay a care management fee to physicians who support a patient-centered medical home," said Robert Doherty, senior vice president for governmental affairs and public policy for the American College of Physicians, during the roundtable.

The legislative proposals would base the patient-centered medical home on a model put forth by the National Committee for Quality Assurance and endorsed by the PCPCC. Doherty said the patient-centered medical home has wide backing, generating support from physicians, employers and consumers both inside and outside of the Beltway.

Legislative Language

So far, the PCPCC has been able to get language promoting the medical home into at least four bills on Capitol Hill, including the National Health Information Incentives Act, H.R. 1952, (at the THOMAS Web site, type "HR 1952" in the search box after selecting Bill Number) legislation introduced by Reps. Charles Gonzalez, D-Texas, and Phil Gingrey, R-Ga. The bill would provide incentives, such as grants, loans, expanded tax deductibility and Medicare payments, to support health information technology and care coordination in a patient-centered medical home. It also would give the HHS secretary the ability to provide care management fees to cover the costs involved in acquiring electronic systems to provide coordinated and patient-centered care to beneficiaries, especially those with multiple chronic illnesses.

In the meantime, Reps. Michael Burgess, R-Texas, and Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, have introduced H.R. 2854, the High-Need Physician Work Force Incentives Act of 2007, (at the THOMAS Web site, type "HR 2854" in the search box after selecting "Bill Number") to provide state grants for management fees to physicians in medically underserved communities. The fees would support the provision of "targeted, accessible, continuous, coordinated and patient-centered care through a qualified medical home" that adopts the care management model, according to a bill summary.

A third bill pending in the House and Senate, H.R. 2244 and S.B. 1340, respectively, (at the THOMAS Web site, type HR 2244, SB 1340 after selecting "Bill Number") would create a new Medicare benefit to provide comprehensive reviews of patients' medical conditions, their functional and cognitive capacities, and their environmental and psychosocial needs.

Patients qualifying for care coordination services under that bill would have the option of choosing a physician or a chronic care manager who enters into an agreement with HHS to provide care coordination services, according to the legislation, which was introduced by Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., and Rep. Gene Green, D-Texas. The government would pay the physician a monthly, prospective, bundled care coordination fee for managing high-cost Medicare beneficiaries and beneficiaries with either multiple or chronic conditions or dementia.

Finally, Sens. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., and Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., will re-introduce a health information technology bill later this month that awards competitive grants to physicians who adopt health information technologies. The legislation, which was first introduced last year, will give preference to "entities that organize their practices as a patient-centered medical home," according to a legislative summary.

Blended Payment System

Doherty, like other primary care proponents at the roundtable, decried the declining number of primary care physicians, telling the audience that "primary care in the United State is in dire straits."

"The number of medical students choosing to go into primary care programs has declined precipitously as the current cohort of primary care physicians begin to retire," he said. "There are a large percentage of physicians over the age of 55 who will be retiring. There will not be primary care physicians coming in to replace them until something is done."

Robert Berenson, M.D., a senior fellow at the Urban Institute, pointed out that some subspecialists earn two to three times more than family physicians under public and private payer systems, creating disincentives for careers in the primary care field.

"The primary care world is saying, 'These kinds of variations are so great they distort decisions that medical students make as to what specialty to go into,'" said Berenson.

Kellerman agreed, saying simply that "our medical students are good at math," and they are adding things up.

Kellerman added that public and private payers should adopt a blended payment system that incorporates a basic care coordination fee, a fee-for-service payment and a pay-for-performance structure.

Share this on AAFP Connection

Government & Medicine

PCMH Is Answer to Medicare Payment Problems

Physician Groups Unite to Call for SGR Repeal

Threatened Medicare Payment Cuts Cause Chaos for FPs

AAFP, Medical Organizations Push for SGR Repeal

Focus of Conference Call is Shared Savings, Advance Payment

AAFP Renews Push for SGR Fix

FPs Can Expect Slight Changes in Medicare Pay for 2012

HHS Approach to Essential Health Benefits Falls Flat

CMS Delays Implementation of 'Sunshine Act'

Congress Works Out Temporary Solution to SGR Cut

Community-based Residencies Would Benefit From House Bill

GME Funding to Remain Level in 2012

House Rejects Measure to Block Medicare Pay Cut

House Addresses Medicare Payment Cut

AAFP Backs Tavenner as New CMS Administrator

Supercommittee Fails to Address SGR

Overcoming Scarce Resources to Enact Health Care Reform

Medicare Payment: Value Is as Important as Volume

AAFP President-elect Makes Return Visit to Capitol Hill

Insurance Exchanges, CO-OPs Might Provide Opportunity for FPs

AAFP Members Speak Out on Title VII Funding

Campaign Addresses Need for Medicare Payment Reform

AAFP Continues to Press Congress for Payment Solution

AAFP Leaders Take On Washington

Campaign Focuses on GME Outreach

'Family Medicine Matters,' AAFP Members Tell Congress

AAFP Outlines Suggested Changes for CO-OP Program

Groups Call on Supercommittee to Address Medical Liability Reform

Grassroots Efforts to Repeal SGR Continue

Bill Linking Mandatory Education to Prescribing Not Needed

Blended Payment Model Gives Boost to Primary Care Services

AAFP Joins AMA, Other Groups in Calling for SGR Repeal

Eliminating SGR May Come With High Price

Tobacco Oversight Must Include Cigars, Say AAFP, Other Groups

AAFP Rallies Congress of Delegates on Medicare Payment

AMA Task Force Focuses on Fixing the SGR

2012 Physician Fee Schedule Needs Work, Says AAFP

New Task Force Takes Steps to Better Value Primary Care

Deficit-reduction Plan Must Eliminate SGR, Says AAFP

Physicians File Lawsuit Over RUC, CMS Relationship

Policy Brief Explains HHS Insurance Exchange Plans

Deficit-reduction Plan Falls Short, Says AAFP President

YouTube Video Designed to Encourage SGR Repeal