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capitol hill report: Could your advocacy go even further at the state level?

February 26, 2024

Issue in Focus

By Michael Markowski, DO, FAAN

In early January, I had the pleasure of attending the American Medical Association’s State Advocacy Summit in Amelia Island, Florida, along with AAN Senior State Affairs Program Manager Grant Niver. This weekend conference confirmed that our AAN advocacy efforts at the state and federal level focus on many of the same issues as other physician groups, including the AMA: streamlining prior authorization, reforming step therapy, bolstering the physician workforce, fixing Medicare reimbursement, and much more.

Although neurology has remained approximately 2% of the physician workforce for several decades, we have a strong voice among lawmakers in Washington, DC. The AAN in particular remains a very respected physician organization by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which seeks our input and feedback on various regulations. Our neurology footprint and presence on Capitol Hill continues to depend upon our BrainPAC donations, which I encourage you to learn more about so our collective voice continues to be heard by federal lawmakers.

Although the atmosphere in Washington has been increasingly partisan in recent years—complicating our federal efforts for various health care reforms—local state houses often have a more unified and bipartisan environment where many of our longstanding advocacy issues may be easier resolved. This AMA state advocacy conference was a terrific reminder of the old adage that “all politics are local.” In 2023, more than 20,000 bills were introduced in Washington. At the state level, that number rocketed to more than 165,000.

One example of powerful state-level advocacy can be found this past fall when the AMA and the Medical Society of New Jersey approached the AAN to help push prior authorization reform across the finish line in New Jersey. The Ensuring Transparency in Prior Authorization Act’s (A1255/S1794) intention was to enable a meaningful decrease in delays of care that lead to poor outcomes, including long response times and repeat authorizations, along with improving continuity of care when patients change their insurance. Our New Jersey neurology colleagues were thrilled when this bill passed and became state law earlier this year, bringing significant prior authorization reform to our country’s 11th-largest state and a big win for AAN advocacy. New Jersey is the 18th state to pass common sense prior authorization or step therapy reforms in recent years.

As a general neurologist in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and Vice Chair of the AAN’s Advocacy Committee, I feel very fortunate that we have excellent staff located in Washington, DC, advocating for our patients and profession. It is much more challenging to have a physical presence in all 50 states and to remain aware of the innumerable health care bills and scope of practice bills introduced into every state legislature. That is where members come in. By partnering with our state medical and neurologic societies and leveraging our key neurologist contacts within each state, we have an opportunity to be more effective at the state level and win needed improvements before enacting similar reforms at the national level.

For these reasons, it is important to stay involved locally and learn about proposed state legislation that affects your patients and practice. Contact the AAN’s advocacy team to bring any state issues that we can assist with to our attention.

At the end of this AMA conference, we enjoyed a roundtable discussion with three neurologists who also serve as state representatives in Minnesota, Mississippi, and North Carolina. They encouraged neurologists to become more involved in state advocacy efforts and further supported our successful AAN advocacy approach—that while it is important to quickly review pertinent figures and data, the key to convincing lawmakers to act upon our behalf is by sharing our patient stories illustrating the need for health care change. We all have the opportunity and ability to share such stories.

 

Latest Advocacy News

AAN Participates in ALS Better Care Act Fly-In
The AAN joined the ALS Association and others in participating in an organized Capitol Hill day in support of the ALS Better Care Act (S.3258/H.R.5663). The AAN recently joined an informal coalition in support of this legislation, which would ensure that patients with ALS can receive care at multidisciplinary clinics around the country by enhancing Medicare reimbursement to match the high-quality multifaceted care they provide. The bill is led by Senators Coons (D-DE) and Murkowski (R-AK) in the Senate and Representatives Schakowsky (D-IL), Fitzpatrick (R-PA), Crow (D-CO), and Quigley (D-IL) in the House. AAN President Carlayne E. Jackson, MD, FAAN, was quoted in support of the bill in a press release earlier this year from Rep. Schakowsky’s office.

AAN Submits Letter of Support for the No Fees for EFTS Act
The AAN joined a sign-on letter, led by the Regulatory Relief Coalition, thanking Representatives Murphy (R-NC), Griffith (R-VA), Bera (D-CA), Miller-Meeks (R-IA), Kilmer (D-WA), and Schrier (D-WA) for introducing H.R. 6487, the No Fees for EFTs Act. This bill would prohibit health plans from imposing fees on health care providers for electronic funds transfers (EFTs), health care payments, and remittance advice transactions. Many insurers partner with third-party vendors that charge between two to five percent per EFT, leaving providers with fees of up to $1,000,000 annually to receive reimbursements electronically. The AAN continues to monitor and advocate against regulatory burdens imposed on physicians.

Congress Sends Request to HHS Permanent Telehealth Extensions
Last month, Senator Schatz (D-HI) led a letter to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) signed by a group of bipartisan lawmakers calling for permanent access to telehealth for Medicare beneficiaries. Senator Schatz is the Co-Chair of the Senate Telehealth Working Group. The AAN is closely following negotiations in Congress surrounding telehealth in advance of the December 31st expiration date for the most recent extension of pandemic-era flexibilities. The Academy continues to urge Congress to act as soon as possible to ensure access to telehealth and provide stability for providers and patients.

AAN Submits Comments Supporting Part D Redesign
On February 20, the AAN submitted comments in response to proposals from CMS implementing critical portions of the Part D Redesign mandated by the Inflation Reduction Act. The AAN’s comments supported key provisions of the redesign and urged the agency to ensure that implementation remains consistent with statutory intent to reduce patient out-of-pocket costs for Part D drugs.

AAN Joins Broad Letter of Support for Legislation Addressing Physician Burnout
On February 15, 2024, the AAN signed onto a letter of support thanking Senators Kaine (D-VA) and Young (R-IN) and Representatives Wild (D-PA), Kiggans (R-VA), Dingell (D-MI), and Carter (R-GA) for seeking reauthorization of the Dr. Lorna Breen Health Care Provider Protection Act (S.3679/H.R.7153), initially signed into law last Congress. This landmark, first-of-its-kind legislation establishes grants and other activities aimed to improve mental and behavioral health among health care providers. Since passage, this legislation has funded more than $100 million in grants to implement evidence-informed strategies to reduce and prevent suicide, burnout, mental health conditions, and substance use disorders.

 

What We're Reading

  • ‘Behind the Times’: Washington Tries to Catch Up With AI’s Use in Health Care (KFF Health News)
  • New CMS rules will throttle access researchers need to Medicare, Medicaid data (Op-Ed, STAT)