Friday, October 23, 2009

Senate Bill 1776: The Fix?

Yesterday, the press finally reported the whole story on the Baucus Bill, which you read here on October 13. Senate Bill 1776, which was supposed to fix the faulty Medicare physician reimbursement formula (Medicare SGR as continued under the Baucus Bill), failed to pass Wednesday. Congress somehow thought the American people would not figure out that paying doctors would be considered part of their supposed comprehensive healthcare “reform” if they put it in another bill. Instead, S. 1776 was an attempt to add $249 billion straight to the national debt. Let’s crunch the numbers: the $81 billion dollar savings of the Baucus bill minus the $249 billion appropriation to “fix” the physician payment formula equals +$168 billion to the national debt – not exactly budget neutral.

Senator Nelson of Florida was interviewed by Greta van Susteren last night saying he hoped this did not derail the Senate’s reform bill. He claimed perhaps we if we had a 5-year fix or even a 3-year fix, we should still push through “reform.” How does postponing the day of reckoning make it better? Certainly, physicians will be right back in the same position they are now, with further cuts threatening because the formula used is faulty; except by then healthcare reform fatigue will have set in with the American public and no one will want to hear about it.

Worse yet, with the current printing and spending spree in Washington, the present economic downturn is going to persist for a considerable period of time. Central banks around the world are warning us that our fiscal and monetary policies are “imprudent.” Given the current policies being pursued on an array of issues, there will be fewer small business starting up and more businesses laying off people. As a result, tax revenues will continue to go down, adding further to the annual deficit and ultimately the federal debt. If this continues, the country may not be able to fix the problem in 3 years. Americans voted for change. Our legislators must be responsible and get it right. If not the only change Americans may have is the change in their pockets.

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