Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 1 | Page 9

FEATURE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION MEMBERS Move Medicine Robert Couch, MD, MBA I n February, I attended the American Medical Association (AMA) National Advocacy Conference (NAC) held in Washington D.C. During my time there, I had meetings with Senate Leader Mitch McConnell, Rep. Andy Barr, and Rep. Brett Guthrie, and staff members for Rep. Thomas Massie and Rep. James Comer, while others in the delegation met with Congressman John Yarmuth—all to discuss the fu- ture of health care. Without my AMA membership, I would not have been able to speak with these leaders on behalf of Greater Louisville and Kentucky physicians, as well as our patients. Through my time at NAC, I experienced firsthand that working together with the AMA gets results. Most recently, following strong GLMS, KMA and AMA advocacy efforts, Anthem announced its plan to eliminate the Modifier 25 payment reductions. This year, the AMA and Anthem—whose health plans cover more than 40 million people—will pursue collaboration in four key areas to: » » Enhance consumer and patient health care literacy » » Develop and implement value-based payment models for primary and specialty care physicians » » Improve access to timely, actionable data to enhance pa- tient care » » Streamline or eliminate low-value prior-authorization re- quirements The AMA is also asking Congress to closely scrutinize the mas- sive proposed merger of CVS Health and Aetna because of the potential negative impact it poses to American health care consum- ers—much like when the AMA fought and won the landmark ruling in federal court to block Aetna’s $37 billion acquisition of Humana. Furthermore, the AMA has been a tremendous partner with organized medicine in Greater Louisville and the state of Kentucky, and Kentucky physicians have been, and are, an integral part of the AMA. The AMA Litigation Center has worked closely with the Kentucky Medical Association (KMA) as we fight to keep Medical Review Panels in Kentucky. Lastly, we all worked together to oppose the insurance company mergers that would have further increased the monopoly power of large insurers. (continued on page 8) JUNE 2018 7