Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 12 | Page 11

POLICY & ADVOCACY FIGHT THE POWER, Responsibly Rishi Kumar, MD L ike many physicians that I know, I have not historically been keen to spend my little free time on “poli- tics.” And every time I tell myself, “Okay, this is the last time I’m go- ing to say ‘yes’ to participating in a day of advocacy or being part of a GLMS commit- tee or helping to sponsor a campaign,” I get sucked right back in. reward. Further, we continue to see the fruits of this labor (see below), and truly it is labor and sacrifice. So, let us not place this burden upon the few, but rather let us come together as a formida- ble force. Please, against your natural tendency, come participate in a meeting, write the check, make the phone call, write the email, talk to your representative, visit glms.org, contact the Kentucky Medical Association, reach out on social media, and in the words of the great Chuck D, “Fight the [corrosive] power that be.” WINS: “Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!” Cue The Godfather music. Senate Bill 54 – Ensures greater transparency and access to prior authorization Now, as the initially-reluctant chair of the GLMS Policy and Advocacy (P&A) Committee, I realize that we have no alternative but to participate. As a colleague of mine recently wrote in bit- terness, “So often, it is hard to not feel as if we have plighted our troth to a profession, which has dashed the cup of life’s joy from our lips. Reimbursement, EMR’s, plaintiffs, and on and on.” Senate Bill 30 – Requires insurers to cover genetic tests for cancer risks As physicians we are, in my strongly biased opinion, to be most like Plato’s virtuous philosophical ruler and therefore must head up the charge against what Cicero termed “the corroding tenden- cies of power,” requiring “true philosophic greatness of spirit [and] the moral goodness to which Nature most aspires. (1)” Who else but your local GLMS physician? Dr. Kumar practices ophthalmology at the Kumar Eye Institute. As P&A Chair, meeting and becoming friendly with many fine examples of this type of virtuous character has been a great House Bill 11 – Smoke Free Schools Defeated Senate Bill 132 – Expansion of APRN scope of practice. 1. Cicero, De Officiis, trans. Walter Miller (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1913). IX.65 To join the Policy and Advocacy Team, email [email protected]. MAY 2019 9