The Journal of the Arkansas Medical Society Med Journal Feb 2019 Final 2 | Page 4
WHAT HAVE WE DONE FOR YOU LATELY?
The 92 nd General Assembly Begins
DAVID WROTEN
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT
T
he Arkansas General As-
sembly is just beginning,
and your profession is
already being attacked from all
sides. What you do over the next 60 days can
and will determine the outcome on several impor-
tant issues.
First and foremost, it seems like everyone
wants to be a physician without having to go to
medical school. Each session has its share of
“scope-of-practice” bills, but this is certainly one
for the books. Here is a quick look at what is on
deck. There will likely be others as well, but these
are the ones we already know about.
» » Optometrists want the Legislature to give
them the right to perform surgery on your
eyes. Yes, that’s right. Scalpels, lasers, nee-
dles, you name it. They have hired multiple
contract lobbyists and PR firms to help them
in their efforts.
» » APRNs will be back for the umpteenth time
with multiple bills to try to circumvent medi-
cal school. They want to remove the collab-
orative practice requirement, write Schedule
II prescriptions, mandate that Medicaid treat
them as PCPs, and get paid on an equal ba-
sis as physicians. Also included in their is-
sues are the CRNAs who want to repeal the
physician supervision requirement.
» » Pharmacists are in the game as well. They
want to dispense oral contraceptives and
smoking cessation drugs and give im-
munizations to our children through what
they’re calling a “statewide protocol.” That’s
basically an open-ended prescription with a
single physician at the health department,
allowing pharmacists to dispense without
a doctor’s prescription for a specific patient.
I hope you can appreciate the challenge these
scope bills present for the AMS. Most legislators
understand the education and training differences
between physicians and these other groups, but
remember: this is a political issue and legislators
respond to constituents. Each of these provider
groups are organized, and they rally their mem-
bers to send emails, make phone calls, show up
for committee hearings, and talk to their legislators
while home in the district. They are important con-
stituents to legislators and each have their role in
providing health care to patients. Optometrists are
good at what they do, but they are not trained to be
eye surgeons. APRNs are important and do good
work, but their training cannot compare to a three-
year family practice residency.
Don’t think for a minute that legislators won’t
support legislation that you think is obviously
flawed for lack of training and education. That’s
a quick way to lose. THEY NEED TO HEAR FROM
YOU. It’s better if when you call, they know you. As
the session progresses, you’ll receive alerts and
“calls to action” from your AMS legislative staff.
What you do with those alerts will most definitely
determine what happens to these scope-of-prac-
tice bills. Some represent a direct attack on your
profession and an afront to the years of education
and training you’ve gone through to become a phy-
sician. You are all in this together. Not just ophthal-
mologists; not just family practice, not just ob/gyns.
All of medicine must come together when we send
a call to action.
What makes these scope fights even more dif-
ficult is that they limit our resources to pass our
own legislative initiatives. You’ll be hearing about
those as well…stay tuned!
What you do with those alerts
will most definitely determine
what happens to these scope-of-
practice bills.
172 • THE JOURNAL OF THE ARKANSAS MEDICAL SOCIETY
David Wroten
Executive Vice President
Penny Henderson
Executive Assistant
Journal Advertising
Nicole Richards
Managing Editor
Jeremy Henderson
Art Director
EDITORIAL BOARD
Appathurai Balamurugan, MD, DrPH, MPH
Family Medicine/Public Health
Tim Paden, MD
Family Medicine
Sandra Johnson, MD
Dermatology
Issam Makhoul, MD
Oncology
Naveen Patil, MD, MHSA, MA, FIDSA
Internal Medicine/Infectious Disease
Benjamin Tharian, MD, MRCP, FACP, FRACP
Gastroenterologist/Hepatologist
Robert Zimmerman, MD
Urology
Tobias Vancil, MD
Internal Medicine
Darrell Over, MD
Family Medicine
EDITOR EMERITUS
Alfred Kahn Jr., MD (1916-2013)
ARKANSAS MEDICAL SOCIETY
2018-2019 OFFICERS
Lee Archer, MD, Little Rock
President
Amy Cahill, MD, Pine Bluff
Immediate Past President
Dennis Yelvington, MD, Stuttgart
President Elect
Chad Rodgers, MD, Little Rock
Vice President
George Conner, MD, Forrest City
Secretary
Bradley Bibb, MD, Jonesboro
Treasurer
Danny Wilkerson, MD, Little Rock
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
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