Seniors’ Access to Doctors Protected

Legislation also includes important deficit reduction measures

(Washington, DC)  —  Today, Rep. Wasserman Schultz (FL-20) voted to preserve seniors’ access to their doctors by fixing the way Medicare pays physicians. The Medicare Physician Payment Reform Act will permanently reform the Medicare payment system, repealing a 21% cut in payments to doctors scheduled to take place in January 2010 and replacing it with a stable system that protects seniors, preserves their relationship with their doctors and promotes primary care.

“This vital legislation ensures that seniors have reliable access to their doctors and the primary care they need,” said Rep. Wasserman Schultz. “Medicare is a lifeline for South Florida seniors and this bill takes important steps toward strengthening Medicare and providing the highest quality of care and benefits for America’s seniors. This bill is vital companion legislation to the Affordable Health Care for America Act the House just passed.”

This bill tackles seniors’ main concern – preventing pay cuts that could encourage doctors to stop seeing Medicare patients. It builds on the historic health insurance reform bill the House passed earlier this month, which will lower premiums, extend the solvency of Medicare by five years, improve preventive and primary care for seniors, and close the prescription drug “donut hole” coverage gap.

“AARP and leading senior advocacy groups have given this legislation, and the Affordable Health Care for America Act their strong endorsement,” said Rep. Wasserman Schultz. “They will lower costs and improve care for our seniors. It’s a win-win for South Florida seniors.”

To underscore our commitment to reduce the deficit, the House attached statutory “pay-as-you-go,” or PAYGO, legislation to the Medicare Physician Payment Reform Act before sending it to the Senate. By joining statutory PAYGO with legislation fixing Medicare physician payments, we are making PAYGO more credible and effective – avoiding the need to waive it for current policies that Congress and the President have already agreed should be extended – and sending a clear message that we are committed to fiscal responsibility.

“The President and this Congress made a commitment to honest budgeting, and by permanently fixing the way doctors are paid we are putting a stop to budget gimmicks,” said Rep. Wasserman Schultz. “This legislation reassures the American people that we understand that we must curb the deficit and that new policies must be paid for.”

With statutory PAYGO in place, all new tax and entitlement policies must be offset, restoring fiscal discipline and bringing down the deep deficits that face our nation. By enacting statutory PAYGO, this Congress is putting an end to the reckless “borrow-and-spend” policies of the Bush Administration and reinstating the principle that led us from record deficits to record surpluses in the Clinton Administration.