FTC delays Red Flags Rule enforcement until November 1st
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has delayed the enforcement date of the Red Flags Rule until November 1st. This regulation requires creditors and financial institutions to develop identity theft prevention programs.
Practices should continue to develop their Red Flag Identity Theft Plans to insure that they meet the November 1st deadline.
The AMA has created a Red Flag Sample Policy that group practices can use to formulate their own red flag policy.
Obama’s Unintended Consequences for Anesthesia
Michael Casey from the Associated Press Wire Service reported on an effort to preserve sea birds on Macquarie Island. All the cats on the island were removed or exterminated. Unfortunately, this led to an explosion in the rabbit population. The rabbits destroyed the vegetation that the birds required for cover. Ultimately, the move hurt the birds far more than the cats ever could have. This story provides an illustration of the law of unintended consequences. Manipulation of complex and sensitive systems carries with it both risks and benefits. Change in one area typically impacts others.
President Barack Obama has made health care reform a priority. In doing so the House has drafted a bill (e.g. HR3200), that in its present form will decimate the speciality of anesthesia, an unintended consequence. The president intends to insure affordable healthcare and improve access, but by doing so he will cause unintended consequences that will be counter to his objectives. By using the Medicare fee schedule as the basis for payment under the proposed “Public Option” health plan the government has signed the death warrant for the specialty of anesthesia .
Medicare payments for anesthesia services are calculated using a different method and a different “conversion factor” than that used for other medical specialties. While Medicare pays primary care and other physicians an average of 80% of private sector fees, according to the GAO, Medicare rates for anesthesia providers average only about 33% of what private insurers pay for our services, across the country. This unequal treatment is already driving many anesthesia providers to seek early retirement and it will ultimately limit patients’ access to anesthesia care as fewer anesthesia providers enter the specialty. Payment rates in any health plan, including a potential “Public Option”, must be fairly negotiated to encourage all providers to participate. Anesthesia providers need to educate House members on this unintended consequence so that it can be removed from the bill or the bill modified to correct the unintended consequence for anesthesia.