MMA, Others Urge Congress to Pass Legislation to Fix Medicare Physician Payments

March 16, 2023

The MMA, AMA and 133 other health organizations – representing 900,000 physicians and tens of millions of Medicare patients – wrote congressional leaders on March 15, telling them that a full inflation-based update is “the principal legislative solution to the ongoing problems plaguing the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule.” 

The letter notes that Congress has passed stopgap measures in the past few years to mitigate threats to Medicare physician payments. Yet, practice costs have outpaced those efforts. The gap between frozen physician payment rates and rising medical practice costs due to inflation will continue to widen. A permanent solution is needed to avoid this annual panic and legislative chaos. 

The letter points out the real-life impact of the eroding value of Medicare payments. According to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), among those looking for a new primary care physician, half of Medicare patients had difficulty in finding one. And among Medicare patients looking for a new specialist, one-third struggled to find one. Finding specialists in rural and historically underserved areas is particularly difficult, and the payment system is creating even bigger barriers for patients in those communities. 

Also on March 15, MedPAC called for a physician payment update tied to the Medicare Economic Index (MEI). Medical advocacy groups have long championed this move and appreciate MedPAC’s acknowledgement that the current Medicare physician payment system is inadequate – a critical first step toward the larger, necessary work of reforming Medicare to make it more rational and serve patients better. 

In the face of inflation, the COVID pandemic, and growing costs of running a medical practice, physicians have struggled to keep open their doors, jeopardizing access to care, particularly in rural and underserved areas. Not only have Medicare payments failed to respond adequately, but physicians saw a 2% payment reduction for 2023, creating an additional challenge at a perilous moment.  

“Having surveyed the healthcare landscape, MedPAC recognized that physician pay has not kept up with the cost of practicing medicine,” said AMA President Jack Resneck Jr., MD. “Yet, we feel strongly that an update tied to just 50% of MEI will cause physician payment to chronically fall even further behind increases in the cost of providing care. Congress should adopt a 2024 Medicare payment update that recognizes the full inflationary growth in healthcare costs.” 

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