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PRESIDENT’S
  MESSAGE

                                         Constant vigilance
                                         helps protect organized
                                         medicine from harmful laws

                                         By James L. Humphreys, MD
                                         2015 BCMS President

  During a year in which numerous actions of considerable           physician reimbursement is at least partially based on a seri-
import could have changed the practice of medicine in Texas,        ously flawed quality outcome metrics scheme.
not that many aspects actually changed. The list of things
that didn’t change is instructive, however, and illustrates just      At the state level, we have just seen the occupations tax re-
how fluid a situation our practices are in and the need to pay      pealed and the franchise tax reduced which is good for taking
careful attention to our regulating bodies and their actions.       off a few hundred dollars in fees for physicians each year. As
                                                                    an aside, it may be hard to feel the benefit of this in the face
  We had lots of potential action in both the state and federal     of egregious Bexar County property tax assessments that also
legislatures this year and an important case before the Supreme     were levied this year. The state finally increased the funding
Court to boot. Here’s a quick review of what happened. First,       for graduate medical education in a small step toward easing
the Affordable Care Act provision for federal subsidies sur-        the physician shortage in the state. What didn’t happen at
vived a technical attack that easily could have made it fiscally    the state level was any allied health provider scope of practice
non-viable. This situation could have gone either way, and          expansion despite a number of efforts to do so. There was
there was very broad interest in the court decision, which de-      no significant alteration to the hard-won tort reforms of 2003
clared the federal premium subsidies to be constitutional and       either this session. Medicaid was neither expanded nor par-
kept the act unchanged. Further attacks by opponents of the         ticularly reformed, although I don’t believe that the state will
act will no doubt be forthcoming, but this looked like their        not be able to avoid either of those two things for long.
best shot to derail the act.
                                                                      While many of the worst possible changes to medicine were
  In the federal legislature, the much-hated SGR formula was        avoided this year, you can see that there is unrelenting pres-
finally repealed, after 17 years of concerted lobbying to have      sure on medical practices from a broad number of fronts.
the broken and misguided formula removed. While this is             Constant vigilance is our only effective defense.
generally a good thing for physicians, the federal government
managed to tack on a lot of potentially bad offsetting condi-         James L. Humphreys, MD, is the 2015 president of the Bexar
tions in the usual fashion. I consider this a positive first step,  County Medical Society. He is a pathologist with Precision
but feel that our work on this issue is not complete as long as     Pathology in San Antonio.

8 San Antonio Medicine • September 2015
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