[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 26 (Thursday, February 16, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H811]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REFORMS TO THE MEDICARE SYSTEM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Fitzpatrick) for 5 minutes.
Mr. FITZPATRICK. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to speak on behalf of the
senior citizens in Pennsylvania's Eighth Congressional District who
rely on a Medicare system which makes predictable and stable payments
to their physicians.
I came to Washington, with one of the largest freshman classes in
recent history, to make the difficult decisions that for too long have
been deferred and delayed. I'm proud to have joined a bipartisan group
of my fellow Representatives last spring in passing a budget resolution
which addressed the long-term challenges facing Medicare.
The budget resolution we supported provides fiscal stability to a
program which will face severe cuts and drastic changes in the future
without serious reform. However, while these basic reforms to the
existing system are being debated, we are currently faced with a more
pressing issue, the solution to which has already earned widespread
support among lawmakers, doctors, and health care industry groups.
The practicality of the sustainable growth formula for Medicare
payments has been a subject of much debate in this Chamber since its
implementation in 1997. Over the course of the past two decades,
Congress has deemed it acceptable to provide for short-term, temporary
fixes to ensure that doctors receive adequate payment for the services
they provide to Medicare patients. Short-term fixes provide no
stability or predictability to these important service providers.
In speaking with a cardiologist in my home of Bucks County, he shared
his concerns with me over the way Congress has chosen to handle the
SGR. He told me that every time a short-term extension comes up for a
vote, he is faced with the possibility of having to lay off employees
and reducing his practice in the face of potential cuts.
The constant threat of cuts to the Medicare reimbursement rate
prevents doctors and hospitals from developing new delivery and payment
models intended to reduce rising health care costs and denies them the
flexibility they need to achieve savings through improved care.
Each time Congress enacts a short-term fix, the scheduled cuts in the
SGR formula grow deeper and the cost of a full repeal increases. A full
repeal in 2005 would have cost less than $50 billion. Today's cost is
upwards of $300 billion. In the next 5 years, if nothing is done to
correct this predictable crisis, the cost of short-term fixes and the
total debt accumulated from the SGR will climb to over $600 billion.
With the drawdown of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan and the
homecoming of many of the brave young men and women who so proudly
served our country in those theaters over the course of the past
decade, we are presented with a unique opportunity to provide for a
permanent fix to the Medicare physician payments, and to do so without
adding to our already burdensome national debt. The use of savings from
the Overseas Contingency Operations fund to permanently repeal the SGR
formula will provide doctors and their patients with the certainty they
so desperately need in these difficult economic times.
As with so many of the challenges facing our Nation today, we are
presented with two clear options:
We can choose to ignore the problems posed by the SGR formula to
doctors, seniors, and to our fiscal health by continuing the practice
of short-term fixes and forced draconian cuts to hospitals and health
care providers and apply the savings from the OCO funds elsewhere; or
We can choose to use these funds to permanently repeal the SGR and to
set our Medicare system on a new path and provide for long-term
stability for doctors that promote equality, efficiency, and improved
health care services for our Nation's seniors.
I understand that we're presented with another opportunity to provide
some breathing room for doctors and their patients as part of the
middle class tax cut bill that looks to achieve bipartisan support here
this week. Let us use the next 10 months to engage in some honest
discussion about the real cost and impact of the SGR. Let's get this
right before the end of the year. And I look forward to working with my
colleagues on both sides of the aisle to do just that.
____________________