[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 158 (2012), Part 13]
[House]
[Page 18425]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                    THE SGR NEEDS TO BE PATCHED NOW

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Georgia (Mr. Price) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. PRICE of Georgia. Mr. Speaker, in the late 1990s, Congress came 
up with a new formula to determine how much to pay doctors for taking 
care of seniors in the Medicare program. It's called the ``sustainable 
growth rate,'' or the SGR. And like so many Washington solutions, it 
doesn't work.
  Before coming to Congress, I was a doctor. I took care of patients 
for over 20 years. I remember thinking at the time that the SGR program 
was put into place, Well, that won't work. It's a house of cards. It's 
destined to fail.
  Mr. Speaker, here we are. America's seniors are on the verge of 
losing access to health care. Let me repeat that, Mr. Speaker. 
America's seniors are on the verge of losing access to health care. 
How? If Congress and President Obama don't act by January 1, tomorrow, 
Medicare payments to physicians will be reduced, will be cut by nearly 
27 percent. You see, Mr. Speaker, the fiscal cliff is more than just 
the tax increases that President Obama so dearly wants.
  The effect of the SGR formula means that physicians who treat 
Medicare patients will be forced to limit the number of seniors that 
they see, fewer patients being seen, doctors forced not to see patients 
because of foolish Washington policy. This jeopardizes health care for 
millions of folks. The sustainable growth rate, the formula used by 
Medicare to determine physician reimbursement, needs to be repealed. It 
doesn't work for patients, and it doesn't work for doctors. It's 
destructive to the very principles that we hold dear about health care. 
It violates accessibility, it violates quality, and it limits choices. 
It harms real people.
  There are positive solutions that we're working on so that we may 
responsibly reform this broken system. But while we work to put in 
place a system that actually does make sense, we must provide certainty 
for patients and their doctors for the new year.
  Mr. Speaker, slashing payments to doctors is a terrible idea, and it 
must be stopped. The SGR needs to be patched now so that seniors may 
continue to see their doctors, and then we should move forward with 
real solutions that work for real people, not just for Washington 
bureaucrats.
  The sad thing about our current dysfunction in this town is that 
people all across this country get harmed. It's not because of 
something that they did, but because of something that government did 
to them or forced them to do. It's time to let Americans be Americans, 
and in health care that means caring for each other and allowing 
patients and families and doctors to make medical decisions, not 
Washington.

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