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Image from www.whitehouse.govPresident Obama faces opposition from both Republicans and Democrats on the Independent Physicians Advisory Board (IPAB) -- the most potent cost-cutting tool in the health reform law. Remember: The IPAB, which would be composed of physicians, would have the power to set Medicare payments for services based on comparative effectiveness research. The IPAB would, for example, be able to have Medicare pay less for procedures that are shown to be less effective. 

The Obama Administration is pushing for a mandatory training requirement for doctors prescribing narcotics in an effort to curb the nation’s prescription painkillers epidemic.

Image from cms.hhs.govCMS's push for you and your peers to adopt electronic health record (EHR) systems by 2016 has a passionate advocate in Administrator Donald Berwick, MD, a former pediatrician appointed by the Obama administration. Dr. Berwick, who is generally well regarded in the physician community, appears in a four-minute YouTube video released last week to make a personal case for EHR adoption. Dr. Berwick describes the benefits of an EHR from his clinical perspective, and tells an interesting anecdote of treating an autistic native American child in a remote reservation.
AMA logo used with permissionWhat would you like CMS to give you for Christmas? The AMA is showing its cards -- in a recent letter sent to CMS chief Donald Berwick, the top physician advocacy group provided a long list of "the most burdensome regulations [physicians] deal with" and asked for change.

The letter is intended as a response to President Obama's Jan. 18 executive order asking federal agencies to remove or reduce regulations that unnecessarily have a negative impact on small business. The AMA's response takes aim at a dozen Medicare and Medicaid regulations and policies, including a few recent favorites you'll recognize.
HHS unveiled the 10-year Partnership for Patients initiative, as means to prevent complications during patient care in a conference call Tuesday. Department Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said that the program could “help save lives by stopping preventable injuries and complications in patient care over the next three years.” 

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