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Dr.
Smith goes to Washington
OU-COM students and clinical
faculty advocate for health care reform in Congress
By Mary Reed
When Starla Lyles, OMS I,
put on her white coat and made rounds April 24, she wasn’t in a
hospital or clinic, but on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. Lyles
joined more than 40 OU-COM students and clinical faculty—and more
than 800 others from across the U.S.—at D.O. Day on the Hill. This
national lobbying event, coordinated by the American Osteopathic
Association (AOA), brings together D.O.s and osteopathic medical
students to advocate for health care policy reform.
“We had an opportunity to
actually talk to our representatives and senators … they listened;
they had an open ear,” said Lyles, political affairs chair for the
OU-COM chapter of the Student Osteopathic Medical Association.
In D.C., the students met
with Sen. Sherrod Brown and with an aide to Rep. Charlie Wilson,
both Ohio democrats. Among other topics, D.O. Day participants
pressed representatives to sign a letter supporting the Save
Medicare Act of 2008, which would halt the 10.6 percent cut in
physician reimbursements slated to go into effect July 1, followed
by another five percent cut in January 2009.
According to Peter Bell,
D.O., the issue is not how much doctors are paid, but for what.
“Medicare rewards doing things without compensating
preventive care efforts or rewarding greater quality of care,” said
Bell, a CORE assistant dean at both Doctors Hospital and Grandview
Medical Center.
Bell explained that
Medicare, America’s largest health care purchaser,
pays hospitals and doctors a fixed sum to perform a specific
procedure or treat a condition. Failing to provide preventive care
or adequate early treatment can increase the need for such
Medicare-reimbursed services later on. As a result, low quality of
care is actually rewarded.
“In our country, we have a
patchwork of health care solutions. What we need is a well-woven
blanket,” Bell said. “As physicians, we need to understand the
weaknesses of the system and offer realistic, sustainable
suggestions.”
Lyles coordinated her and
her classmates’ D.C. trip this year, with transportation and
accommodations funded by the Ohio Osteopathic Association (OOA).
“The OOA believes it is very
important for D.O.s to serve as health policy advocates for their
patients and their communities,” said Jon Wills, OOA executive
director. “We want students to actively participate in the
legislative process, so they will continue to speak out on important
issues when they become physicians.”
This year’s D.O. Day on the
Hill drew 852 osteopathic physicians and students to the nation’s
capital. “The event helps students understand how Congress impacts
the practice of medicine,” said Leann Fox, AOA director of federal
advocacy. “Students are growing more aware that grassroots advocacy
is key to ensuring that the rules and regulations governing medicine
are made with their input and with the understanding that the
physician-patient relationship must be protected.”
Imran Akbar, OMS II,
helped prepare his fellow students for the big day by coordinating
the college’s 2008 Policy Puzzle—a series of lunchtime seminars that
cover topics such as health care costs, access to health care,
physician reimbursements and the State Children’s Health Care
Program (SCHIP), which was the focus of last year’s D.O. Day on the
Hill.
Akbar attended the event
last year and wanted to encourage more students to get involved for
2008. “My goal (for Policy Puzzle) was to get more students excited
about the democratic process and more aware of important health care
issues,” he said. “Until you’ve done (D.O. Day), you don’t realize
how accessible our government is. When you leave, you have a
newfound respect for the process, and it beckons you to engage.”
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