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lobbying_activities: 1183312

Individual lobbying activities reported in quarterly filings. Each row is one issue area for one client — includes the specific issues lobbied on, government entities contacted, and income/expense amounts.

Data license: Public Domain (U.S. Government data) · Data source: Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API

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id filing_uuid filing_type registrant_name registrant_id client_name filing_year filing_period issue_code specific_issues government_entities income_amount expense_amount is_no_activity is_termination received_date
1183312 e461f592-cd3c-468d-ba8f-5bbda81ce837 Q4 MARSHFIELD CLINIC HEALTH SYSTEM 57830 MARSHFIELD CLINIC HEALTH SYSTEM 2011 fourth_quarter MMM The following bullet points summarize the objectives of the Marshfield Clinic's Health Policy Agenda: "value-based purchasing of health services including bonus payments for high value Medicare Advantage programs; "establishment and funding of comparative effectiveness research; "promoting payment fairness in Medicare physician and practice expense payments; promoting payment fairness in Medicare physician and practice expense payments; new formulas for aligning Medicare reimbursement with value; bonus payments for efficient providers; bonus payments for primary care providers; financing for the adoption and utilization of health information technology; repeal and reform of the Medicare sustainable growth rate mechanism for updating physician payments; improved reimbursement for the CMS Physician Group Practice (PGP) demonstration; expansion of the PGP demonstration methodology into a national accountable care organization program to extend the physician group practice demonstration; Adequate funding for CMS; Adequate funding for community health centers; Funding for after-school programs Integration of Medical and dental care and records Meaningful use of HIT; Funding for medical simulation training Personalized medicine Healthy lifestyles programs Budget Control Act (S. 365, PL 112-25) provisions requiring mandatory sequestration of federal funding if Congress does not act to implement deficit reduction. Medicare Payment Advisory Commission recommendations regarding reform of the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula of the Medicare physician fee schedule, and offsets to fund the reforms. H.R.3682 : Patient Centered Healthcare Savings Act of 2011 Sponsor: Rep Duffy, Sean P. - Marshfield Clinic, the corporate sponsor of Security Health Plan, a five star Medicare Advantage program, opposes provisions which promote the sale of insurance across state lines but do not address the disparities in existing state law which would allow other insurance entities to circumvent Wisconsin law. HR 3630 the House Payroll Tax holiday bill H.R.3630 Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 Sponsor: Rep Camp, Dave. The bill also included a "doc fix" - a 1% increase in Medicare physician payment for 2012 and 2013; The bill also extends through 2012 the floor at 1.0 on the work geographic index in the formula for determining relative values for physicians' services for the Medicare physician payment; and directed MEDPAC to assess whether any geographic adjustment is needed under Medicare to distinguish the difference in work effort by geographic area, and if so, what that level should be and were it should be applied. The bill also revises Medicare hospital outpatient department (OPD) payment amounts for evaluation and management services, bringing them into parity with physician E&M payments. H.R.3765 Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 Sponsor: Rep Camp, Dave two month extension Medicare physician payment increase. HR 3258 - Medicare Equity Extension Act of 2011 Sponsor Rep. Bruce Braley- Amends Medicare formulae for determining payments for physician services under part B to extend through calendar 2013: (1) a specified formula element for the employee wage and rent portions of the Medicare practice expense geographic adjustment, and (2) the Medicare work geographic adjustment floor at 1.0 under the Medicare and Medicaid Extenders Act of 2010. Value Based Purchasing The concept of value-based health care purchasing is that buyers should hold providers of health care accountable for both cost and quality of care. Value-based purchasing brings together information on the quality of health care, including patient outcomes and health status, with data on the dollar outlays going towards health. It focuses on managing the use of the health care system to reduce inappropriate care and to identify and reward the best-performing providers. Variations in Health Care Service and Distribution Research conducted the Medicare Payment Advisory commission and the Dartmouth School of Medicine has documented glaring variations in how medical resources are distributed and used in the United States. The extent of variation in Medicare spending, and the evidence that more care does not result in better outcomes, should lead us to ask if some chronically ill Americans are getting more care than they actually want or need. Caring for people with chronic disease now accounts for more than 75 percent of all health-care spending. Over-use and overspending is not just a Medicare problemthe health-care system as a whole lacks efficient, effective ways of caring for people with severe chronic illnesses. Medicare Payment Dilemma The rising costs of care coupled with the increasing awareness of poor quality care have made clear the need for a transformation in the way health care is financed. Current Medicare payment policy values service delivery without regard to quality or need. The Medicare system rewards physicians for providing care even when it is not needed. We recognize the importance of primary care and care coordinated through the use of unitary electronic medical records, but these expectations and values are at odds with the current reimbursement system and the distribution of payments throughout the country. Sustainable Growth Rate Medicares SGR mechanism unfairly links physician payment updates to factors unrelated to patients needs and the cost of providing patient care. For years the Marshfield Clinic has watched Medicare physician payments atrophy in proportion to the cost of providing Medicare Services. In 2010 the Clinic recovered only 52.45% of the Medicare Allowable Costs of serving Medicare patients. In 2009 the Clinic lost 49.6 cents on each dollar of care provided. As payments have deteriorated in both the Medicare and Medicaid sector, the Clinic has documented increasing patient counts as other physicians and providers in the communities that we serve turn patients away. The difficulty of correctly updating physician fees is complicated by problems with the fee schedule regarding resource use, compensation for care coordination, and volume growth that point to Mispricing related to the value of physician services; inaccuracy of practice expense (overhead) calculations; and increasing variation in the volumes of services provided in different regions of the country. Uncertainty about the Medicare/Medicaid revenue stream complicates Clinic efforts to provide services where they are needed. Stability, adequacy, and predictability in payment should be the highest priority for Congress to assure high quality efficient care for all patients, but especially for the 20% of the population that is chronically ill and responsible for 75% of Medicare spending. Medicare Payment Inequities In the traditional fee-for-service system Medicare currently reimburses for units of service, in a manner that promotes service utilization without regard to quality. This has had the effect of economically stimulating growth in the numbers of supply-sensitive services provided by physicians. The Update formula for physician services is inequitable because it treats all physicians and regions of the country alike regardless of their individual volume influencing behavior. If the problem of cost is related to the volume of services provided, shouldnt payment be volume adjusted for specific localities? Why should conservative practices and States be punished for the excessive volume of other localities? Medicare Payment Inequities In the traditional fee-for-service system Medicare currently reimburses for units of service, in a manner that promotes service utilization without regard to quality. This has had the effect of economically stimulating growth in the numbers of supply-sensitive services provided by physicians. The Update formula for physician services is inequitable because it treats all physicians and regions of the country alike regardless of their individual volume influencing behavior. If the problem of cost is related to the volume of services provided, shouldnt payment be volume adjusted for specific localities? Why should conservative practices and States be punished for the excessive volume of other localities? Payment Equity for Physician Work There is no difference in the work of physicians in different locations regardless of where the work occurs. We believe that physician work should not be adjusted for geographic location. What is the rational for paying physicians more in many geographic areas when those same areas have apparently ample numbers of physicians and their wages are trending below physician wages in other areas? Should the Medicare program subsidize physicians who chose to live in high cost areas? Recommendation: the geographic adjustment of physician work should be eliminated entirely on a Budget neutral basis. Payment Fairness for Practice Costs The formulas by which Medicares payments are calculated are widely variable throughout Medicare localities, and are based upon outdated data assumptions regarding the cost and organization of medical practice. Medicares physician fee schedule, which specifies the amount that Medicare will pay for each physician service, includes adjustments that are ostensibly made to ensure that the fees paid reflect systematic and enduring variation in geographic practice-related costs. Currently, CMS uses the median hourly earnings of four occupational classes -- Clerical Workers, Registered Nurses, Licensed Practical Nurses, and Medical Technicians -- found in physician offices as proxy non-physician wage input cost measures. These proxy occupational classes, which were the most common employees in physician practices in the 1980s, are now only a subset of non-physician employees in physician practices. The practice of medicine has changed substantially since the proxy measurement formulae were established. Recommendation: Congress should require CMS to administratively revise its measurement of cost of practice to assure the validity and fairness of payments. Medicare Advantage The Medicare Advantage program provides a capitated reimbursement to health plans for all Medicare benefits provided to enrolled beneficiaries. Corresponding mechanisms for rewarding value in the Medicare Advantage program should offer incentives for those plans that demonstrate superior patient care performance. Performance bonuses should be provided for plans that: Achieve predetermined quality performance targets; Adopt health information technology; Meet standards for care coordination; and Provide data on comparative effectiveness. Medical Simulation Training The Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Program Requirements for Resident Education in Internal Medicine has recommended that residency programs need to Provide residents with access to training using simulation. The need for medical simulation is great; medical errors continue to kill approximately 98,000 people annually. Over the past decade, this amounts to almost a staggering one million accidental patient deaths. These errors cost the US approximately $17-$29 billion annually. Medical errors are highly preventable through the use of modeling and simulation in medical education. Simulation will enhance technical and communication skills of physicians and other medical providers in high fatality, low frequency skills, such as emergency cricothyroidotomy, and amniocentesis and physician re-entry skill verification, such as pelvic exam and central line placement. Simulation experiences also provide the opportunity to enhance team communication and patient to provider communication through the recreation of uncommon or stressful scenarios such as obtaining a sexual health history or abuse/neglect screening. Marshfield Clinic will support legislation to initiate, maintain and grow medical simulation programs through the identification of simulation centers of excellence, advancement of simulation technologies, allocation of grant funds for institutions who train healthcare providers and call together key leaders to discuss the direction of medical simulation Accountable Care Organizations One important delivery system reform is the Medicare Shared Savings Program under section 3022 of the Affordable Care Act, which promotes the formation and operation of accountable care organizations (ACOs). Under this provision, groups of providers meeting the criteria specified by the Secretary may work together to manage and coordinate care for Medicare beneficiaries through an [ACO]. An ACO may receive payments for shared savings if the ACO meets certain quality performance standards and cost savings requirements established by the Secretary. The basic shared savings model outlined in the statute provides a bonus payment to ACOs that meet quality targets and keep spending for the population for whom the ACO is responsible below a target level. The amount of the bonus payment will depend on the amount of savings and the proportion of the savings allocated to the ACO and Medicare ACOs should report a focused set of quality indicators that reflect the outcomes ACOs are designed to achieve: keeping the population healthy, better care coordination to reduce unnecessary and sometimes harmful spending, and better patient experience. New measures may be necessary for ACOs because the current measures reflect the limitations and incentives of the current FFS payment system. A focused set of measures would help assure Medicare that the ACO is doing its job and help assure beneficiaries that they are receiving high quality care. The ACO metrics could include population-based outcomes measures such as: Emergency room use, Potentially preventable admission rates, In-hospital mortality rates, and possibly patient safety measures, and Readmission rates. In addition to outcomes measures, CMS could also consider measuring patient experience with health care provided under the ACO and health status. There should be a focused set of measures tracking how well care is provided, rather than how many services are provided. Community Health Centers Under Health Reform The Affordable Care Act included provisions relating to community health centers, including $11 billion in new funding for the community health center program. While these are mandatory funding levels, it is possible that the Congress might cut the base funding levels for community health centers and the National Health Service Corp effectively diminishing the impact of the reform legislation. As reform is rolled out there are key payment protections and improvements for community health centers. For example, the Act requires that health centers receive no less than their Medicaid rate from private insurers offering plans through the new health insurance exchanges and it requires that these plans must contract with health centers. Other provisions add preventive services to the federally qualified health center Medicare payment rate and eliminates the outdated Medicare payment cap on FQHC payments. This will begin to modernize the health center Medicare payments to insure health centers are able to provide highest quality care to Medicare beneficiaries. It is possible that these payment reforms may open up new avenues for enhanced Medicare reimbursement for Family Health Center/Marshfield Clinic patients. Finally, the Act acknowledges the growing role of health centers in teaching the next generation of primary care providers by authorizing and funding new programs for health center -based residencies. A new Title VII grant program for the development of residency programs at health centers is established along with a new Title III program that would provide payments to community-based entities that operate teaching programs. Dental Access and Integration with Traditional Medicine The Institute of Medicine (IOM) released a report, Dental Education at the Crossroads: Challenges and Change in January 1995 which called for a strong cohesion between medicine and dentistry. The IOM report states that "Dentistry will and should become more closely integrated with medicine and the health care system on all levels: research, education, and patient care. The National Institutes of Health has supported research documenting the importance of oral health in the context of general health and well being. Studies have demonstrated numerous oral-systemic interactions that underscore the need for more integrated care delivery. As our nation embraces EHR technologies, science underscores the need to fully incorporate oral health within an integrated EHR. Marshfield Clinic is simultaneously addressing the issue of dental access and integration with traditional medicine. Family Health Center of Marshfield, Inc. (FHC) in partnership with Marshfield Clinic has been serving low-income, underinsured and uninsured individuals since March 1974. Using technology to integrate medical and dental health records holds great promise to improve the quality, safety, efficiency, effectiveness and continuity of patient care by enhancing communication and teamwork between physicians and dentists. A comprehensive approach to primary care delivery, demonstrated by Marshfield Clinic and community health centers nationwide, can best be supported with an equally comprehensive EHR infrastructure for both medical and dental records. Meaningful Use of Health Information Technology The accelerating growth in new medical knowledge, coupled with the birth of new sciences, such as genomics and personalized medicine, suggests that physicians, nurses, and other healthcare professionals will invariably continue to fall further and further behind in their ability to keep up with the latest discoveries and approved treatments. As information technology has sparked this explosive growth in knowledge, only information technology can provide an adequate response. By using evidence-based knowledge embedded in clinical decision support deployed within a well-designed workflow, physicians can manage the ever changing and growing knowledge base critical to the delivery of effective and efficient healthcare. Personalized Medicine Personalized medicine is the concept that envisions an individually tailored approach to detecting, preventing, and treating disease based on a persons specific genetic profile. If the multiple population groups in the United States and elsewhere in the world are to benefit fully and fairly from such research, a national resource operated as a trust for the public good must be established to conduct a large populationbased cohort study that includes full representation of minority populations. The Federal government should make critical investments in the enabling tools and resources essential to moving beyond genomic discoveries to personalized medicine services of patient and public benefit. Medicaid Block Grants On April 15, the House approved Rep. Paul Ryans budget proposal for FY 2012, entitled "The Path to Prosperity. Ryan's proposal does not have the force of law but of special interest is Ryans proposal for Medicaid block grants which will come before the Energy and Commerce Committee. Under the Ryan proposal, starting in 2013, the federal share of all Medicaid payments would be paid to the states as a block grant (indexed to CPI-U and population growth). Federal requirements would be reduced and states would have flexibility in designing their programs. Starting in 2022, the block grant would be reduced to exclude projected spending for acute care services or Medicare premiums and cost-sharing paid by Medicaid. Premium support On April 15, the House approved Rep. Paul Ryans budget proposal for FY 2012, entitled "The Path to Prosperity. Ryan's budget does not have the force of law but tees up consideration of various reform proposals which may be considered later this year. With regard to health care, the Ryan plan calls for a major withdrawal of the federal government from the financing of health care. One health provision of the proposal calls for conversion of the current Medicare to a premium support program. For people now 55 or younger, the traditional Medicare program a defined benefit plan would cease to exist and, starting in 2022, would be converted to a defined contribution program which has been described as a premium support program. CMS Physician Group Practice Demonstration On September 27, 2002 the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services published a notice in the Federal Register informing interested parties of an opportunity to submit proposals for participation in the Medicare Physician Group Practice Demonstration (PGP) project to test a hybrid payment methodology that combines Medicare fee-for-service payments with a bonus pool derived from savings achieved by improvements in patient care management. Marshfield Clinic submitted a proposal for this demonstration and was selected by CMS to participate in the demonstration program, effective April 1, 2005. Marshfield Clinic supported CMS determination to extend this program, beyond its initial 3-year term, and transition these organizations into Accountable care Organizations. Section 1301 of the House bill HR 3962, the Affordable Health Care for America Act, and Section 3022 of the Senate bill HR 3590, the Patient Protections and Affordable Care Act. Centers For Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS),Food & Drug Administration (FDA),Health & Human Services, Dept of (HHS),HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC),SENATE   120000 0 0 2012-01-10T17:05:23-05:00
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