Trumpfs Health Secretary Pick Leaves Nationfs Doctors Divided

By ROBERT PEAR
DEC. 26, 2016 - The New York Times

WASHINGTON — When President-elect Donald J. Trump chose Representative Tom Price of Georgia to be his health and human services secretary, the American Medical Association swiftly endorsed the selection of one of its own, an orthopedic surgeon who has championed the role of physicians throughout his legislative career.

Then the larger world of doctors and nurses weighed in on the beliefs and record of Mr. Price, a suburban Atlanta Republican — and the split among caregivers, especially doctors, quickly grew sharp.

gThe A.M.A. does not speak for us,h says a petition signed by more than 5,000 doctors.

Mr. Trump and a Republican-held Congress are considering some of the biggest changes to the American health care system in generations: not only the repeal of the Affordable Care Act, which is providing insurance to some 20 million people, but also the transformation of Medicare, for older Americans, and Medicaid, for low-income people. Mr. Price has favored those changes.

Seven years ago, the A.M.A.fs support helped lift President Obamafs health care proposals toward passage, and the group has backed the law, with some reservations, since its adoption in 2010. But as Republicans push for its dismantlement, deep disagreements within the A.M.A., which has long wielded tremendous power in Washington, could lessen its influence.

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The concerns voiced by dissident doctors do not appear to imperil Senate confirmation of Mr. Price, but they do ensure that his confirmation hearings next month will be as contentious as any held for a Trump nominee, featuring a full public examination of the new presidentfs proposed health policies.

gDoctors are divided big time,h said Dr. Carl G. Streed Jr., a primary care doctor at Brigham and Womenfs Hospital in Boston and a member of the A.M.A. house of delegates, the organizationfs principal policy-making body.

The controversy began soon after Mr. Trump announced on Nov. 29 that he had chosen Mr. Price to head the Department of Health and Human Services, which controls Medicare, Medicaid, the Affordable Care Actfs federal health insurance exchange, the National Institutes of Health, the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Contol and Prevention.

Within hours, the A.M.A. — the nationfs largest medical advocacy group, which has nearly 235,000 members and calls itself gthe voice of the medical professionh — issued a statement saying it gstrongly supportsh the selection.

It noted Mr. Pricefs experience as a doctor, a state legislator and a member of Congress. It praised, in particular, his support for gpatient choice and market-based solutionsh and his efforts to reduce gexcessive regulatory burdensh on doctors.

The enthusiasm was understandable at one level: Mr. Price has been a member of the A.M.A. house of delegates since 2005 and was an alternate delegate for a decade before that, according to the A.M.A. and the Medical Association of Georgia.

gFor those who are attacking Dr. Price, I have to ask whom you would rather have at the helm of H.H.S. — a career bureaucrat? A former governor who views doctors as a cost center to be controlled?h said Dr. Robert E. Hertzka of San Diego, an anesthesiologist and former president of the California Medical Association. gTom Price may turn out to be the best friend that physicians and patients have ever had in that role.h

Many doctors are not willing to take that chance. More than 750 people who identify themselves as members of the A.M.A. signed a letter to the associationfs board objecting to the endorsement.

The gunqualified supporth for Mr. Price is inappropriate, the letter says, because he has been ga strong opponent of so much of our clearly delineated A.M.A. policyh on issues like the Affordable Care Act, contraception and gay rights. Some doctors also said their patients could be hurt by major changes in Medicare and Medicaid that Mr. Price, along with other House Republicans, has advocated.

Dr. Andrea S. Christopher, 32, an internal medicine doctor at the veterans hospital in Boise, Idaho, said she had decided not to renew her A.M.A. membership over the endorsement, which she called especially upsetting to her generation of physicians.

gDr. Price has been an outspoken opponent of the Affordable Care Act, which has done so much to address the needs of our most vulnerable patients and reduced the uninsured rate to the lowest level on record,h Dr. Christopher said.

Dr. Kristin M. Huntoon, a 37-year-old neurosurgery resident at Ohio State University in Columbus, said the organizationfs support for Mr. Price had increased the chances that the Affordable Care Act would be dismantled — and that has put her patients at risk.

Ohio has extended Medicaid coverage to more than 600,000 people under the federal health care law. If that expansion is reversed, Dr. Huntoon said, some patients will not receive imaging or treatment at an early stage of their disease, and they are more likely to arrive when tumors have spread to the brain.

gAt that stage,h she said, gtherefs often nothing I can do for the patient.h

Physicians have long been a focus of Mr. Pricefs legislative efforts. He led the push to fix widely recognized flaws in Medicarefs formula for paying doctors and supported changes in malpractice laws that could make it easier for doctors to defend themselves. He supported changes in Medicare that would allow doctors to get around fee limits by signing contracts with patients. He has also backed changes in antitrust law that would enhance doctorsf bargaining power in negotiations with insurance companies.

gPocketbook issues — the economic well-being of physicians — may well be a factor contributing to the A.M.A.fs endorsement,h said Dr. Manan Trivedi, a former Democratic candidate for Congress who is the president of the National Physicians Alliance, a group of 10,000 doctors that opposes Mr. Pricefs confirmation.

Dr. Patrice A. Harris, the chairwoman of the A.M.A., strongly defended the groupfs actions and suggested that Mr. Price could surprise critics as Dr. C. Everett Koop did in the 1980s, when he was surgeon general of the United States under President Ronald Reagan. Liberal politicians and womenfs groups initially criticized Dr. Koop because of his opposition to abortion, but when he stepped down after more than seven years in office, he was widely praised for his role in fighting AIDS and discouraging the use of tobacco.

gWe do realize that there is a diversity of opinion on Dr. Price,h Dr. Harris said in an interview. gWe respect that diversity. We take the concerns that have been expressed by some of our members and by physicians in general seriously.

gOur support for Dr. Price is based on our history with him, his extensive involvement with A.M.A.,h she added. gHefs a longtime member, hefs a delegate. For us, he has always been accessible. He listens, and he really knows how policies impact the delivery of care and the physician-patient relationship.h

Phillip J. Blando, a spokesman for the Trump transition team, said Mr. Price had been endorsed by many medical groups and was guniquely preparedh for the job. gIf confirmed,h he said, gDr. Price will work to restore the patient-doctor relationship and clamp down on government overreach.h

Mr. Price has introduced legislation to repeal President Obamafs health law, including its expansion of Medicaid and subsidies for the purchase of private insurance. He advocates tax credits to help people buy insurance, greater use of individual health savings accounts and state-run ghigh-risk poolsh for people with pre-existing conditions who might otherwise have difficulty finding affordable coverage.

As a member of the House Budget Committee, and then its chairman, he has supported proposals to shift Medicare away from its open-ended commitment to pay for medical services and toward a fixed government contribution for each beneficiary, which could be used for either private insurance or traditional Medicare. Such proposals could increase costs for some beneficiaries or limit the amount of care they receive, health policy experts say.

Mr. Price has also backed turning Medicaid into block grants to state governments. Critics say that states would probably respond by restricting eligibility, cutting Medicaid benefits or reducing payments to health care providers.

In leading efforts to repeal the presidentfs health law, Mr. Price is pursuing a goal in opposition to the policies of the A.M.A. In a letter to congressional leaders in 2010, Dr. J. James Rohack, who was then president of the A.M.A., said the law took gan important step toward improving the health of the American people,h by gextending coverage to the vast majority of the uninsuredh and gimproving competition and choice in the insurance marketplace.h

Dr. Samantha G. Harrington, a doctor at Cambridge Hospital in Massachusetts, said she had canceled her A.M.A. membership because she found its endorsement of Mr. Price gembarrassing and shameful.h

Dr. Thomas M. Gellhaus, the president of the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, said Mr. Price had gworked closely with ush on many issues. But, he said in a recent letter to the congressman, gsome of the bills you supported in Congress would not serve womenfs health well.h

Mr. Price has supported efforts to restrict abortion and cut off federal funds for Planned Parenthood clinics.

If confirmed, Mr. Price would be only the third physician to serve as secretary in the 63-year history of the Health and Human Services Department and its predecessor, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.