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September 29, 2009 |
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Important Message from AAFP President Dr. Ted EpperlyOutgoing American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) President Dr. Ted Epperly issued the following message to AAFP members on Sept. 28: “In less than three weeks, I will have the distinct privilege of installing Dr. Lori Heim as the 63rd president of AAFP. As my time serving you as president winds down, I want to take this opportunity to talk with you one last time about the important efforts your Academy is taking to help ensure reform of our health care system. So what principles am I talking about? Where does AAFP stand on health care reform? It is really quite simple. We believe that the key to designing a new health care system is to reemphasize the centrality of primary care by:
In addressing all of these principles, our approach has been one of "Yes, if." "Yes, we will support certain provisions, if the following principles are present." The health care system we have is unacceptable and not financially sustainable long term. The rapidly growing health insurance premiums and cost sharing measures (like higher co-payments and bigger deductibles) are making more of our patients limit their access to their family doctors. The status quo is not acceptable to us or to our patients. In this vein, your AAFP leaders have been busy recently, talking face-to-face and via conference call with members of the Obama administration and Congress to stress the need to enact health care reform legislation that improves health care quality, enhances patient access and lowers costs via a primary care-based system. I met with Nancy-Ann DeParle, director of White House Office of Health Reform, and others in August. During this meeting, I told them that AAFP continues its commitment to the major principles of health care reform, including providing health care for all and the importance of better payments for family physicians and other primary care physicians. I stressed that adequate payment is key to building a primary care infrastructure in this country and that we must invest in the education and training of the primary care workforce so we have enough family physicians in our country. In addition to the White House face-to-face meeting, I have participated in several conference calls with the White House, along with representatives of several other physician organizations, including American College of Physicians, American Osteopathic Association, American Academy of Pediatrics and American Medical Association. We discussed what we could do collectively to move health care reform along. I am very optimistic and encouraged by the discussions with the White House and with our colleague organizations, and believe we need these exchanges to get good, solid, factual information to our members. I also have been part of six town halls where I have had a chance to represent AAFP to both members of Congress and to you. I have seen the fear, heard the concerns and witnessed much about the character of America. It is important that America is having this dialogue. AAFP must stay engaged in the health care reform process. Now is not the time to walk away from the table, if anything now is the time for us to be more engaged and to advocate for the way the health care system needs to be reformed. AAFP is going to continue to be engaged and advocating every second for the good of health care for this country. I would ask of you to do the following:
I would like to just end with this. We have never been closer to meaningful health care reform in the history of our nation than we are right now. I remain optimistic that we will step forward as a nation for the good of health care for all. I wish you all the best as we move forward.” Regards, Dr. Ted Epperly |