loader image
Thursday, January 22, 2026
66.2 F
McAllen
- Advertisement -

AMA Urges Congress to Avert Medicare Cuts in The New Year

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

With Congress and the Administration concluding legislative business for 2023 without addressing the 3.37-percent Medicare physician payment cuts that begin on January 1, 2024, the American Medical Association (AMA) urged legislative action shortly after the holidays to avoid imperiling patient access to care and jeopardizing physician practices. Image for illustration purposes
With Congress and the Administration concluding legislative business for 2023 without addressing the 3.37-percent Medicare physician payment cuts that begin on January 1, 2024, the American Medical Association (AMA) urged legislative action shortly after the holidays to avoid imperiling patient access to care and jeopardizing physician practices. Image for illustration purposes
- Advertisement -

CHICAGO — With Congress and the Administration concluding legislative business for 2023 without addressing the 3.37-percent Medicare physician payment cuts that begin on January 1, 2024, the American Medical Association (AMA) urged legislative action shortly after the holidays to avoid imperiling patient access to care and jeopardizing physician practices.

Not only is there a bipartisan legislative fix – the Preserving Seniors’ Access to Physicians Act of 2023 (H.R.6683) – to completely eliminate the cuts, but the FY 2024 National Defense Authorization (NDAA) bill includes $2.2 billion in sequester cuts for physicians in a Medicare Improvement Fund – more than enough funding to stop the 3.37-percent cuts in their entirety.

“After three consecutive years of cuts to Medicare services, physicians and the patients they treat are at a crossroads. Facing a nearly 10-percent reduction in Medicare payments over the past four years and rising practice costs on top of the burdens and burnout of three years of COVID-19, for many physicians, continuing down this road is unsustainable,” said AMA President Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, M.D., MPH. “These cuts will be felt first and hardest in rural and underserved areas that continue to face significant health care access challenges. Medicare physicians do not receive inflationary payment updates, which is why eliminating these cuts is so crucial.”

- Advertisement -

“But as Kate McCallister famously said in Home Alone, ‘This is Christmas – the season of perpetual hope.’ Congress has multiple paths to avert these cuts, preserve seniors’ access to their physicians, and ensure access to Medicare across the country; we have a bipartisan legislative fix and more than enough funding in the Medicare Improvement Fund. We urge lawmakers to act quickly, preserve Medicare access, and pass this vital legislation. They’ll have physicians and patients alike saying, ‘to us, you are perfect.’”

Information Source: American Medical Association

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

A Deep Dive into the Impact of Stress on Kids’ Health

Most research on the health effects of stress focuses on adults, but a new review looks at how stress uniquely affects children.

The Hidden Threat in Your Home: Understanding CO Exposure

If you haven’t checked your carbon monoxide detector in a while, now is a good time to do so -- especially as we crank up the heat to stay warm this winter.

FDA Aims to Make Gluten Easier to Spot on Food Labels

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a Request for Information (RFI) regarding labeling and preventing cross-contact of gluten in packaged food.

Hydration 101: The Simple Habit That Keeps Your Body Running

Water. It is essential to support life. Water is one of the simplest, most accessible ways we have to support good health. Because the human body is made up of roughly 60 percent water, staying hydrated is essential for almost every biological function, from regulating temperature to transporting nutrients.
- Advertisement -
×