News | December 11, 2007

Members of the House Speak Against Medicare Cuts to Medical Imaging

December 12, 2007 - Representatives Carolyn McCarthy (D-NY) Joseph Pitts (R-PA) and Gene Green (D-TX) were joined by more than 65 of their colleagues in urging Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi to reject any additional cuts to Medicare medical imaging services.

“It is very encouraging to see the leadership from Representatives McCarthy, Pitts and Green and the support from so many Members of Congress to preserve and protect Medicare beneficiary access to medical imaging services.,” said Tim Trysla, executive director of the Access to Medical Imaging Coalition (AMIC), a coalition representing more than 75,000 physicians and providers, as well as numerous patient advocacy groups throughout the United States. “Medical imaging technologies like PET and CT scans, MRIs, ultrasounds and DEXA catch diseases early and, combined with other agents, treat them more precisely so that patients have dramatically better health outcomes,” said Andrew Whitman, vice president of the Medical Imaging & Technology Alliance, a member of AMIC. “These cutting-edge medical imaging services go hand-in-hand with the latest preventive and targeted medical care – precisely the type of innovative care that Congress should be promoting, not cutting.”

Congress is currently negotiating a legislative package that could include large cuts to medical imaging services. Some proposals would make billions of dollars in cuts and, in so doing, further reduce access to medical imaging technologies that are instrumental to detecting life-threatening diseases – including cancer, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis and diabetes.

Access to medical imaging services is already being squeezed as a result of the $13 billion in cuts included in the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. This resulted in an 18 to 19 percent reduction in payments for imaging services provided in physician offices and outpatient imaging centers and was just implemented in January of this year.

For more information: www.imagingaccess.org


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