AMA Meeting to Consider Requiring Physicians Lead ACOs, Dropping Support of Insurance Mandate

At its Interim Meeting from Nov. 6-9, the American Medical Association House of Delegates will consider resolutions to drop the organization's support of the individual insurance mandate and to require that physicians lead accountable care organizations, according to an AMA report on the meeting.

Resolution 816, to drop AMA support of the individual mandate in the healthcare reform law, will be introduced by delegations from Kansas, Alabama, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia and the American Society of General Surgeons. "Federally mandating and regulating the individual purchase of health insurance will likely undermine the innovations and improvements in healthcare financing that can evolve in a free market," the measure stated.

Resolution 819, to be introduced by the California Delegation, proposed a lengthy set of principles. Under "ACO Governance," it stated: "ACOs must be physician-led and encourage an environment of collaboration among physicians." Also, it said ACOs should be allowed to use different payment models beyond shared-savings, including capitation, partial capitation, medical homes and care management fees.

Read the AMA report on healthcare reform.

Read more coverage of the AMA.

- AMA CEO to Step Down Following Furor Over Its Stance on Reform

- AMA Leader: Failure to Avert Looming Fee Cut Would be 'Catastrophe'

- Healthcare Trade Groups Shifting Support to Republicans





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