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Baltimore Times: Group calls on health insurers
Written by Editor
Baltimore, Md.— To protect the health of African Americans in Maryland, the Black Nurses Association of Baltimore and the Greater Baltimore Urban League have joined together to support a National Health Insurer Code of Conduct from the American Medical Association. In Maryland, a large portion of the state's racial and ethnic minorities, including African Americans, face significant barriers to health care, including obtaining coverage for treatments and medications prescribed by their providers. More Maryland doctors are finding their ability to care for their patients negatively impacted by third parties. Combined with the cost of treatment, these health disparities can make it extremely difficult for patients to manage their disease and maintain a quality of life. "In Maryland, African Americans with chronic diseases have problems gaining access to the right treatments for their conditions," Patricia Meadley, President of the Black Nurses Association of Baltimore, stated. "They're just not getting the care they need." The American Medical Association's (AMA) Health Insurer Code of Conduct focuses on four areas: transparency, accountability, clinical autonomy and patient safety and welfare. This will help address health disparities by providing patients with clearer information and open communication about their health plan and place a responsibility on health insurers to act in the best interests of its patients. It also gives prescribing authority back to doctors to treat patients as they see fit instead of having treatment options dictated to them through insurance practices The code of conduct limits health disparities by forcing health plans to be accountable and by allowing doctors to make clinical decisions that are in the best interests of their patients. While many managed care organizations maintain appropriate focus on quality measures, some managed care plans and pharmacy benefit managers employ aggressive tactics to cut costs, while sacrificing patient care in the process. "We are committed to improving the lives of African Americans in the Baltimore community and across the state," J. Howard Henderson, President & CEO, Greater Baltimore Urban League, stated. "Health care is not for the privileged few; it is for everyone." A code of conduct is not intended to unravel the practices of managed care, instead it is to level the playing field so that physicians can act in the best interests of their patients, and without interference from outside influences such as monetary incentives or fears of punitive actions. The AMA code will set forth clear and concise principles addressing both medical policies and payment issues, as well as create a mechanism to monitor compliance by managed care companies. The February 2009 Issue Brief from the National Business Group on Health's Center for Prevention and Health Services indicated that members of racial and ethnic minorities are less likely to receive preventive health services than members of the majority population. "Health care is needed for all--especially Maryland's black community," Meadley stated. " If you solve the health inequalities of the black population, all will benefit." The Black Nurses Association and the Greater Baltimore Urban League encourage community members to sign the Alliance for Patient Access petition in support of the Code. By doing so, it will guarantee and protect patient access to approved medical treatments. The petition can be accessed at www.insurepatientaccess.org.
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All News Items August 26, 2010 - The Lund Report: The Best Care Possible: You're Worth It June 14, 2010 - American Medical News: 10 things health insurers must do to regain trust; The AMA, with endorsement from 68 state and medical specialty societies, outlines steps health plans must take to be credible in the eyes of physicians and patients. February 27, 2010 - Providence Journal: The creepy third person in doctor’s exam room November 28, 2009 - Newport News Daily Press: MDs under attack November 04, 2009 - The Hill: A code of conduct for health insurers October 27, 2009 - WCBU-FM 89.9 (Peoria, Ill.) radio news October 26, 2009 - WEEK (NBC - Peoria, Ill.): Developing a doctor-patient relationship October 12, 2009 - Las Vegas Business Press: Here's a prescription: A health insurers code of ethics September 09, 2009 - Maryland State Medical Society Resolution 14-09 August 29, 2009 - The Island Packet: AMA code puts doctors, patients in charge of care August 28, 2009 - Baltimore Times: Group calls on health insurers August 27, 2009 - Baltimore Times: Nursing Maryland back to health August 20, 2009 - Lincoln Journal-Star: Pharmacists forced to serve insurers rather than patients August 19, 2009 - WSTM-NBC3: Prescription medication battle heats up in Central New York August 17, 2009 - New York State Senator Jeffrey D. Klein blog: For Health or Profit? Klein Unveils Sickly Scorecard of Major HMOs August 17, 2009 - New York Daily News: Prescription Prescription drug coverage marred by bureaucracy, survey says August 13, 2009 - Leading African American Groups Call On Health Insurers to Dismiss Restrictive Practices August 13, 2009 - San Diego Union-Tribune: Bureaucracy won't contain costs August 01, 2009 - Huntington, W.V. Herald-Dispatch: Insurers put stress on the physician-patient relationship July 21, 2009 - Chicago Tribune: They authorized back surgery but denied his $148,000 claim July 17, 2009 - American Osteopathic Association calls for Development of Code of Conduct July 12, 2009 - Houston Chronicle: Another kind of remedy for the sick; Code of conduct would protect patients July 07, 2009 - Washington Post: Health Reform: Who Holds the Reins on Care? July 06, 2009 - NATIONAL HEALTH INSURER CODE OF CONDUCT HITS 1000 SIGNATURES OF SUPPORT June 30, 2009 - Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Code of conduct needed for health insurers, too June 24, 2009 - Penn. Pharmacists Association: “A Patient Walks Up to the Counter …” June 24, 2009 - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Broken bonds; The physician-patient relationship is being destroyed by the cost-driven decisions of health insurers June 09, 2009 - Bellingham (Wash.) Herald: Time for a health insurance code of conduct June 08, 2009 - Mississippi Business Journal: Transparency is the best medicine; Health Insurer Code of Conduct may improve the quality of care June 03, 2009 - Frederick (Md.) News Post Op-Ed: Pharmacists pawns in health care's game of chess June 01, 2009 - KUSI-TV interview with Dr. Jack Schim May 25, 2009 - San Francisco Chronicle: Doctor pushes back against insurer scrutiny May 08, 2009 - Fox News Health Blog: Bad Medicine: Is Your Insurance Company Hazardous to Your Health? April 27, 2009 - Petition for Health Insurer Code of Conduct Garners Widespread National Support April 20, 2009 - On-line petition launched in support of a national health insurer code of conduct April 13, 2009 - Petition launched in support of a national health insurer code of conduct April 09, 2009 - Westchester (N.Y.) Herald letters: Access to Quality Healthcare April 01, 2009 - Los Angeles Society of Allergy, Asthma & Clinical Immunology Applauds the AMA for Developing Health Insurer Code of Conduct March 24, 2009 - Arizona Republic: Patient care, not financial gain, must take priority March 22, 2009 - Rochester (N.Y.) Democrat and Chronicle: Health insurers should agree to a code of conduct March 20, 2009 - Buffalo News: Code of conduct would protect patients from insurers March 10, 2009 - AfPA Launches Petition in Support of a National Health Insurer Code of Conduct March 09, 2009 - Texas Medical Society: Health Insurance Code of Conduct Act of 2009; The Time Has Come March 09, 2009 - American Medical News: MSSNY president: Insurer settlements highlight need for code of conduct February 01, 2009 - Colorado Medicine: Health Insurer Code of Conduct? January 24, 2009 - Fresno Bee: Doctors push code of conduct for insurers December 10, 2008 - Lupus Agencies of New York State Applaud AMA's Resolution to Develop a "Code of Conduct" for Health Insurers December 09, 2008 - New York State Rheumatology Society Position Paper: AMA Resolution 823 November 20, 2008 - National Minority Quality Forum Applauds AMA's Health Insurer Code of Conduct November 14, 2008 - Alliance for Patient Access Applauds AMA's Health Insurer Code of Conduct November 13, 2008 - Alliance for Better Medicine Calls on California Health Insurers to Adopt a "Code of Conduct" November 13, 2008 - Los Angeles County Medical Association Reinforces AMA's Call for a Health Insurer Code of Conduct
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