CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

75F Hi 85F
Lo 70F

Recent Blog Posts

Physicians Will Seek To Prescribe to Albany

By E.B. SOLOMONT, Staff Reporter of the Sun | March 3, 2008

Health care organizations and physician groups will vie for the attention of state lawmakers this week, as thousands of health care lobbyists travel to Albany to weigh in on Governor Spitzer's health care agenda.

The main physician group in New York, the Medical Society of the State of New York, expects nearly 2,000 doctors to travel to the state capital tomorrow to attempt to impress on legislators the need for medical liability reform. The group has chartered 20 buses to transport doctors from around the state, and organizers said obstetricians from Lenox Hill Hospital plan to leave behind a skeleton staff of doctors to handle emergency cases.

"The sheer numbers that we're expecting are proof positive of the urgency that the physicians of the state of New York feel," the group's executive vice president, Rick Abrams, said.

In July, the Insurance Department increased liability insurance rates by 14%, a rate doctors said is not sustainable. A medical malpractice insurance task force convened by Mr. Spitzer was expected to make recommendations for changes by the end of 2007, but in the absence of recommendations, the physician group is planning to rally on the steps of the Capitol to "express our frustration and anger at what we're facing," the group's president and a doctor of osteopathic medicine, Robert Goldberg, said.

Even as doctors take up the issue of medical liability, other groups plan to lobby legislators on elements of Mr. Spitzer's 2008-09 budget in advance of the April 1 budget deadline.

In January, Mr. Spitzer outlined a health care agenda that would expand health insurance coverage to uninsured children and shift resources to primary care settings.

The budget planned to achieve $980 million in health care savings by controlling the cost of prescription drugs, taxing HMOs, reforming hospital reimbursement for inpatient care, and cracking down on Medicaid fraud.

On Wednesday, the Healthcare Association of New York State will hold an advocacy day in Albany. Representatives from the Greater New York Hospital Association are expected to take part. While the industry's response to this year's budget was markedly more favorable than it was last year, some have expressed concern about spending cuts that are meant to achieve savings, such as cuts to health care providers. They also said the impact on hospitals is not fully understood, even thought the budget deadline is weeks away.

At the same time, primary care advocates, who are expected to converge on Albany today, plan to back a shift in resources to outpatient and primary care settings. "A lot of us have known for a long time that we should be providing more funding and more focus to outpatient care and preventive care," the director of New York City policy for the Community Health Care Association of New York State, Darryl Ng, said.

Mr. Ng said the group anticipates nearly 500 advocates to travel to Albany for a series of briefings and meetings with legislators today.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

It is about time to get control of the malpractice situation in this state. The circumstances surrounding this issue is... [MORE]

Glenn Edwards 

Mar 4, 2008 13:49

You article seems to indicate that doctors are upset over a 14% rise in malpractice rates. That is only the... [MORE]

David Edelson, MD 

Mar 4, 2008 18:55

Comment on this article

    Before submitting your comment, please provide a valid email address to complete the verification process.

    Fall Education
    A New York Sun Advertorial Section

    NEW YORK ›

    A Surge of Support for the Sun Voiced by Leaders in the City

    19 Columbia Freshmen Jump to the Ivy League From the Armed Forces

    2 Arrested for Running Prostitution Ring

    Community Organizers 'Appalled' by Their Portrayal

    City Teacher Charged With Section 8 Fraud

    More School Construction Is Urged for Manhattan

    NATIONAL ›

    Detroit Mayor To Step Down: 'I Lied Under Oath'

    Palin Speech Draws More Than 40 Million Viewers

    Abortion Rights Group Sees 'Discrepancy' in Palin Stance

    Abramoff Sentenced to Four Years in Corruption Scandal

    Bruno Draws Tough Obama-Spitzer Parallels

    McCain: 'I Will Reach Out My Hand'

    ARTS+ ›

    This Old House: Godfrey Cheshire's Family History

    Alan Ball Is Looking for Trouble

    Latinbeart 2008: The Heart of Latin America Is Strong

    'Mister Foe': The Boy Who Cried Mother

    'Everybody Wants To Be Italian': Love Is Never Saying ... Anything

    'August Evening': A Repressed Family in the Land of the Free