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Independent Payment Advisory Board

The Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) was to be a fifteen-member United States government agency created in 2010 by sections 3403 and 10320 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act which was to have the explicit task of achieving specified savings in Medicare without affecting coverage or quality. Under previous and current law, changes to Medicare payment rates and program rules are recommended by MedPAC but require an act of Congress to take effect. The system creating IPAB granted IPAB the authority to make changes to the Medicare program with the Congress being given the power to overrule the agency's decisions through supermajority vote. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 repealed IPAB before it could take effect.[1]

Independent Payment Advisory Board
AbbreviationIPAB
Formation2010
PurposeMedicare
Location

Beginning in 2013, the Chief Actuary of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services determined in particular years the projected per capita growth rate for Medicare for a multi-year period ending in the second year thereafter (the "implementation year"). If the projection exceeded a target growth rate, IPAB was to develop a proposal to reduce Medicare spending in the implementation year by a specified amount. If it was required to develop a proposal, the Board was to submit that proposal in January of the year before the implementation year; thus, the first proposal could have been submitted in January 2014 to take effect in 2015. If the Board failed to submit a proposal that the Chief Actuary certifies would achieve the savings target, the Secretary of Health and Human Services was to submit a proposal that would achieve that amount of savings. The Secretary was then to implement the proposal unless Congress enacted resolutions to override the Board's (or the Secretary's) decisions under a fast-track procedure that the law set forth.[2]

A related group, the Specialty Society Relative Value Scale Update Committee (or Relative Value Update Committee; RUC), composed of physicians associated with the American Medical Association, also advises the government about pay standards for Medicare patient procedures, according to news reports.[3]

On February 9, 2018, the United States Congress voted to repeal the Independent Payment Advisory Board as a part of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018,[4] by a vote of 71−28 in the US Senate[5] and by a vote of 240−186 in US House of Representatives.[6] Shortly thereafter that day, President Trump signed the budget bill into law,[7] thereby repealing the IPAB.[4]

Background edit

Congress created IPAB as a strengthened version of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), a body with no regulatory power that solely advises Congress, but cannot enact regulations in and of itself. Since 1997, MedPAC had recommended cuts totaling "hundreds of billions of dollars" to Medicare that were ignored by Congress.[8] Congress has pressured Medicare administrators to cover "ineffective or needlessly costly methods of care," while Medicare's founding legislation says "Nothing in this title shall be construed to authorize any Federal officer or employee to exercise any supervision or control over the practice of medicine."[9] Henry Aaron, a health care expert at the Brookings Institution, said that many observers saw that some in Congress are "in thrall to campaign contributors and producers and suppliers of medical services" and most are not well enough informed to wisely use Medicare's buying power to reform health care.[9] The idea behind the IPAB was to take power away from Congress (and special interests[10]) in order to give it to those knowledgeable in health care policy.[11]

Legislative history edit

On June 25, 2009, Senator Jay Rockefeller introduced the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission Reform Act of 2009, which would have changed MedPAC into an executive branch agency.[12] On July 17, 2009, the Obama administration submitted to Congress a similar proposal called the Independent Medicare Advisory Council Act, which would have created an independent five-member executive council to make recommendations to the president. From June 17 to September 14, 2009, three Democratic and three Republican Senate Finance Committee members met for a series of thirty-one meetings to discuss the development of a health care reform bill. During this period, Senators Max Baucus (D-Montana), Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Kent Conrad (D-North Dakota), Olympia Snowe (R-Maine), Jeff Bingaman (D-New Mexico), and Mike Enzi (R-Wyoming), met for more than sixty hours, and their discussions established the principles upon which the health care reform legislation that later passed was based.[13] The Finance Committee included a provision establishing an independent Medicare advisory board in its health reform legislation,[14] which passed the Senate on December 24, 2009.[15]

Mission edit

IPAB was tasked with developing specific proposals to bring the net growth in Medicare spending back to target levels if the Medicare Actuary determines that net spending was forecast to exceed target levels, beginning in 2015.

With regard to IPAB's recommendations, the law said: "The proposal shall not include any recommendation to ration health care, raise revenues or Medicare beneficiary premiums under section 1818, 1818A, or 1839, increase Medicare beneficiary cost sharing (including deductibles, coinsurance, and co-payments), or otherwise restrict benefits or modify eligibility criteria."[16] The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) was to implement these proposals unless Congress adopted equally effective alternatives. The board was also to be required to submit to Congress annual reports on health care costs, access, quality, and utilization. IPAB was to submit to Congress recommendations on how to slow the growth in total private health care expenditures.[17]

Every year, on September 1, IPAB was to submit a draft proposal to the Secretary of Health and Human Services. On January 15 of the next year, IPAB was to submit a proposal to Congress. If IPAB failed to meet this deadline, the HHS was to create its own proposal. Congress was to consider this proposal under special rules. Congress could not consider any amendment to the proposal that would not achieve similar cost reductions unless both houses of Congress, including a three-fifths super majority in the Senate, voted to waive this requirement. If Congress failed to adopt a substitute provision by August 15, HHS was to implement the proposal as originally submitted to Congress.[17]

Membership and term of office edit

IPAB was to be composed of fifteen members appointed by the President, subject to Senate confirmation. The Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Administrator of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the Administrator of the Health Resources and Services Administration were to serve ex officio as nonvoting members.[18] In making the appointments, the President was to consult with the Majority Leader of the Senate concerning the appointment of three members; the Speaker of the House of Representatives concerning the appointment of three members, the Minority Leader of the Senate concerning the appointment of three members, and the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives concerning the appointment of three members.[19]

The first members appointed to the Board were to be divided into three staggered classes in order to ensure that their terms would not expire simultaneously. Five were to be appointed for a term of one year, five were to be appointed for a term of three years, and five were to be appointed for a term of six years. All subsequent appointments were to be made for six years. A member was not to serve more than two full consecutive terms.[20]

Appointed members of the IPAB were to include individuals with national recognition for their expertise in health finance and economics, actuarial science, health facility management, health plans and integrated delivery systems, health facilities reimbursement, and other providers of health services or related fields to provide a mix of professionals, a broad geographic representation, and a balance between urban and rural areas. IPAB members were to include (but will not be limited to) physicians and other health professionals, experts in the area of pharmaco-economics or prescription drug benefit programs, employers, third-party payers, individuals skilled in the conduct and interpretation of biomedical, health services, and health economics research, and expertise in outcomes and effectiveness research and technology assessment. Members also were to include individuals representing consumers and the elderly. Individuals who were directly involved in providing or managing the delivery of Medicare items and services were not to constitute a majority of IPAB's membership.

The President of the United States was to establish a system for public disclosure by IPAB members of any financial and other potential conflicts of interest. No IPAB member was to be engaged in any other business, vocation or employment.[2]

Members were to be paid at a rate described in Level III of the Executive Schedule that determines pay for senior executive branch officials. As of 2010, this was $165,300 a year.[17]

Funding edit

Congress appropriated $15 million for IPAB in 2012. Future funding for the agency was to be based on this figure adjusted for inflation.[17]

Reception edit

Predicted outcomes edit

A 2009 Kaiser Health News article predicted primary care doctors would likely see benefits from an "independent Medicare commission because the panel would be more likely to increase their fees and lower specialists' rates."[21] While payment cuts to hospitals and hospices were to be off-limits until 2020, and clinical laboratories were to be off limits until 2016, physician fees could have been cut unless a doc fix to Medicare's sustainable growth rate formula made those cuts off limits.[9] Other "savings would have to have been found in private Medicare Advantage plans, Medicare's Part D prescription-drug program, or spending on skilled-nursing facilities, home-based health care, dialysis, durable medical equipment, ambulance services, and services of ambulatory surgical centers".[9] According to the New England Journal of Medicine, holding off creation of accountable care organizations (ACOs) was likely to be a bad long term strategy for physicians.[22]

Critics of IPAB charged that the board's cost-cutting mandate would inevitably bring about a reduction in care, despite the anti-rationing language in the bill. Congressman Phil Roe from Tennessee, a doctor, warned that IPAB would ration care through payment policy. American Medical News charged that the bill gave IPAB "unprecedented, dangerous authority to cut Medicare pay rates and strangle access to care."[23]

Experts edit

Health economist Uwe Reinhardt thought that given the "dubious style of campaign financing of which we all are victims now," an independent Medicare commission was the U.S.'s only hope to restrain Medicare spending.[24] Reinhardt criticized former chairman of the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health William Thomas' 1995 comment as emblematic of the spurious reasoning found in Congress. Of a payment system that resembled bundled payment, Thomas said, "I'm not wild about a payment system that involves telling a bunch of innovative entrepreneurs that they can't be in the business anymore". Reinhardt criticized this, saying Thomas "seemed uninterested in what made more clinical and economic sense. His was purely an industrial policy, not a health policy. And his reasoning explains why, year in year out, Congress has rejected economically sensible proposals to attain greater efficiency in the Medicare program."[24] Reinhardt compares the IPAB to a similar board in Germany, which he says is efficient, effective and civilized.[25]

Former CBO directors edit

Peter Orszag, who directed the CBO and OMB in the Obama administration, said the IPAB may have been the most important aspect of the Affordable Care Act.[26] He said the board was "created to help address our long-term fiscal imbalance while boosting quality in health care".[27] "It's a very promising structure," said Orszag, but he cautioned that "whether it realizes its potential depends on how it's implemented."[28]

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former CBO director and an economist who is currently president of a conservative political organization, thought that despite "requirements that would force Congress to adopt the recommendations or find comparable savings," "cuts will be politically infeasible, as Congress is likely to continue regularly to override scheduled reductions."[29] In the words of Susan Dentzer, editor of Health Affairs, Holtz-Eakin thought no IPAB "will ever succeed in saving lawmakers from their own self-preserving instincts to pander."[30]

Politicians edit

Sen. John Cornyn, a Republican from Texas, introduced a bill in the Senate to prevent the creation of the IPAB.[31] The Washington Post reported that Congressman and retired physician Phil Roe (R-TN) twice sponsored House bills to eliminate the IPAB, which was partially why he was regarded as a "kindred soul" by the medical industry.[32][33] Roe charged that IPAB would deny care. However, the legislation governing IPAB bared "any recommendation to ration health care."[34]

Tom Daschle, the former Senate Democratic leader who was Obama's first choice for health secretary, argued that IPAB should have been expanded to cover all forms of health insurance in order to prevent doctors from shifting costs onto patients with private medical insurance.[28] After voting for the 2010 health care reform, Pete Stark (D-Calif.), said that the IPAB "sets [Medicare] up for unsustainable cuts" that will endanger the health of patients, and that he would "work tirelessly to mitigate the damage" the panel would cause.[35]

Lobbying groups edit

The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America said that elimination of the payment board was its top priority in the 2011 Congress.[36] The American Hospital Association and the American Medical Association (AMA) have spoken out against the board.[36][37] The AMA wanted to change the IPAB requirement that members have no outside employment so working physicians could be considered.[38] The AMA also opposed any independent commission which could cut physician payment rates.[39]

Dr. J. Fred Ralston Jr., president of the American College of Physicians (ACP), expressed support for the idea behind the IPAB, saying "making complex Medicare payment and budgetary decisions is very difficult within a political process with substantial lobbying pressures," but the group wanted to see significant changes. The ACP supported creating a position for a primary care physician on IPAB, additional protections to ensure that cost reductions would not lead to lower quality of care, authority for Congress to reject proposals made by IPAB via a simple majority vote, and equal treatment of all healthcare providers.[40]

Dr. Elaine C. Jones, government relations committee cochair of the American Academy of Neurology stated, "We are also very concerned about the power of the IPAB to cut payments to physicians. The sole function of the IPAB is to cut spending with little guarantee of maintaining quality, access, and scientifically proven care. There may be no physician representation on the board either. These elements are concerning and unacceptable."[41]

Ron Pollack, the founding executive director of the health care advocacy group Families USA, advised Democrats against being divided and conquered by supporting repeal of specific portions of the health care reform, such as IPAB.[42]

Two major nursing home associations, the American Health Care Association and the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging, along with seventy two other healthcare groups, urged Congress to reject IPAB. They argued that the board would have had too much control over Medicare and would affect the ability of healthcare providers to lobby for changes in how they are reimbursed. The groups also argued that IPAB would have only been accountable to the president.[43]

The American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons made IPAB a focus of their advocacy work. Hospital exemptions from 2015 to 2020 as well as the lack of practicing physicians on the board itself were major concerns. Lobbying efforts in April 2011 focused on making these modifications if not fully eliminating the board.[citation needed]

Medical specialty groups spearheaded efforts to repeal IPAB. The American Society of Anesthesiologists and American Association of Neurological Surgeons co-lead a coalition of 26 medical specialties and patient organizations representing more than 350,000 physicians and their patients dedicated to repealing IPAB.[44] The coalition endorsed efforts in the 113th Congress to repeal IPAB.[45]

Howard Dean, a consultant for Washington, D.C.-based lobbying firm McKenna, Long and Aldridge and former Democratic Governor of Vermont, believed the IPAB would fail to control costs and should be abolished. He opposed the premise of the board, writing in The Wall Street Journal that it was "a health-care rationing body" and that "rate setting—the essential mechanism of the IPAB—has a 40-year track record of failure."[46]

Editorials edit

In an editorial opposing Sen. Cornyn's bill to repeal IPAB The Washington Post wrote, "The political system failed when it came to controlling health-care costs. The 15-member panel that Mr. Cornyn et al. deride as 'beltway bureaucrats' would be a group of experts in the field, nominated by the president, chosen in part by congressional leaders of the opposing party and subject to Senate confirmation. Congress isn't bound by its proposals if lawmakers can come up with what they think is a better approach. Getting costs under control is going to require difficult choices – including, in the case of Medicare, difficult political choices. This unwise bill is not a good sign about Washington's willingness to make them."[31]

Death panel controversy edit

The term "death panel" was used in conjunction with IPAB.[47] Sarah Palin wrote in the Wall Street Journal that the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform "implicitly endorses the use of "death panel"-like rationing by way of the new Independent Payments [sic] Advisory Board."[48] The New York Times reported some Obama administration officials feared the Independent Payment Advisory Board could be "target for attacks of the 'death panel' sort";[49] An October 2010 National Right to Life article wrote the IPAB was "a good candidate for the title of 'death panel,'"[50] and a December 2010 Wall Street Journal editorial associated 'death panels' with the IPAB.[51]

Former OMB Director Orszag responded: "I think it's only in Washington, D.C., that a board created to help address our long-term fiscal imbalance while boosting quality in health care and that is specifically by law prohibited from rationing care could be called a death panel".[52]

Congressional Budget Office scoring edit

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated[when?] that IPAB would achieve Medicare spending reductions of $28 billion through 2019—amounting to 0.4 percent of the projected Medicare spending of ~$7 trillion for the period.[53]

In March 2011, the CBO estimated the Medicare baseline level of spending would not exceed targets throughout the years of 2015 to 2021; thus, the IPAB was not expected to affect any Medicare spending.[54]

Fiscal commission report edit

The 2010 presidential commission, the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, issued a report on reducing the federal deficit and voted 11 to 7 to strengthen the IPAB. It wished to bring forward the time by which health care providers would be affected by IPAB decisions.[55][56][57][58] The recommendations "would hit hospitals the hardest, which gained an exemption from the group's decisions for several years."[59]

Lawsuit edit

As part of legal challenges from conservative organizations and state attorneys general in about twenty states to the Affordable Care Act, Arizona's conservative Goldwater Institute, along with three Republican congressman from Arizona, filed a suit challenging the constitutionality of the IPAB.[60] The Hill reported that "while the suit illustrates conservative frustration with the federal government, the courts rarely strike down advisory boards created by Congress."[60] The suit was dismissed in 2012. The Ninth Circuit found for the government on appeal, and the Supreme Court declined to hear a further appeal.[61]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–123 (text) (PDF) sec. 52001.
  2. ^ a b Independent Payment Advisory Board American Medical Association. "By Jan 1, 2015, and at least every other year thereafter, the IPAB will submit recommendations to slow the growth in national health care expenditures while preserving or enhancing quality of care."
  3. ^ Pear, Robert (May 31, 2015). "Federal Investigators Fault Medicare's Reliance on Doctors for Pay Standards". New York Times. Retrieved June 1, 2015.
  4. ^ a b "Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018". United States Senate. February 7, 2018. p. 610.
  5. ^ Carney, Jordain (February 9, 2018). "Senate passes bill to end shutdown, sending it to House". The Hill.
  6. ^ "Final Vote Results for Roll Call 69". United States House of Representatives. February 9, 2018.
  7. ^ Kamisar, Ben; Zanona, Melanie; Marcos, Cristina (February 9, 2018). "Trump signs budget deal ending shutdown". The Hill.
  8. ^ Mike Lillis. “GOP leaders push to repeal Medicare cost-cutting panel.” The Hill. (July 28, 2010).
  9. ^ a b c d Henry J. Aaron (May 2011). "The Independent Payment Advisory Board – Congress's 'Good Deed'". The New England Journal of Medicine. 364 (25): 2377–9. doi:10.1056/NEJMp1105144. PMID 21561342.
  10. ^ David Leonhardt (December 8, 2009). "Rockefeller: The Economists' Man in the Senate?". The New York Times. Retrieved July 5, 2011.
  11. ^ Ezra Klein (March 26, 2010). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on January 23, 2012. Retrieved June 18, 2011.
  12. ^ S. 1380
  13. ^ "Health Care Reform from Conception to Final Passage". Retrieved November 23, 2010.
  14. ^ Ronald Brownstein (November 13, 2009). "GOP Faces Choice If Health Bill Passes". National Journal.
  15. ^ Holly Stockdale. An Overview of Proposals to Establish an Independent Commission or Board in Medicare. August 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Washington, D.C.: Congressional Research Service, 2010.
  16. ^ 111 Stat. 490; to be codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1899A(c)(2)(A)(ii).
  17. ^ a b c d Jost, Timothy Stoltzfus (July 2010). "The Independent Payment Advisory Board". The New England Journal of Medicine. 363 (2): 103–105. doi:10.1056/NEJMp1005402. PMID 20505171.
  18. ^ 111 Stat. 502; to be codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1899A(g)(1)(A).
  19. ^ 111 Stat. 503; to be codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1899A(g)(1)(E).
  20. ^ 111 Stat. 503; to be codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1899A(g)(2).
  21. ^ Phil Galewitz (August 16, 2009). "Most health industry players would win under overhaul". Kaiser Health News. McClatchy Washington DC News Bureau. Retrieved July 20, 2011.
  22. ^ Kocher, Robert; Sahni, Nikhil R. (2010). "Physicians versus Hospitals as Leaders of Accountable Care Organizations". New England Journal of Medicine. 363 (27): 2579–2582. doi:10.1056/NEJMp1011712. PMID 21067374.
  23. ^ Fiegl, Charles, "Medicare IPAB: Rational or rationing?", American Medical News, October 15, 2012
  24. ^ a b Marilyn Werber Serafini (December 21, 2009). "Helping Or Hurting Medicare?". National Journal. Retrieved July 31, 2011.
  25. ^ Julie Rovner (July 12, 2011). "Medicare Payment Board Draws Brickbats". Morning Edition. Retrieved July 31, 2011.
  26. ^ James Ridgeway. "Meet the Real Death Panels." Mother Jones. (July/August 2010).
  27. ^ Jon Meacham (May 10, 2010). "In Search of a Fiscal Cure". Newsweek. 155 (19).
  28. ^ a b Jackie Calmes (April 18, 2010). "After Health Care Passage, Obama Pushes to Get It Rolling". The New York Times. Retrieved March 17, 2011.
  29. ^ Holtz-Eakin D, Ramlet MJ (June 2010). "Analysis & commentary. Health care reform is likely to widen federal budget deficits, not reduce them". Health Aff (Millwood). 29 (6): 1136–41. doi:10.1377/hlthaff.2010.0446. PMID 20530343.
  30. ^ Dentzer S (June 2010). "The risks and rewards of implementing health reform". Health Aff (Millwood). 29 (6): 1092. doi:10.1377/hlthaff.2010.0518. PMID 20530334. But this inside the-trenches view conflicts with the more general impressions of the many doubters on the prospects for curve bending, including Douglas Holtz-Eakin and Michael J. Ramlet, who rightly invoke past instances when Congress squeezed the health system and later retrenched under political pressure. From their perspective, no Independent Payment Advisory Board would ever succeed in saving lawmakers from their own self-preserving instincts to pander.
  31. ^ a b "Wrong way on health care; A Republican proposal to eliminate a cost control board is a bad prescription". The Washington Post. August 16, 2010. Retrieved March 17, 2011.
  32. ^ R. Jeffery Smith Health-related money continues to flow to members of Congress The Washington Post. February 6, 2011.
  33. ^ Dr. Roe Introduces Legislation to Eliminate the Independent Payment Advisory Board: HR 452 – The Medicare Decisions Accountability Act Press Release. January 26, 2011.
  34. ^ Suzy Khimm (January 27, 2011). "It's Alive! GOPers Resurrect 'Death Panels'". Mother Jones. Retrieved February 8, 2011.
  35. ^ Julian Pecquet. “GOP staffer: Look to healthcare debate for repeal clues.” The Hill. (October 19, 2010).
  36. ^ a b Duff Wilson "Industry Aims at Medicare Board" The New York Times. November 4, 2010.
  37. ^ "Live Health Chat: Health care law changes". Los Angeles Times. February 17, 2011.
  38. ^ "SPECIALTY DOCTORS TO VISIT CONGRESS JUNE 23 TO DISCUSS DOC FIX, IPAB, CODES". Inside CMS. June 10, 2010.
  39. ^ Michael D. Maves (January 13, 2010). "Letter to the Honorable Harry Reid & Sen. Baucus, Harkin and Dodd; Rep. Pelosi, Hoyer, Miller, Rangel and Waxman" (PDF). American Medical Association. Retrieved May 26, 2011.
  40. ^ "Implementing Health Reform On the Independent Payment Advisory Board". Internal Medicine News. August 1, 2010. Retrieved October 27, 2011.
  41. ^ Mary Ellen Schneider (March 1, 2011). "Physicians Offer Rx for Fixing Health Reform Law". Internal Medicine News.
  42. ^ Julian Pecquet Dems prepare defense of healthcare law in face of repeal threats The Hill. December 21, 2010.
  43. ^ "Providers try to quash Medicare payment board proposal". McKnights Long Term Care News and McKnights Assisted Living. January 13, 2010.
  44. ^ "Health Care".
  45. ^ [1][dead link]
  46. ^ Dean, Howard (July 28, 2013). "The Affordable Care Act's Rate-Setting Won't Work". The Wall Street Journal.
  47. ^ Roy, Avik, The Epistemology of Death Panels, National Review, December 31, 2010.
  48. ^ Palin, Sarah, Why I Support the Ryan Roadmap, Wall Street Journal, December 10, 2010.
  49. ^ Jackie Calmes (April 17, 2010). "After Health Care Passage, Obama Pushes to Get It Rolling". The New York Times.
  50. ^ Burke J. Balch (October 2010). "Are ObamaCare "Death Panels" Truly a Myth?". National Right to Life News. National Right to Life Committee. 37 (10): 10, 18.
  51. ^ Rivkin, David and Foley, Elizabeth Price, 'Death Panels' Come Back to Life, Wall Street Journal, December 30, 2010
  52. ^ Jon Meacham (May 10, 2010). "In Search of a Fiscal Cure". Newsweek. 155 (19).
  53. ^ Alain C. Enthoven (May 2011). "Reforming Medicare by reforming incentives". The New England Journal of Medicine. 364 (21): e44. doi:10.1056/NEJMp1104427. PMID 21561341.
  54. ^ March 2011 Medicare baseline CBO. p. 2. Retrieved October 27, 2011.
  55. ^ Erik Wasson. “Rep. Ryan says deficit reduction plan would ‘entrench ObamaCare’” The Hill. (December 2, 2010).
  56. ^ The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform. The Moment of Truth December 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, at 41. Dec. 2010.
  57. ^ Derek Thompson, "The Plan to Balance the Budget: The Fiscal Commission's Final Report." The Atlantic. (December 1, 2010).
  58. ^ Ezra Klein. “The best and worst of Simpson-Bowles.” The Washington Post. (December 3, 2010).
  59. ^ Mathew DoBias. “Deficit Panel Offers Partial Answer on Health Care.” Archived January 29, 2013, at archive.today National Journal. (December 1, 2010).
  60. ^ a b Elise Viebeck (August 13, 2010). "Ariz. congressmen join health reform lawsuit". The Hill. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
  61. ^ "Supreme Court won't hear case on Obamacare Medicare board". Politico.

External links edit

  • David Newman and Christopher M. Davis. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Research Service, 2010.
  • Henry Aaron, PhD. The Independent Payment Advisory Board. New England Journal of Medicine, 2011. []

independent, payment, advisory, board, ipab, fifteen, member, united, states, government, agency, created, 2010, sections, 3403, 10320, patient, protection, affordable, care, which, have, explicit, task, achieving, specified, savings, medicare, without, affect. The Independent Payment Advisory Board IPAB was to be a fifteen member United States government agency created in 2010 by sections 3403 and 10320 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act which was to have the explicit task of achieving specified savings in Medicare without affecting coverage or quality Under previous and current law changes to Medicare payment rates and program rules are recommended by MedPAC but require an act of Congress to take effect The system creating IPAB granted IPAB the authority to make changes to the Medicare program with the Congress being given the power to overrule the agency s decisions through supermajority vote The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 repealed IPAB before it could take effect 1 Independent Payment Advisory BoardAbbreviationIPABFormation2010PurposeMedicareLocationWashington D C United StatesBeginning in 2013 the Chief Actuary of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services determined in particular years the projected per capita growth rate for Medicare for a multi year period ending in the second year thereafter the implementation year If the projection exceeded a target growth rate IPAB was to develop a proposal to reduce Medicare spending in the implementation year by a specified amount If it was required to develop a proposal the Board was to submit that proposal in January of the year before the implementation year thus the first proposal could have been submitted in January 2014 to take effect in 2015 If the Board failed to submit a proposal that the Chief Actuary certifies would achieve the savings target the Secretary of Health and Human Services was to submit a proposal that would achieve that amount of savings The Secretary was then to implement the proposal unless Congress enacted resolutions to override the Board s or the Secretary s decisions under a fast track procedure that the law set forth 2 A related group the Specialty Society Relative Value Scale Update Committee or Relative Value Update Committee RUC composed of physicians associated with the American Medical Association also advises the government about pay standards for Medicare patient procedures according to news reports 3 On February 9 2018 the United States Congress voted to repeal the Independent Payment Advisory Board as a part of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 4 by a vote of 71 28 in the US Senate 5 and by a vote of 240 186 in US House of Representatives 6 Shortly thereafter that day President Trump signed the budget bill into law 7 thereby repealing the IPAB 4 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Legislative history 2 Mission 3 Membership and term of office 4 Funding 5 Reception 5 1 Predicted outcomes 5 2 Experts 5 2 1 Former CBO directors 5 3 Politicians 5 4 Lobbying groups 5 5 Editorials 5 6 Death panel controversy 6 Congressional Budget Office scoring 7 Fiscal commission report 8 Lawsuit 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksBackground editCongress created IPAB as a strengthened version of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission MedPAC a body with no regulatory power that solely advises Congress but cannot enact regulations in and of itself Since 1997 MedPAC had recommended cuts totaling hundreds of billions of dollars to Medicare that were ignored by Congress 8 Congress has pressured Medicare administrators to cover ineffective or needlessly costly methods of care while Medicare s founding legislation says Nothing in this title shall be construed to authorize any Federal officer or employee to exercise any supervision or control over the practice of medicine 9 Henry Aaron a health care expert at the Brookings Institution said that many observers saw that some in Congress are in thrall to campaign contributors and producers and suppliers of medical services and most are not well enough informed to wisely use Medicare s buying power to reform health care 9 The idea behind the IPAB was to take power away from Congress and special interests 10 in order to give it to those knowledgeable in health care policy 11 Legislative history edit On June 25 2009 Senator Jay Rockefeller introduced the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission Reform Act of 2009 which would have changed MedPAC into an executive branch agency 12 On July 17 2009 the Obama administration submitted to Congress a similar proposal called the Independent Medicare Advisory Council Act which would have created an independent five member executive council to make recommendations to the president From June 17 to September 14 2009 three Democratic and three Republican Senate Finance Committee members met for a series of thirty one meetings to discuss the development of a health care reform bill During this period Senators Max Baucus D Montana Chuck Grassley R Iowa Kent Conrad D North Dakota Olympia Snowe R Maine Jeff Bingaman D New Mexico and Mike Enzi R Wyoming met for more than sixty hours and their discussions established the principles upon which the health care reform legislation that later passed was based 13 The Finance Committee included a provision establishing an independent Medicare advisory board in its health reform legislation 14 which passed the Senate on December 24 2009 15 Mission editIPAB was tasked with developing specific proposals to bring the net growth in Medicare spending back to target levels if the Medicare Actuary determines that net spending was forecast to exceed target levels beginning in 2015 With regard to IPAB s recommendations the law said The proposal shall not include any recommendation to ration health care raise revenues or Medicare beneficiary premiums under section 1818 1818A or 1839 increase Medicare beneficiary cost sharing including deductibles coinsurance and co payments or otherwise restrict benefits or modify eligibility criteria 16 The Department of Health and Human Services HHS was to implement these proposals unless Congress adopted equally effective alternatives The board was also to be required to submit to Congress annual reports on health care costs access quality and utilization IPAB was to submit to Congress recommendations on how to slow the growth in total private health care expenditures 17 Every year on September 1 IPAB was to submit a draft proposal to the Secretary of Health and Human Services On January 15 of the next year IPAB was to submit a proposal to Congress If IPAB failed to meet this deadline the HHS was to create its own proposal Congress was to consider this proposal under special rules Congress could not consider any amendment to the proposal that would not achieve similar cost reductions unless both houses of Congress including a three fifths super majority in the Senate voted to waive this requirement If Congress failed to adopt a substitute provision by August 15 HHS was to implement the proposal as originally submitted to Congress 17 Membership and term of office editIPAB was to be composed of fifteen members appointed by the President subject to Senate confirmation The Secretary of Health and Human Services the Administrator of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Administrator of the Health Resources and Services Administration were to serve ex officio as nonvoting members 18 In making the appointments the President was to consult with the Majority Leader of the Senate concerning the appointment of three members the Speaker of the House of Representatives concerning the appointment of three members the Minority Leader of the Senate concerning the appointment of three members and the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives concerning the appointment of three members 19 The first members appointed to the Board were to be divided into three staggered classes in order to ensure that their terms would not expire simultaneously Five were to be appointed for a term of one year five were to be appointed for a term of three years and five were to be appointed for a term of six years All subsequent appointments were to be made for six years A member was not to serve more than two full consecutive terms 20 Appointed members of the IPAB were to include individuals with national recognition for their expertise in health finance and economics actuarial science health facility management health plans and integrated delivery systems health facilities reimbursement and other providers of health services or related fields to provide a mix of professionals a broad geographic representation and a balance between urban and rural areas IPAB members were to include but will not be limited to physicians and other health professionals experts in the area of pharmaco economics or prescription drug benefit programs employers third party payers individuals skilled in the conduct and interpretation of biomedical health services and health economics research and expertise in outcomes and effectiveness research and technology assessment Members also were to include individuals representing consumers and the elderly Individuals who were directly involved in providing or managing the delivery of Medicare items and services were not to constitute a majority of IPAB s membership The President of the United States was to establish a system for public disclosure by IPAB members of any financial and other potential conflicts of interest No IPAB member was to be engaged in any other business vocation or employment 2 Members were to be paid at a rate described in Level III of the Executive Schedule that determines pay for senior executive branch officials As of 2010 this was 165 300 a year 17 Funding editCongress appropriated 15 million for IPAB in 2012 Future funding for the agency was to be based on this figure adjusted for inflation 17 Reception editPredicted outcomes edit A 2009 Kaiser Health News article predicted primary care doctors would likely see benefits from an independent Medicare commission because the panel would be more likely to increase their fees and lower specialists rates 21 While payment cuts to hospitals and hospices were to be off limits until 2020 and clinical laboratories were to be off limits until 2016 physician fees could have been cut unless a doc fix to Medicare s sustainable growth rate formula made those cuts off limits 9 Other savings would have to have been found in private Medicare Advantage plans Medicare s Part D prescription drug program or spending on skilled nursing facilities home based health care dialysis durable medical equipment ambulance services and services of ambulatory surgical centers 9 According to the New England Journal of Medicine holding off creation of accountable care organizations ACOs was likely to be a bad long term strategy for physicians 22 Critics of IPAB charged that the board s cost cutting mandate would inevitably bring about a reduction in care despite the anti rationing language in the bill Congressman Phil Roe from Tennessee a doctor warned that IPAB would ration care through payment policy American Medical News charged that the bill gave IPAB unprecedented dangerous authority to cut Medicare pay rates and strangle access to care 23 Experts edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2011 Health economist Uwe Reinhardt thought that given the dubious style of campaign financing of which we all are victims now an independent Medicare commission was the U S s only hope to restrain Medicare spending 24 Reinhardt criticized former chairman of the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health William Thomas 1995 comment as emblematic of the spurious reasoning found in Congress Of a payment system that resembled bundled payment Thomas said I m not wild about a payment system that involves telling a bunch of innovative entrepreneurs that they can t be in the business anymore Reinhardt criticized this saying Thomas seemed uninterested in what made more clinical and economic sense His was purely an industrial policy not a health policy And his reasoning explains why year in year out Congress has rejected economically sensible proposals to attain greater efficiency in the Medicare program 24 Reinhardt compares the IPAB to a similar board in Germany which he says is efficient effective and civilized 25 Former CBO directors edit Peter Orszag who directed the CBO and OMB in the Obama administration said the IPAB may have been the most important aspect of the Affordable Care Act 26 He said the board was created to help address our long term fiscal imbalance while boosting quality in health care 27 It s a very promising structure said Orszag but he cautioned that whether it realizes its potential depends on how it s implemented 28 Douglas Holtz Eakin a former CBO director and an economist who is currently president of a conservative political organization thought that despite requirements that would force Congress to adopt the recommendations or find comparable savings cuts will be politically infeasible as Congress is likely to continue regularly to override scheduled reductions 29 In the words of Susan Dentzer editor of Health Affairs Holtz Eakin thought no IPAB will ever succeed in saving lawmakers from their own self preserving instincts to pander 30 Politicians edit Sen John Cornyn a Republican from Texas introduced a bill in the Senate to prevent the creation of the IPAB 31 The Washington Post reported that Congressman and retired physician Phil Roe R TN twice sponsored House bills to eliminate the IPAB which was partially why he was regarded as a kindred soul by the medical industry 32 33 Roe charged that IPAB would deny care However the legislation governing IPAB bared any recommendation to ration health care 34 Tom Daschle the former Senate Democratic leader who was Obama s first choice for health secretary argued that IPAB should have been expanded to cover all forms of health insurance in order to prevent doctors from shifting costs onto patients with private medical insurance 28 After voting for the 2010 health care reform Pete Stark D Calif said that the IPAB sets Medicare up for unsustainable cuts that will endanger the health of patients and that he would work tirelessly to mitigate the damage the panel would cause 35 Lobbying groups edit The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America said that elimination of the payment board was its top priority in the 2011 Congress 36 The American Hospital Association and the American Medical Association AMA have spoken out against the board 36 37 The AMA wanted to change the IPAB requirement that members have no outside employment so working physicians could be considered 38 The AMA also opposed any independent commission which could cut physician payment rates 39 Dr J Fred Ralston Jr president of the American College of Physicians ACP expressed support for the idea behind the IPAB saying making complex Medicare payment and budgetary decisions is very difficult within a political process with substantial lobbying pressures but the group wanted to see significant changes The ACP supported creating a position for a primary care physician on IPAB additional protections to ensure that cost reductions would not lead to lower quality of care authority for Congress to reject proposals made by IPAB via a simple majority vote and equal treatment of all healthcare providers 40 Dr Elaine C Jones government relations committee cochair of the American Academy of Neurology stated We are also very concerned about the power of the IPAB to cut payments to physicians The sole function of the IPAB is to cut spending with little guarantee of maintaining quality access and scientifically proven care There may be no physician representation on the board either These elements are concerning and unacceptable 41 Ron Pollack the founding executive director of the health care advocacy group Families USA advised Democrats against being divided and conquered by supporting repeal of specific portions of the health care reform such as IPAB 42 Two major nursing home associations the American Health Care Association and the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging along with seventy two other healthcare groups urged Congress to reject IPAB They argued that the board would have had too much control over Medicare and would affect the ability of healthcare providers to lobby for changes in how they are reimbursed The groups also argued that IPAB would have only been accountable to the president 43 The American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons made IPAB a focus of their advocacy work Hospital exemptions from 2015 to 2020 as well as the lack of practicing physicians on the board itself were major concerns Lobbying efforts in April 2011 focused on making these modifications if not fully eliminating the board citation needed Medical specialty groups spearheaded efforts to repeal IPAB The American Society of Anesthesiologists and American Association of Neurological Surgeons co lead a coalition of 26 medical specialties and patient organizations representing more than 350 000 physicians and their patients dedicated to repealing IPAB 44 The coalition endorsed efforts in the 113th Congress to repeal IPAB 45 Howard Dean a consultant for Washington D C based lobbying firm McKenna Long and Aldridge and former Democratic Governor of Vermont believed the IPAB would fail to control costs and should be abolished He opposed the premise of the board writing in The Wall Street Journal that it was a health care rationing body and that rate setting the essential mechanism of the IPAB has a 40 year track record of failure 46 Editorials edit In an editorial opposing Sen Cornyn s bill to repeal IPAB The Washington Post wrote The political system failed when it came to controlling health care costs The 15 member panel that Mr Cornyn et al deride as beltway bureaucrats would be a group of experts in the field nominated by the president chosen in part by congressional leaders of the opposing party and subject to Senate confirmation Congress isn t bound by its proposals if lawmakers can come up with what they think is a better approach Getting costs under control is going to require difficult choices including in the case of Medicare difficult political choices This unwise bill is not a good sign about Washington s willingness to make them 31 Death panel controversy edit The term death panel was used in conjunction with IPAB 47 Sarah Palin wrote in the Wall Street Journal that the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform implicitly endorses the use of death panel like rationing by way of the new Independent Payments sic Advisory Board 48 The New York Times reported some Obama administration officials feared the Independent Payment Advisory Board could be target for attacks of the death panel sort 49 An October 2010 National Right to Life article wrote the IPAB was a good candidate for the title of death panel 50 and a December 2010 Wall Street Journal editorial associated death panels with the IPAB 51 Former OMB Director Orszag responded I think it s only in Washington D C that a board created to help address our long term fiscal imbalance while boosting quality in health care and that is specifically by law prohibited from rationing care could be called a death panel 52 Congressional Budget Office scoring editThe Congressional Budget Office CBO estimated when that IPAB would achieve Medicare spending reductions of 28 billion through 2019 amounting to 0 4 percent of the projected Medicare spending of 7 trillion for the period 53 In March 2011 the CBO estimated the Medicare baseline level of spending would not exceed targets throughout the years of 2015 to 2021 thus the IPAB was not expected to affect any Medicare spending 54 Fiscal commission report editThe 2010 presidential commission the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform issued a report on reducing the federal deficit and voted 11 to 7 to strengthen the IPAB It wished to bring forward the time by which health care providers would be affected by IPAB decisions 55 56 57 58 The recommendations would hit hospitals the hardest which gained an exemption from the group s decisions for several years 59 Lawsuit editMain article Coons v Geithner As part of legal challenges from conservative organizations and state attorneys general in about twenty states to the Affordable Care Act Arizona s conservative Goldwater Institute along with three Republican congressman from Arizona filed a suit challenging the constitutionality of the IPAB 60 The Hill reported that while the suit illustrates conservative frustration with the federal government the courts rarely strike down advisory boards created by Congress 60 The suit was dismissed in 2012 The Ninth Circuit found for the government on appeal and the Supreme Court declined to hear a further appeal 61 See also editHealth care rationing Healthcare reform in the United States Medicare Payment Advisory Commission Specialty Society Relative Value Scale Update CommitteeReferences edit Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 123 text PDF sec 52001 a b Independent Payment Advisory Board American Medical Association By Jan 1 2015 and at least every other year thereafter the IPAB will submit recommendations to slow the growth in national health care expenditures while preserving or enhancing quality of care Pear Robert May 31 2015 Federal Investigators Fault Medicare s Reliance on Doctors for Pay Standards New York Times Retrieved June 1 2015 a b Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 United States Senate February 7 2018 p 610 Carney Jordain February 9 2018 Senate passes bill to end shutdown sending it to House The Hill Final Vote Results for Roll Call 69 United States House of Representatives February 9 2018 Kamisar Ben Zanona Melanie Marcos Cristina February 9 2018 Trump signs budget deal ending shutdown The Hill Mike Lillis GOP leaders push to repeal Medicare cost cutting panel The Hill July 28 2010 a b c d Henry J Aaron May 2011 The Independent Payment Advisory Board Congress s Good Deed The New England Journal of Medicine 364 25 2377 9 doi 10 1056 NEJMp1105144 PMID 21561342 David Leonhardt December 8 2009 Rockefeller The Economists Man in the Senate The New York Times Retrieved July 5 2011 Ezra Klein March 26 2010 Can we control costs without Congress The Washington Post Archived from the original on January 23 2012 Retrieved June 18 2011 S 1380 Health Care Reform from Conception to Final Passage Retrieved November 23 2010 Ronald Brownstein November 13 2009 GOP Faces Choice If Health Bill Passes National Journal Holly Stockdale An Overview of Proposals to Establish an Independent Commission or Board in Medicare Archived August 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine Washington D C Congressional Research Service 2010 111 Stat 490 to be codified at 42 U S C 1899A c 2 A ii a b c d Jost Timothy Stoltzfus July 2010 The Independent Payment Advisory Board The New England Journal of Medicine 363 2 103 105 doi 10 1056 NEJMp1005402 PMID 20505171 111 Stat 502 to be codified at 42 U S C 1899A g 1 A 111 Stat 503 to be codified at 42 U S C 1899A g 1 E 111 Stat 503 to be codified at 42 U S C 1899A g 2 Phil Galewitz August 16 2009 Most health industry players would win under overhaul Kaiser Health News McClatchy Washington DC News Bureau Retrieved July 20 2011 Kocher Robert Sahni Nikhil R 2010 Physicians versus Hospitals as Leaders of Accountable Care Organizations New England Journal of Medicine 363 27 2579 2582 doi 10 1056 NEJMp1011712 PMID 21067374 Fiegl Charles Medicare IPAB Rational or rationing American Medical News October 15 2012 a b Marilyn Werber Serafini December 21 2009 Helping Or Hurting Medicare National Journal Retrieved July 31 2011 Julie Rovner July 12 2011 Medicare Payment Board Draws Brickbats Morning Edition Retrieved July 31 2011 James Ridgeway Meet the Real Death Panels Mother Jones July August 2010 Jon Meacham May 10 2010 In Search of a Fiscal Cure Newsweek 155 19 a b Jackie Calmes April 18 2010 After Health Care Passage Obama Pushes to Get It Rolling The New York Times Retrieved March 17 2011 Holtz Eakin D Ramlet MJ June 2010 Analysis amp commentary Health care reform is likely to widen federal budget deficits not reduce them Health Aff Millwood 29 6 1136 41 doi 10 1377 hlthaff 2010 0446 PMID 20530343 Dentzer S June 2010 The risks and rewards of implementing health reform Health Aff Millwood 29 6 1092 doi 10 1377 hlthaff 2010 0518 PMID 20530334 But this inside the trenches view conflicts with the more general impressions of the many doubters on the prospects for curve bending including Douglas Holtz Eakin and Michael J Ramlet who rightly invoke past instances when Congress squeezed the health system and later retrenched under political pressure From their perspective no Independent Payment Advisory Board would ever succeed in saving lawmakers from their own self preserving instincts to pander a b Wrong way on health care A Republican proposal to eliminate a cost control board is a bad prescription The Washington Post August 16 2010 Retrieved March 17 2011 R Jeffery Smith Health related money continues to flow to members of Congress The Washington Post February 6 2011 Dr Roe Introduces Legislation to Eliminate the Independent Payment Advisory Board HR 452 The Medicare Decisions Accountability Act Press Release January 26 2011 Suzy Khimm January 27 2011 It s Alive GOPers Resurrect Death Panels Mother Jones Retrieved February 8 2011 Julian Pecquet GOP staffer Look to healthcare debate for repeal clues The Hill October 19 2010 a b Duff Wilson Industry Aims at Medicare Board The New York Times November 4 2010 Live Health Chat Health care law changes Los Angeles Times February 17 2011 SPECIALTY DOCTORS TO VISIT CONGRESS JUNE 23 TO DISCUSS DOC FIX IPAB CODES Inside CMS June 10 2010 Michael D Maves January 13 2010 Letter to the Honorable Harry Reid amp Sen Baucus Harkin and Dodd Rep Pelosi Hoyer Miller Rangel and Waxman PDF American Medical Association Retrieved May 26 2011 Implementing Health Reform On the Independent Payment Advisory Board Internal Medicine News August 1 2010 Retrieved October 27 2011 Mary Ellen Schneider March 1 2011 Physicians Offer Rx for Fixing Health Reform Law Internal Medicine News Julian Pecquet Dems prepare defense of healthcare law in face of repeal threats The Hill December 21 2010 Providers try to quash Medicare payment board proposal McKnights Long Term Care News and McKnights Assisted Living January 13 2010 Health Care 1 dead link Dean Howard July 28 2013 The Affordable Care Act s Rate Setting Won t Work The Wall Street Journal Roy Avik The Epistemology of Death Panels National Review December 31 2010 Palin Sarah Why I Support the Ryan Roadmap Wall Street Journal December 10 2010 Jackie Calmes April 17 2010 After Health Care Passage Obama Pushes to Get It Rolling The New York Times Burke J Balch October 2010 Are ObamaCare Death Panels Truly a Myth National Right to Life News National Right to Life Committee 37 10 10 18 Rivkin David and Foley Elizabeth Price Death Panels Come Back to Life Wall Street Journal December 30 2010 Jon Meacham May 10 2010 In Search of a Fiscal Cure Newsweek 155 19 Alain C Enthoven May 2011 Reforming Medicare by reforming incentives The New England Journal of Medicine 364 21 e44 doi 10 1056 NEJMp1104427 PMID 21561341 March 2011 Medicare baseline CBO p 2 Retrieved October 27 2011 Erik Wasson Rep Ryan says deficit reduction plan would entrench ObamaCare The Hill December 2 2010 The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform The Moment of Truth Archived December 14 2012 at the Wayback Machine at 41 Dec 2010 Derek Thompson The Plan to Balance the Budget The Fiscal Commission s Final Report The Atlantic December 1 2010 Ezra Klein The best and worst of Simpson Bowles The Washington Post December 3 2010 Mathew DoBias Deficit Panel Offers Partial Answer on Health Care Archived January 29 2013 at archive today National Journal December 1 2010 a b Elise Viebeck August 13 2010 Ariz congressmen join health reform lawsuit The Hill Retrieved March 9 2011 Supreme Court won t hear case on Obamacare Medicare board Politico External links editDavid Newman and Christopher M Davis The Independent Payment Advisory Board Washington D C Congressional Research Service 2010 Henry Aaron PhD The Independent Payment Advisory Board New England Journal of Medicine 2011 WebCite Cache Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Independent Payment Advisory Board amp oldid 1180405773, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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