Written and edited by Norm Scott: EDUCATE! ORGANIZE!! MOBILIZE!!! Three pillars of The Resistance – providing information on current ed issues, organizing activities around fighting for public education in NYC and beyond and exposing the motives behind the education deformers. We link up with bands of resisters. Nothing will change unless WE ALL GET INVOLVED IN THE STRUGGLE!
Friday, October 28, 2022
Photos: CROC Halloween Horror Press Conference ...Jumaane Williams, Charles Baron and other City Council members show up in support
Mulgrew saves City a Billion on healthcare - out of our pockets, Restrictions on ER visits can cost lives
The escalating cost of health insurance, prescription drugs and medical care across the country has created a national crisis. Hospitals and drug companies are charging increasingly exorbitant amounts... Michael Mulgrew in UFT FAQ. (See it debunked -The Facts Michael Mulgrew, UFT, Doesn’t Want You to know.)
Another way is to pressure Medicare to be more vigilant - see the article below
Preauthorizations – a cautionary tale
October 23, 2022... the oncologist frowned. Unfortunately, the scan couldn’t be scheduled for 3 or 4 weeks. “We’re not the problem...We have to get approval from your insurance. We’ll submit it, they’ll reject it. There’s a lot of back and forth.” Barry was puzzled. …“Just to be clear,” he said, “I’m not in Medicare Advantage. I have regular Medicare with a supplemental.” The oncologist’s “whole demeanor changed.” … The frown became a smile. “Well then, we can go a lot faster,” he was told.
Prior Authorization: Who saves? Who loses?
October 24,
Who saves?
- The City
- The Stabilization Fund
- Michael Mulgrew
- The Insurance Companies
Who pays?
- Soon? Retirees. (unless we stop them)
- Eventually? All of us.
- (and the federal government)
Mulgrew raises copays; Bronx gets hit
Do you know what health care savings are? They (insurance companies, Michael Mulgrew, the New York Times) call it savings when 1) you think about going to the doctor, and decide not to and 2) when you pay more (and they pay less) for your visits.
So what do they call it when your copay goes from $50 to $100? Or from $0 to $30? That’s right – the MLC and the UFT leadership call that SAVINGS. Doesn’t feel like savings when it costs me more. How about you?
More on the New Emblem (GHI) Copays
We are talking MRIs, CAT scans, PET scans, NMR, and other stuff. Copays in network were $50. But the City and the MLC and Mulgrew and the Insurance companies found a cost savings. (Cost savings mean you get less medical care, or you have a harder time accessing medical care, or you have to pay more out of pocket for medical care. “Cost Savings” is short for “Cost Savings for them, at our expense”)
In any case, the way they are going to charge us more is by declaring everyone to be out of network, with double the copay ($100 instead of $50).
Did the UFT make an announcement about copay increases?
October 27, 2022Maybe I missed it? I have been writing about the increase in GHI (now Emblem) copays, for Montefiore, and for MRIs, CTs, and other scans.
I have pointed out that the notice from Emblem came AFTER the changes went into effect. I have also pointed out that the notice from the UFT NEVER CAME. I searched my mail. I searched my email. Could I have missed it? Please readers, tell me if I have. But I don’t think so.
Tuesday at a UFT meeting two UFT officers indicated this was the first they had heard of it, and that they had not seen it in writing. This is a change to copays for the insurance (Emblem, used to be GHI) that most high school teachers have.
Yesterday I got an email over Mulgrew’s name about healthcare – I read carefully to see if they snuck in a mention of the new copays. Nope. Mulgrew and friends just decided not to tell us about the new copays. Let Emblem do it. Or let the members find out when they get a surprise charge at the doctors office. This, by the way, is tried and true Unity strategy. When they have bad news, hide it.
Aiming to reset the debate over the future of the healthcare provided retired New York City civil servants, the president of the largest municipal union insists he wants the City Council to change the city’s administrative code — not to force retirees into a controversial Medicare Advantage Plan as critics claim — but to preserve all city unions’ collective bargaining rights.
On an Oct. 20 virtual press call, Michael Mulgrew, president of the 200,000 member United Federation of Teachers, told reporters that New York State Judge Lyle Frank’s ruling last October “undid 40 years of collective bargaining” and that while an appeal is still pending, the City Council needs to revise the administrative code to preserve the unions’ ability to offer a myriad of healthcare plans to the city’s 200,000 retirees.
Complete article: https://portside.org/2022-10-27/uft-prez-doubles-down-medicare-advantage-push-face-fierce-opposition
And one more. While we support Medicare, we don't support the lax admin when it comes to fraud. People at the top of MC often move back and forth between govt and industry. If we want to save money let's keep an eye on the corrupt ball.
Medicare Rights: CMS to Release Audit Findings on Overpayments to Medicare Advantage Plans
https://www.medicarerights.org/medicare-watch/2022/10/27/cms-to-release-audit-findings-on-overpayments-to-medicare-advantage-plans
- By Lindsey Copeland
- October 27, 2022
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
Media Advisory: Halloween Horror Press Conference to Tell City Council Members: DO NOT Amend Administrative Code §12-126
Media Advisory For October 27, 2022
Halloween Horror Press Conference
to Tell City Council Members:
DO NOT Amend Administrative Code §12-126
New York City municipal retirees have been fighting for over a year to prevent the City from moving us out of our excellent, traditional Medicare-with-supplemental-
We will greet and educate our City Council members as they enter City Hall on October 27th. Halloween is scary and fun, but there is nothing fun about losing our hard-earned health benefits! We will let the City Council know that amending NY City Administrative Code §12-126 would be a real horror show, for the city, and its workers.
Come to the press conference and hear experts and elected officials talk about the proposed amendment to the city code and explain why Medicare Advantage Plans are bad for our health.
Confirmed Speakers:
Jumaane Williams, Public Advocate for the City of New York
City Council Member Christopher Marte, District 1
City Council Member Alexa Aviles, District 38
Dr. Oli Fein, Physicians for a National Health Program
When: Thursday, October 27th, 2022 at 12:30pm
Where: Broadway & Park Place at entrance to City Hall
Press Contacts:
Julie Schwartzberg jschwartzberg@gmail.com
Sarah Shapiro sarahmorah@gmail.com
The Cross-union Retirees Organizing Committee (CROC)
Here is the admin code changes the UFT etc want to make - in yellow.
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
Unity/UFT Ends Decades of Tradition of Open ended questioning at Oct. 24 Ex Bd as Questions Attempt to hold leadership accountable
Opposition doesn't come from a naive place. We have educated opinions that differ from leadership's.... Melissa Williams, CL OT/PT Chapter at Oct. 24 UFT Ex Bd
I'm done with anything Unity does anymore. Not joining the healthcare committee. Probably gonna leave contract. Waste of my time and validates them falsely. Done giving them credibility that they aren't partisan. I'm just sad. I'm sad that unity stooped this low. I really am. I was optimistic about working together to some extent. That died today..... Comment from activist who had intentions of working with Unity
Healthcare savings are nothing but givebacks.... James Eterno
United for Change defeated Unity by 500 votes in the high schools to elect the 7 high school reps to the ex bd. There are 20 thousand high school teachers. They deserve a voice.Autocrats threatened with losing control, always react with suppressing democracy which actually energizes the opposition. (See Iran).
If you can't find the time to put in two hours every two weeks at an Ex bd meeting, go find something else to do.
Links to Oct. 24 Ex Bd meeting notes from Nick and James:
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
Something broke last night at the UFT Ex Bd meeting, becoming reminiscent of the divide between Republicans and Democrats. We know who the Republicans are. Fundamentally, the UFT/Unity leadership has the mentality of the Republican party - privatizing, voter suppression and anti-democratic. Mitch Mulgrew.
I heard Amy [Arundell] yelling at the top of her lungs when we brought up the length of the president’s report [at the DA] and asking who makes the agenda "it’s our TRADITION," she yelled. Last night she gutted decades of tradition By cutting the question period •limiting it.... Her oath to loyalty over principle may now mean I’ve lost all respect for her unionism......we lose all respect for your unionism when oath to caucus loyalty comes before a modicum of principle. Limiting & silencing questions by rank and file because they make you uncomfortable... Educators of NYC
We watch positioning in the UFT along the lines people watched the Chinese Communist Party where Xi Jinping kept his back turned while his predecessor was escorted from the room. Unity should televise their next Party Congress. Will we see Mulgrew escorted from the room the same way?
Unity is not thinking ahead. This plan is exactly why they won this year by the lowest percentage ever, and exactly why they could lose the next election... The MLC Medicare Advantage Plan
Monday, October 24, 2022
Rally and Zoom to Protect Health Care - Thurs Oct 27 12:30 - Numbers Count, Zoom Tuesday Oct 25 7:30-9PM
Educational Panel:
Amendment of City Administrative Code 12-126:
What is it & what can we do to stop it?
Tuesday, October 25, 7:30-9:00 PM via Zoom
Join by phone or computer.
Closed captions in English will be available.
A recording will be distributed to all registrants following the forum.
The City is currently trying to push an amendment to the Administrative Code through the City Council, which would allow the City to save money at workers’ expense by reducing healthcare benefits to ALL workers on NYC’s medical coverage.
Please RSVP to join us on Tuesday, October 25th for a panel with experts on policy and labor activism to learn how City Administrative Code 12-126 would change the City’s responsibility to provide healthcare benefits to its workers. We will cover what the code is, why this amendment is being proposed, and how it will impact both active and retired city workers and their dependents. There will be time allotted for a lengthy Q&A session! Most importantly, we will discuss how to actively oppose this change (to take action now, you can call your City Councilmember HERE).
The code they are looking to change has protected NYC workers for over fifty years, and this amendment is a direct attack to undermine the hard-earned benefits of City employees. Join us to learn more on October 25th at 7:30 on Zoom!
Please come out and join us on Thursday Oct. 27th at 12:30 pm on Broadway & Park Pl. for a Halloween Horror Press Conference as we greet our City Council members entering City Hall. We are frightened and need to let them know NOT to amend City Administrative Code 12-126 because the results would be very scary for us and for our health.
New York City Municipal retirees have fought for over a year to keep the City from switching our excellent traditional Medicare with supplement to a privatized Medicare Advantage Plan. We won a lawsuit protecting us, and now the City is doing an "end run" by trying to get the City Council to change the law--Admin. Code 12-126! This change will not only affect retirees but could diminish current city workers' health benefits as well.
We are gathering once again when the Council is in session to tell them— VOTE NO!
Sunday, October 23, 2022
October DA Reinforces United for Change allegation (Complaint #21) that the UFT/Unity Caucus Shuts UFC Out at DA - Unity Denies DA Plan
Sunday, October 23, 2022
The UFC Committee alleges that the UFT has violated the LMRDA with a range of conduct relating to the conduct of the Delegate Assembly, the UFT’s representative legislative body. These allegations are broadly divided into three categories: (a) alleged violations of Roberts Rules; (b) procedural inadequacy; and (c) procedural changes made in conjunction with the election... UFT Election Complaint #21
For decades some Unity Caucus people have been telling us how Unity and the leadership prepped for Delegate Assemblies through what they call their "Speakers Bureau". People get assigned roles. They even rehearse. They held two rehearsals for a recent DA so Mulgrew could get it right. Mulgrew even has seating plans. People are set up to ask certain questions that allow Mulgrew to expand on his already way too long opening report. They have designated plants to speak on leadership backed resos and people known as "call the question" plants to end debates. One former Unity told me a clue is when Leroy Barr removes his glasses. Which makes this report Leroy gave at the Oct. 3 Ex Bd hilarious:
UFT President Michael Mulgrew does not determine who is called on based on caucus affiliation...Concerning the allegation that no delegate not affiliated with the UC has been permitted to present a resolution and no UFC candidate member has been recognized during the new motion period of the Delegate Assembly, this is false. While the UFT does not track caucus affiliation for attendees or speakers at Delegate Assemblies, UFT rejection of UFC Complaint #21 - LOL
While I don't expect the Department of Labor or the AFT to rule against
the UFT on the way they run the Delegate Assembly, we need to keep
pointing their behavior. Last year's - a UFT election year - the
behavior by Unity was the worst as Mulgrew shut out voices of the
opposition at last years' DAs after the opposition had won or came close
on some resos.
Unity shuts out opposition voices by controlling the 10 minute New Motion period by inserting its own motions and making it look like they are random.
Ex Bd UFC member Nick Bacon exposed the continuing behavior in his report on the Oct. DA:
No time for opposition:
Mulgrew called on one opposition member all night – H.S. executive board member, Ilona Nanay (MORE), who asked a good question (and got a bad answer) on changes to the city council administrative code. It was no accident that Mulgrew called on a known opposition member during the question period, but not during the new motions period. During a question period, it’s easy for Mulgrew to regain control of the room. He can spend lots of time answering a short question, and making it clear that his perspective is the right perspective.
During a new motion, opposition has far more space to convince the audience. Mulgrew knows that, so we haven’t been called on since last November, 2021 to raise one (and that’s when I was technically still a member of his Unity caucus). It’s also worth noting how obvious it was that Mulgrew knew who he was picking in advance. One of the people he called on, Maggie Joyce, is someone he calls on frequently to raise new motions. She is a familiar Unity face to him, often present at UFT functions. Another of the people he called on was raising a motion he noted before it was even raised (on migrant children).
Our healthcare reso didn’t stand a chance. We didn’t even get to the business of motions on 10/12’s agenda. We lost all that to the most brainwashing filibuster Mulgrew has ever given. I’ll give my same advice again – if you want to see diverse union perspectives, come to executive board meetings where you have any chance of actually seeing them.
Unity put two "message" resos on the agenda - on immigrants and support for Iranian women - and watch them attack us for calling them out on this as an attack on the substance of the resos - not true - they could have been added as special business and not taken away from the normal 10 minute new motions.
This tactic is intentional and happens time and again when they are threatened with a strong oppo reso and we will raise this tactic with the Department of Labor, though I don't think they will get what we are talking about.
Leadership sponsored resos are presented to the Ex bd and then put on the regular agenda of the DA. The ten minute time had been used by the opposition for decades to raise new motions. So especially since Mulgrew took over the UFT, Unity has coopted this time period to raise "late" resos, often handed out unlabeled as to sponsors. Now I understand that stuff may come up last minute -- so my suggestion is to allow them to do this but not count it against the 10 minutes. And if Mulgrew doesn't filibuster for an hour this would be easy.
Adding to the hilarity are the examples they cite of calling on UFC candidates at times before UFC even existed. The funniest was this:
At the November 17, 2021 Delegate Assembly, eventual UFC Executive Board candidate Nick Bacon made a motion regarding potential health care plan changes, which was voted on and defeated;
Nick, who did not become a candidate for UFC until January 2022, pointed out at the Exec Board meeting he was still in Unity in November 2021. In fact, my guess is that Nick was turned off to Unity due to their behavior at the DA. In fact, over the past 25 years, a number of people who were neutral delegates were pissed off enough at the DA to move toward the opposition.
And on this one from the UFT report:
At the November 17, 2021 Delegate Assembly, eventual UFC Executive Board candidate and member of the Educators of NYC (EONYC) caucus Daniel Alicea had a motion listed on the agenda as a special order of business, regarding the UFT’s position towards mayoral control of New York City public schools, which Mr. Alicea withdrew from consideration;
Daniel, who a year before the election was still fairly neutral about Unity - in fact he voted for Unity in the 2019 election - tried to get a mayoral control reso on the agenda in the spring of 2021 but found himself thwarted at every turn and withdrew his reso after its relevance had expired. That they used this example at a time when UFC did not exist and Daniel was not associated with the opposition - yet - makes their response even more of a farce.
In my opinion the thwarting of his attempt to get a discussion going on mayoral control at the DA was what helped open his eyes. When Daniel raised the point that many of the speakers at DAs are UFT employees on the payroll Unity went ballistic on him - he became public enemy #1.
Below is the complete section of the UFT report:
Complaint #21 – The Allegations Do Not Demonstrate Violations Of The LMRDA
Saturday, October 22, 2022
The Facts Michael Mulgrew, UFT, Doesn’t Want You to Know - Marianne - NYC Org of Public Service Retirees
Now watch UFT staff start appearing at your schools to sell the program and convicne you to accept a deal where you get a raise but use a chunk of it to pay more for your healthcare.
The Facts Michael Mulgrew, UFT, Doesn’t Want You to Know
1. UFT Claim: Mulgrew stated they did not borrow from the Stabilization Fund causing our current health care crisis.
Truth: The Stabilization Fund has been improperly used. It’s been used as a piggy bank to offset City expenses which had not been budgeted. Two examples: in 2009, an ongoing, annual payment of $112M was agreed to, primarily to reduce layoffs. In 2014, a one-time $1 billion payment was made to NYC from the Stabilization Fund to largely pay for UFT raises.
2. UFT Claim: The UFT “fact sheet” claims that the City is spending $11.8 billion in FY 2023 on health care expenses.
Truth: Facts matter: the City’s adopted budget shows healthcare expenses of $7.8 billion. We are not trying to hide the fact that healthcare is expensive, and no one is against trying to find savings. But we need to start with accurate numbers.
3. UFT Claim: “Mulgrew stated “...not a single health care benefit was either lost or diminished during that three-year period as a result of these cost-saving measures.”
Truth: Benefit changes including deductibles, copays and increased prior authorizations were added to the plan. These are diminished benefits. This year they are removing Montefiore from the preferred network adding co-pays, and narrowing the network for imaging and urgent care. All new City hires are automatically forced into the HIP HMO. That may be a prudent way for the City to save on health insurance costs, but it is a diminution of benefits.
-
UFT Claim: Mulgrew stated Medicare Advantage (MA) offers the same benefits as Traditional Medicare.
Truth: Medicare Advantage is nothing like traditional Medicare, while the same medical conditions are covered, Medicare Advantage has two main differences: far fewer doctors participate in Medicare Advantage plans; and doctors and their patients have to endure the bureaucratic hurdles – and proven dangers – of prior authorization. Placing a private insurance company – making medical decisions – between the doctor and her patient is a fundamental difference.
-
UFT Claim: Mulgrew states his “custom” MA plan is the only PPO MA plan.
Truth: There are lots of PPO Medicare Advantage plans offered by many different insurance companies. Period.
6. UFT Claim: Mulgrew says, “The New York City Medicare Advantage Plus Plan, negotiated by the MLC, was a totally new, unprecedented version of Medicare Advantage that was ONLY for New York City municipal retirees and their families.”
Truth: It is not a unique plan and it is not even a particularly good Medicare Advantage plan. The only true parts of the statement is that it was negotiated by the MLC; and it was “only for New York City municipal retirees and their families.” DUH.: the MLC is not about to negotiate on behalf of teachers in Dubuque.
7. UFT Claim: Mulgrew says, “This new plan negotiated by the MLC and the city was, in fact, a Medicare program. We were able to access federal funding because it is a public program.”
Truth: Medicare Advantage is a public-private partnership: Federal money that goes to a private insurance company. By forcing people out of their traditional Medicare-and-Supplemental insurance program that retirees have enjoyed and relied upon for more than 50 years, the City was attempting to relieve itself of the cost and shifting it to the Federal government. But you get what you pay for: Medicare Advantage is a fundamentally inferior program compared to traditional Medicare. It is nothing more than a budgetary gimmick on the backs of retirees.
8. UFT Claim: Mulgrew says, “The new plan was a custom, large-group version of Medicare Advantage developed for New York City municipal employees only. It was modeled after GHI SeniorCare and was filled with features that made it the same or better than current GHI SeniorCare but at lower cost to the city.”
Truth: The new Medicare Advantage plan is nothing – absolutely nothing – like traditional Medicare plus SeniorCare. Traditional Medicare does not have prior authorization restrictions; the proposed Medicare Advantage plan had over 100 categories of tests and procedures that will limit retirees’ access to health care. Virtually all doctors accept traditional Medicare. Hundreds of New York area doctors said they were not going to accept this plan. And for retirees living outside of the New York area, their access to participating doctors was going to be even more restricted.
9. UFT Claim: Mulgrew stated, “A state judge’s recent ruling illuminated an issue with a part of the administrative code (Section 12 -126) that allows for a dangerous interpretation. The judge said the administrative code required the city to only offer premium-free plans.”
Truth: The Court said no such thing. The City and unions argued that should be the interpretation of 12-126, and the Court rejected it. The Court said that if the City included a plan in its range of offerings, the City had to pay up to the defined price cap.
10. UFT Claim: Mulgrew said that if the Court accepted the retirees’ (winning) interpretation, such a mandate would eliminate the MLC's and the city's authority to offer multiple health care plans, since the “city and the MLC would be unable to absorb the cost of multiple premium-free plans.”
Truth: That makes no sense. The Court’s order made clear that the City must pay for plans offered by the City up to the statutory cap: the price of the HIP-HMO.
11. UFT Claim: Mulgrew stated, “Without this change in code, the city may choose to save costs by offering only one health care option that isn’t up to our standards.”
Truth: In the 1992 Health Agreement, the City is obligated to negotiate all aspects of health care with the MLC. The City cannot get rid of these choices of plans unless the MLC agrees to it. Retirees live all over the country and require plans that include their local doctors and hospitals. One size does not fit all.
What is prior authorization?
Prior authorization is a health plan cost-control process that requires physicians and other health care professionals to obtain advance approval from a health plan before a specific service is delivered to the patient to qualify for payment coverage.
What experts are saying about prior authorization
In today’s physician practice, the prior authorization process is typically manual and time consuming, diverting valuable resources away from patient care. In addition, prior authorization can delay treatment and impact optimal patient health outcomes.
Fixing prior authorization is a core element of the AMA Recovery Plan for America’s Physicians. The AMA works to right-size prior authorization through advocacy efforts and significant research focused on physician concerns over patient care delays, administrative costs and workflow disruptions.
Prior authorization impacts quality patient care
AMA research shows that prior authorization is a barrier to providing timely, patient-centered care. According to the AMA’s annual prior authorization physician survey (PDF), among physicians surveyed:
- 91% reported that prior authorization can lead to negative clinical outcomes
- 82% said prior authorization can lead to patients abandoning their course of treatment
- 34% said prior authorization has led to a serious adverse event for a patient in their care
In the June 16, 2022, episode of the “AMA Thriving in Private Practice” podcast, prior authorization expert Heather McComas, AMA director of administrative simplification initiatives, notes that from this survey, “An overwhelming majority of physicians, 93%, indicated that prior authorization can delay access to medically necessary care. And this just isn't about making people wait or inconveniencing them. It actually has negative impacts on their health.”
Prior authorization woes can also extend to employers. While health insurers tout prior authorization as a cost-saving measure, the AMA survey also found that it can lead to absenteeism and a less productive workforce.
Related Coverage
Putting patients first means tackling prior authorizationPrior authorization is an administrative burden
Prior authorization costs valuable time for physicians and health care staff. AMA’s prior authorization physician survey reports that physicians complete an average of 41 prior authorizations per physician per week–this workload translates to almost two business days of physician and staff time.
McComas notes, “it's also disturbing to note that 40% of physicians indicated that they have hired practice staff just to do prior authorization. Again, we're adding a lot of administrative costs to our health care system just to do paperwork.”
AMA offers tips to help physicians reduce the prior authorization burden in their practice (PDF), and strongly advocates for health plans to offer automated, streamlined processes.
Momentum to fix prior authorization is building
AMA continues to fight excessive and unnecessary prior authorization through reform initiatives underway at both the state and federal levels. In addition, the AMA adopts policies to minimize the current impact of prior authorization on practices.
In a June 27, 2022, AMA Moving Medicine video update, Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-WA) discusses a current bipartisan legislative effort, the “Improving Seniors’ Timely Access to Care Act,” that would help reduce unnecessary delays in care by streamlining and standardizing prior authorization under the Medicare Advantage program, providing much-needed oversight and transparency of health insurance for America’s seniors.
“The bill would establish an electronic prior authorization process,” says DelBene, “so we can be speedy about getting information exchange. It would require HHS to establish a process for real-time decisions for items and services that are routinely approved. Again, there's no reason for something that's routinely approved to be delayed.”
Prior authorization efforts at the state level
AMA is committed to fix prior authorization by working with state legislators and medical societies to remove insurance company interference in the timely delivery of patient care.
As the demand and need for such reforms continues to grow, the AMA has created a model bill (PDF) and related issue brief (PDF) that medical societies can use to begin efforts to address prior authorization in state legislative processes.
Related Coverage
Why prior authorization is bad for patients and bad for businessExplore other AMA resources on prior authorization
Learn more about AMA’s grassroots advocacy campaign on prior authorization reform at FixPriorAuth.org. The FixPriorAuth campaign also includes a call to action. Other key AMA prior authorization resources include:
- Prior authorization reform initiatives
- Prior authorization reform resources
- Prior authorization practice resources
- Prior authorization research & reports
- AMA Journal of Ethics: Should Clinicians Be Activists?
- AMA Ed Hub™:
- Administrative Burden and Costs of Prior Authorizations in a Dermatology Department: Interview with Aaron M. Secrest, MD, PhD, author of Administrative Burden and Costs of Prior Authorizations in a Dermatology Department
- “Refocusing Medication Prior Authorization on Its Intended Purpose”
- “Administrative Burden and Costs of Prior Authorizations in a Dermatology Department”
Reviewed by: Heather McComas, director, administrative simplification initiatives, and Emily Carroll, senior legislative attorney, Advocacy Resource Center
Reviewed on: July 12, 2022