https://mailchi.mp/f12ce6f07b28/the-weekly-gist-november-10-2023?e=d1e747d2d8

Last week, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued the final 2024 Physician Fee Schedule, which reduces overall payment rates for physicians by 1.25 percent, including a 3.4 percent decrease in the conversion factor for relative value units, compared to 2023.
The rule also implements a new add-on payment for complex evaluation and management visits, which is expected to boost pay for primary care physicians.
The American Medical Association (AMA) strongly opposes these cuts and immediately appealed to Congress for a reprieve. In response, the Senate Finance Committee unanimously advanced a bill to the Senate floor that would reduce the conversion-factor rate cut from 3.4 percent to 2.15 percent, while also delaying reductions in Medicaid disproportionate share funding for safety-net hospitals. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has indicated he intends to assemble a broad healthcare bill, including some or all of these provisions, by the end of this year.
The Gist: Physicians were hopeful that inflation’s toll on labor and supply costs would earn them a break from continued Medicare pay cuts, but CMS remains committed to reductions within its budget neutrality framework.
Earlier this year, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) recommended for the first time that physician payments be tied to an index of physician practice inflation, but that would require legislative intervention, which Congress has not taken up.
The AMA calculated that Medicare physician pay has lagged inflation by 26 percent since 2001, pointing to burnout and large numbers of physicians exiting the profession as a result.
Until calls for Medicare payment reform are heeded, physicians, like health systems, will have to adopt new, lower-cost models of care to cope with what they will continue to see as insufficient reimbursements.

