Common Sense Health Care Reform will Cut Red Tape, Bureaucracy,
Empower Doctors to Spend More Time with Patients
LANSING –Michigan State Medical Society President John Bizon, MD, today praised
lawmakers for overwhelmingly approving bipartisanship legislation to cut red tape and
bureaucracy in the delivery of health care. Senate Bills 178 and 179, championed by state
Senator Tonya Schuitmaker (R-Lawton) and state Representative Gail Haines (R-Waterford)
now head to the Governor’s desk for his signature and came in response to calls from
Michigan physicians to improve patients’ access to the best care by creating a universal prior
authorization form for prescription drugs.
“Michigan physicians and their staffs want to be in the exam room with patients, not
chained to their desks sorting through hundreds of different versions of the same basic form,”
said Bizon. “Lawmakers today sent a clear message to families across the state that when it
comes to health care, patients come first.”
“We join families and physicians across Michigan in applauding Senator Schuitmaker,
Representative Haines and lawmakers from both parties who took this critical step towards
common sense health care reform that clears bureaucratic hurdles and red tape standing in
the way of the best patient care. We look forward to the Governor’s signature.”
The Michigan State Medical Society (MSMS) for years has championed the creation of
a universal prior authorization form to improve patients’ access to the best care.
The reforms ask the Michigan’s Department of Community Health and the Department
of Insurance and Financial Services to create a single universal prior authorization form to
replace the hundreds of different forms physicians and their staffs currently sort through every
day to accomplish the same task. The overwhelmingly bipartisan reform preserves the right of
insurance companies to choose which drugs they cover under each plan and is cosponsored
by numerous other Republicans and Democrats.
The Michigan State Medical Society is a professional association of more than 16,000
Michigan physicians. Its mission is to promote a health care environment which supports
physicians in caring for, and enhancing the health of Michigan citizens through science,
quality, and ethics in the practice of medicine. Please visit www.msms.org/ for more
information.
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