WASHINGTON--Even if you aren’t able to participate in the American Association for Homecare’s Legislative Conference, you can still make your voice heard.
 
The three-day conference, which ends today, is sending about 250 participants to Capitol Hill to lobby on behalf of the home medical equipment industry. The National Association of Independent Medical Equipment Suppliers and HME service group VGM are encouraging HME providers who were unable to attend the event to contact their legislators and talk to them about the potential devastating effects of competitive bidding, the crippling effects of the oxygen rental cap and the need for oxygen reform.
 
“If you are not traveling to D.C. this week, please be sure that you are contacting your representative and senators to push [oxygen cap repeal bill] H.R. 2373 (to your representatives) and to get language to eliminate competitive bidding included in the health care reform package,” VGM urged on its Web site. “As Congress begins its summer schedule with a ‘must pass’ health care overhaul effort, we have merely weeks-not months-to get this effort accomplished!”
 
“The key issues … are the repeal of the oxygen cap and ending competitive bidding,” said Wayne Stanfield, president and chief executive officer of NAIMES. “NAIMES supports H.R. 2373, the HOPP Act, to repeal the oxygen cap. When you call your representatives, tell them your own personal stories of how the cap has adversely affected your patients.”
 
As of today, the HOPP Act has 20 cosponsors. Stakeholders have said more than 220 cosponsors are needed to move the bill forward.
 
NAIMES supports ending competitive bidding, Stanfield said, and while no bill currently exists, “we must continue to ask for repeal of the program,” he said, adding that providers must urge Congress to take action to end the program.
 
Stanfield said providers should also champion the plan to ask Kathleen Sebelius, secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, to use her authority to allow “any willing provider” to participate in competitive bidding should the latter program be implemented.
 
“We feel that this will allow providers to still participate regardless of bidding or winning, and will stop providers from being excluded from the program,” Stanfield said. “This is a regulatory path that will preserve patient choice and does not mean that NAIMES and other stakeholders are abandoning efforts to repeal the program.”
 
To contact your representative and two senators representing your state, call the U.S. Capitol switchboard at 202/224-3121. The switchboard operator will connect you to your legislator’s office by using your ZIP Code.
 
Talking points on each issue are available at the NAIMES Web site