“Ask Not What Your [Academy] Can Do for You, But…”
As a long time member of the Board of Governors (BOG), with more than 17 years representing the Long Island Society of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, I have seen many advances in the BOG. Starting as a grassroots organization, it has blossomed to where it now represents full-time academic physicians and private practitioners. As government, both on the state and federal level, has increasingly weighed in on reimbursement, recredentialing, Electronic Medical Records (EMR), e-prescribing, and Physician Quality & Reporting System (PQRS) participation, all supposedly for the benefit of our patients, we as physicians have come under increasing administrative pressure and fiscal constraints. We do the best we can for our patients according to our training and experience, advocating for each of them daily. To that end, the Academy and the BOG in its advocacy efforts fight for us every day. They sit at the table protecting our right to practice and patients’ right to good and thorough care. They develop guidelines to help you help your patients. The need for a strong advocacy organization like the BOG has become paramount. Your involvement is equally important, so I ask you to participate in the legislative outreach programs, the Washington OTO Advocacy Summit in the spring, and our BOG committee meetings. When asked, contact your legislator with letters or emails, or visit their local office. The Board of Governors Development/Fundraising Task Force and my chairmanship position were sunsetted at the end of September. It has been so successful that it now has become a Development Committee of the Foundation on which I am honored to serve. The BOG Development Task Force members helped reinvigorate the Millennium Society, and the Hal Foster, MD, Endowment, bringing members the Millennium Society lounge, special seating at the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO, and early registration. The BOG Task Force helped raise more than $8 million. This is a fine example of a giving program formed by members that continues and expands its influence due to that commitment. This money supports the mission of the AAO-HNS/F. It helped fund the health policy and legislative advocacy efforts on the state and federal level, research and quality initiatives, PQRIwizard, the education of our members, Resident Leadership Grants, our public relations mini-campaigns, Find an ENT online feature, AcademyQ, and website relevancy and expansion. Members’ dues only cover 22 percent of the Academy budget. It is estimated that the Academy, through its efforts, returns to each member $4,000-10,000 in increased or saved reimbursement. Advocacy efforts have helped prevent implementation of the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR), while increasing reimbursement for head and neck procedures, new coding for office balloon sinuplasty, and even payment for wax removal. We continue the balloon sinuplasty “experimental and not reimbursable” fight, and the fight against direct-to-consumer hearing tests without a physician referral, and hearing aid dispensing. We continue to oppose audiology direct access to Medicare patients while supporting Truth in Advertising. Only an MD or DO should be able to represent themselves as a physician. We support what is best for our members and our patients. Patient care and access to the best ENT care is vital. The combined efforts of the members and the Academy are necessary to continue these initiatives. The Academy must remain independent of outside influences. Therefore, it is dependent on your continued financial support. Give individually to the Millennium Society, bequeath a large gift (life insurance, stocks bonds, businesses, art work) or make a substantial cash donation and become a member of the Hal Foster, MD Endowment, or a life member of the Millennium Society. Have your practice join Partners for Progress, make your voice heard, and ensure the future of the specialty. Join the Board of Governors, attend committee meetings (they are open to all), and participate. Come to the BOG Spring Meeting/OTO Advocacy Summit in Washington, DC, starting on May 5, 2013. If we, the members of the AAO-HNS, the Board of Governors, and the Academy itself do not have a strong voice in the future of our specialty, someone else will speak for us and our patients. Every BOG member should bring another member to our meetings, and every Millennium Society member should recruit another. Advocate or Abdicate. Donate or be Dominated. The BOG is here to serve you, but only through a strong, financially stable, active membership can that occur. Get involved.
We do the best we can for our patients according to our training and experience, advocating for each of them daily.
To that end, the Academy and the BOG in its advocacy efforts fight for us every day. They sit at the table protecting our right to practice and patients’ right to good and thorough care. They develop guidelines to help you help your patients. The need for a strong advocacy organization like the BOG has become paramount. Your involvement is equally important, so I ask you to participate in the legislative outreach programs, the Washington OTO Advocacy Summit in the spring, and our BOG committee meetings. When asked, contact your legislator with letters or emails, or visit their local office.
The Board of Governors Development/Fundraising Task Force and my chairmanship position were sunsetted at the end of September. It has been so successful that it now has become a Development Committee of the Foundation on which I am honored to serve. The BOG Development Task Force members helped reinvigorate the Millennium Society, and the Hal Foster, MD, Endowment, bringing members the Millennium Society lounge, special seating at the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO, and early registration. The BOG Task Force helped raise more than $8 million. This is a fine example of a giving program formed by members that continues and expands its influence due to that commitment.
This money supports the mission of the AAO-HNS/F. It helped fund the health policy and legislative advocacy efforts on the state and federal level, research and quality initiatives, PQRIwizard, the education of our members, Resident Leadership Grants, our public relations mini-campaigns, Find an ENT online feature, AcademyQ, and website relevancy and expansion.
Members’ dues only cover 22 percent of the Academy budget. It is estimated that the Academy, through its efforts, returns to each member $4,000-10,000 in increased or saved reimbursement. Advocacy efforts have helped prevent implementation of the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR), while increasing reimbursement for head and neck procedures, new coding for office balloon sinuplasty, and even payment for wax removal.
We continue the balloon sinuplasty “experimental and not reimbursable” fight, and the fight against direct-to-consumer hearing tests without a physician referral, and hearing aid dispensing. We continue to oppose audiology direct access to Medicare patients while supporting Truth in Advertising. Only an MD or DO should be able to represent themselves as a physician. We support what is best for our members and our patients. Patient care and access to the best ENT care is vital. The combined efforts of the members and the Academy are necessary to continue these initiatives.
The Academy must remain independent of outside influences. Therefore, it is dependent on your continued financial support. Give individually to the Millennium Society, bequeath a large gift (life insurance, stocks bonds, businesses, art work) or make a substantial cash donation and become a member of the Hal Foster, MD Endowment, or a life member of the Millennium Society. Have your practice join Partners for Progress, make your voice heard, and ensure the future of the specialty.
Join the Board of Governors, attend committee meetings (they are open to all), and participate. Come to the BOG Spring Meeting/OTO Advocacy Summit in Washington, DC, starting on May 5, 2013. If we, the members of the AAO-HNS, the Board of Governors, and the Academy itself do not have a strong voice in the future of our specialty, someone else will speak for us and our patients. Every BOG member should bring another member to our meetings, and every Millennium Society member should recruit another. Advocate or Abdicate. Donate or be Dominated.
The BOG is here to serve you, but only through a strong, financially stable, active membership can that occur. Get involved.