Logo

Log In Sign Up |  An official publication of: American College of Emergency Physicians
Navigation
  • Home
  • Multimedia
    • Podcasts
    • Videos
  • Clinical
    • Airway Managment
    • Case Reports
    • Critical Care
    • Guidelines
    • Imaging & Ultrasound
    • Pain & Palliative Care
    • Pediatrics
    • Resuscitation
    • Trauma & Injury
  • Resource Centers
    • mTBI Resource Center
  • Career
    • Practice Management
      • Benchmarking
      • Reimbursement & Coding
      • Care Team
      • Legal
      • Operations
      • Quality & Safety
    • Awards
    • Certification
    • Compensation
    • Early Career
    • Education
    • Leadership
    • Profiles
    • Retirement
    • Work-Life Balance
  • Columns
    • ACEP4U
    • Airway
    • Benchmarking
    • Brief19
    • By the Numbers
    • Coding Wizard
    • EM Cases
    • End of the Rainbow
    • Equity Equation
    • FACEPs in the Crowd
    • Forensic Facts
    • From the College
    • Images in EM
    • Kids Korner
    • Medicolegal Mind
    • Opinion
      • Break Room
      • New Spin
      • Pro-Con
    • Pearls From EM Literature
    • Policy Rx
    • Practice Changers
    • Problem Solvers
    • Residency Spotlight
    • Resident Voice
    • Skeptics’ Guide to Emergency Medicine
    • Sound Advice
    • Special OPs
    • Toxicology Q&A
    • WorldTravelERs
  • Resources
    • ACEP.org
    • ACEP Knowledge Quiz
    • Issue Archives
    • CME Now
    • Annual Scientific Assembly
      • ACEP14
      • ACEP15
      • ACEP16
      • ACEP17
      • ACEP18
      • ACEP19
    • Annals of Emergency Medicine
    • JACEP Open
    • Emergency Medicine Foundation
  • About
    • Our Mission
    • Medical Editor in Chief
    • Editorial Advisory Board
    • Awards
    • Authors
    • Article Submission
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright Information

American Medical Association President-Elect Dissects Obamacare at ACEP14

By Richard Quinn | on October 27, 2014 | 0 Comment
ACEP14 Features
  • Tweet
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Print-Friendly Version

CHICAGO—Take it from the incoming president of the American Medical Association (AMA): the Affordable Care Act has flaws aplenty, but it’s moved health care forward in a way unseen since the 1965 creation of Medicare and Medicaid.

You Might Also Like
  • American Medical Association President-Elect Steven Stack, MD, FACEP, to Speak at Medical Informatics World Conference
  • Dr. Steven Stack First Emergency Physician Named President-Elect of the American Medical Association
  • ACA Unraveled: Obamacare From the Emergency Medicine Perspective
Explore This Issue
ACEP14 Daily News Tuesday: Vol 33 - No10B - October 2014

“The nation has been struggling to enact meaningful health system reform for more than a century,” AMA President-Elect Steven Stack, MD, FACEP, said in yesterday’s Colin C. Rorrie, Jr. Lecture at ACEP14. “But I would argue that we may have accomplished more in the last four years than in the preceding 40.”

Dr. Stack’s talk, aptly named “The ACA: The Rocky Road to Health Reform,” highlighted progress made in adding insurance coverage for millions of new people and protections of coverage for some 129 million patients with pre-existing conditions. But he emphasized that physicians—and others—need to realize insurance coverage is just one facet of the ACA.

“It’s also about improving quality and delivery functions, transitioning from a fragmented health care system with different providers and stakeholders operating largely independently to a collaborative, team-based approach, and shifting the focus of payment from quantity of service to quality of service.”

Emergency medicine veteran Ron Low, MD, MS, FACEP, of New York City Health and Hospitals Corp., was drawn to Dr. Stack’s talk by both interest in the varied impacts of the ACA, and his status as the first emergency physician to ever lead the AMA. Dr. Low said the talk reinforced for him how arduous the path to continued reform, and its ensuing improvements will be.

“I probably appreciate even more now that it’s going to be an unfinished thing for a while,” Dr. Low added. “It is frustrating but I don’t see any alternative, so I guess we’ll have to put our heads down [and keep working].”

In a brief question-and-answer session, Dr. Stack, an emergency department medical director in two states who currently practices in Lexington, Kentucky, told one nervous physician that even if Republicans take over Congress in next week’s midterm elections, he fully expects President Obama to veto any effort. In the meantime, emergency physicians need to step up and voice their concerns to be part of the process, he said.

“Our specialty must clearly articulate and define the role and value of our services in a reformed health care delivery system,” Dr. Stack added. “Emergency medicine in the future may look substantially different than today and we’ll have to adapt to survive and thrive.”

Pages: 1 2 | Single Page

Topics: ACEP14Affordable Care ActEmergency Medicinehealth reformMedicareregulation

Related

  • ACEP 2025 Leadership & Advocacy Conference—Showing Up on Behalf of EM!

    June 5, 2025 - 0 Comment
  • EM Runs in the Family

    February 26, 2025 - 0 Comment
  • Medicare’s Reimbursement Updates for 2024

    January 13, 2024 - 0 Comment

Current Issue

ACEP Now: November 2025

Download PDF

Read More

About the Author

Richard Quinn

Richard Quinn is an award-winning journalist with 15 years’ experience. He has worked at the Asbury Park Press in New Jersey and The Virginian-Pilot in Norfolk, Va., and currently is managing editor for a leading commercial real estate publication. His freelance work has appeared in The Jewish State, ACEP Now, The Hospitalist, The Rheumatologist, and ENT Today. He lives in New Jersey with his wife and three cats.

View this author's posts »

No Responses to “American Medical Association President-Elect Dissects Obamacare at ACEP14”

Leave a Reply Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


*
*


Wiley
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy
  • Terms of Use
  • Advertise
  • Cookie Preferences
Copyright © 2025 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies. ISSN 2333-2603