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April 2025 News from the College

By ACEP Now | on April 8, 2025 | 0 Comment
From the College
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ACEP to NIH: We Must Avoid Gaps in Research Funding 

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Explore This Issue
ACEP Now: April Digital 02-D

ACEP and nearly 50 physician groups and other organizations are sharing deep concerns about the recently announced 15 percent cap on indirect cost recovery for National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants. ACEP urges NIH to rescind this directive and work collaboratively to develop a solution that balances transparency, efficiency, and sustainability. 

The letter details the importance of using federal research dollars effectively and states: 

“The collateral damage of this policy, if implemented, will be profound and generational, reshaping the future of scientific progress in ways that cannot be easily undone. Beyond its immediate financial strain, the policy introduces significant procedural and structural issues that undermine the integrity of federal research funding.” 

Outlined concerns span research institution funding, career development and talent recruitment, efforts to sustain globally competitive United States-led research innovation, and more. Read the letter. 

ACEP Takes a Stand Against Corporate Overreach 

ACEP issued a statement last month in support of Senate Bill 951 in Oregon, which would limit external management services organizations from exercising control over physician medical decision making and non-compete clauses in employment contracts. ACEP affirmed its stance that medical decisions must be made by physicians and any practice structure that threatens physician autonomy, the patient physician relationship, or the ability of the physician to place the needs of patients over profits should be opposed. 

ACEP identified these business or management decisions should only be made by a physician: 

  • Determining how many patients an emergency physician must see or supervise in each period of time, how many hours an emergency physician must work, or how many hours of coverage are provided.
  • Determining which patients will be seen by an emergency physician or a physician assistant/nurse practitioner or how such patients seen by a physician assistant/nurse practitioner shall be supervised by an emergency physician.
  • Selection, hiring/firing (as it relates to clinical competency or proficiency) of emergency physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants.
  • Setting the parameters under which the practice will enter into contractual relationships with third-party payers.
  • Oversight of policies and procedures for revenue cycle management, including coding and billing procedures, reimbursement from insurers, and collections for patient care services.

Catch up on advocacy at the ACEP State Legislative Dashboard. 

Impact Report Shows How ACEP Advocates, Fights, Protects  

ACEP’s recently released Impact Report shows how ACEP spent 2024 protecting emergency physicians, patients, and the community.  

Pages: 1 2 3 | Single Page

Topics: April News

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