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June 2025 News from the College

By ACEP Now | on June 5, 2025 | 1 Comment
From the College
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Register for ACEP25 by July 31. Get ACEP Anytime Free!

Join your emergency medicine family in Salt Lake City. Surround yourself with those who know you best, absorb practice-changing education, and relentlessly pursue excellence. ACEP is making the conference even more appealing by offering you access to ACEP Anytime—free—if you complete a four-day registration by July 31. Your time is valuable. Get up-to-date information from a library of videos, slides, podcasts, and publications from ACEP’s biggest events and collections. Even better, get $100 off when you register by July 31 with promo code Climbing.

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Explore This Issue
ACEP Now: June 2025 (Digital)

ACEP recently announced an addition to ACEP25. “The Pitt” is coming to Salt Lake City. Actor Noah Wyle, along with writer and producer Joseph Sachs, MD, FACEP, and medical advisor Mel Herbert, MD, FACEP, are delivering an exclusive panel discussion, moderated by incoming ACEP President L. Anthony Cirillo, MD, FACEP. Discover how they capture the chaos, intensity, and humanity of the emergency department with stunning realism and why the show has deeply resonated with emergency physicians across the country.

The exciting back-to-back session lineup kicks off ACEP25 Opening Day and features Olympic Gold medalist figure skater Scott Hamilton, who will deliver “I’m a Healer” – Finding Strength and Purpose Amidst Challenges.”  Hamilton will share his inspiring journey of resilience—from childhood illness to cancer battles—offering a powerful message of perseverance, hope, and turning obstacles into opportunities. Emergency physicians don’t just treat patients—they restore hope, navigate chaos, and heal beyond the physical. “I’m a Healer” celebrates the resilience, compassion, and unwavering dedication that defines emergency medicine.

ACEP to Congress: Reject Medicaid Changes That Would Leave Millions Uninsured

ACEP recently issued a statement to voice concern that drastic changes to Medicaid under consideration will disproportionately affect emergency departments already under significant strain, leaving emergency physicians with fewer resources to respond to patient needs, and threatening patient access to lifesaving emergency care. ACEP recently joined 42 national medical organizations in a letter opposing these proposed Medicaid changes. College leadership looks forward to continuing to work with the Senate to ensure that policy changes do not place undue burdens on already-strained emergency departments or establish barriers to lifesaving emergency care for patients.

“Emergency departments are one of the few settings where patients are treated 24/7/365, regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay,” said ACEP President Alison J. Haddock, MD, FACEP. “The impact of policies that will leave millions of people without any health coverage falls squarely onto emergency physicians and patients. Patients with unmet health care needs will delay treatment and their conditions will worsen, leaving them with no other option than the emergency department. This creates avoidable health risks and threatens the viability of an already strained health care safety net.”

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Topics: AccreditationACEP25AdvocacyAnnals of Emergency MedicineCOVID-19E-QUALEmergency Department Accredication ProgramEMTALAHeadacheInsurance CoveragePain ManagementPatient Safetyphysician onsitePublic PolicyResearchStudent Loanstudent loan forgivenessTechnologyVaccineVirtual Reality

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One Response to “June 2025 News from the College”

  1. July 6, 2025

    Pam Bensen Reply

    Love this ease of commenting and the individual pages and the pdf. Much as I hate e-versions and will probably miss much when I don’t have time to complete the issue in one sitting, these 3 pluses have made it easier to use ACEP Now. Thanks Cedrick.
    I also enjoyed the article explaining the importance of ICD-10-CM codes beyond the heinous billing and payment use.
    Finally, please stop the use of the word ‘reimbursement’. We don’t get reimbursed, we get PAID! Moneys sent to us from insurance and other payers are our payment for services rendered. You do not reimburse the plumber, Walmart, or your hair dresser, you PAY them.

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