BCMS DELEGATION TO TMA NEWS
BCMS Delegation to TMA Wraps Up House of Delegates Business in Virtual Meeting During TexMed 2021 By Mary E. Nava, MBA, BCMS Chief Government Affairs Officer
Congratulations to Jayesh Shah, MD, who was reelected to another term on the TMA Board of Trustees during the virtual annual meeting of the TMA House of Delegates held May 14-15 in conjunction with TexMed 2021. Dr. Shah was also reelected as a delegate member of the Texas Delegation to the AMA. He joins the following physicians, also representing BCMS on the Texas AMA Delegation, who were reelected to their posts: Drs. David Henkes, delegate – who also continues to serve as chair of the Texas Delegation to the AMA; Jennifer Rushton, MD, alternate delegate; and Ezequiel “Zeke” Silva, III, MD, alternate delegate. Delegate and alternate delegate members in the Texas Delegation to the AMA represent TMA at AMA meetings. Additionally, Swetha Maddipudi, a medical student entering her fourth year at the UT Health Long School of Medicine, was elected to serve a one-year term on the TMA Board of Trustees, representing the TMA Medical Student Section. Representing BCMS in the TMA International Medical Graduate (IMG) Section will be Rajeev Suri, MD, who was elected to the IMG Section Executive Council as a TMA delegate. A special thanks to the following delegate members of the BCMS Delegation to TMA, who participated in virtual reference committee hearings and house of delegates business meetings throughout the weekend meeting: Jesse Moss, Jr., MD, and Leah Jacobson, MD, chair and co-chair, respectively, of the BCMS Delegation to TMA. Dr. Jacobson also served on the TMA Credentials Committee. Other members of the BCMS Delegation to TMA include: Apeksha N. Agarwal, MD, Resident and Fellow Section – served on the Medical Education and Health Care Quality Reference Committee; Brian Boies, MD; Dianna Burns-Banks, MD; Chelsea Clinton, MD; Steven Gelfond, MD; Prabhdeep Grewal, MD; Pam Hall, MD; David Henkes, MD; David Hnatow, MD; James Humphreys, MD; Margaret Kelley, MD; Meagan Khan, Medical Student Section: David Lam, MD; William Cannon Lewis, MD; Shazli Noorali Malik, MD; Sekinat McCormick, MD; Lubna Naeem, MD; John Nava, MD – Chair of the Socioeconomics Reference Committee; Gerardo Ortega, MD; Adam Ratner, MD; Jennifer Rushton, MD – served on the Science and Public Health Reference Committee; Brent Sanderlin, DO; Jayesh Shah, MD; John Shepherd, MD; Ezequiel “Zeke” Silva, III, MD – served on the So-
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SAN ANTONIO MEDICINE • August 2021
cioeconomics Reference Committee; J. Marvin Smith, III, MD; Rajeev Suri, MD; Nora Linda Vasquez, MD; Veronica Vasquez, MD; Aruna Venkatesh, MD; Nikki Verma, Medical Student Section; and Alexis Wiesenthal, MD. The members of the BCMS Delegation to TMA also submitted five resolutions for consideration during the House of Delegates reference committee hearings. The resolutions follow, along with action taken by the House of Delegates. To read the full summary of actions taken by the TMA House of Delegates, go to texmed.org/hod. Resolution 106 – Creation of Ad Hoc Committee to Study and Make Recommendations Concerning Noncompete Agreements in Physician Employment Contracts. The resolution asks that (1) the Texas Medical Association study noncompete agreements in physician employment contracts and evaluate the impact of noncompete agreements on physicians and patients in Texas with report made to the TMA no later than TexMed 2022; and (2) that the Texas Medical Association assess whether means other than noncompete agreements might suffice to protect physician employers’ legitimate interests with report made to the TMA no later than TexMed 2022. Adopted as amended in lieu of Resolution 114 2021. Resolution 107 – Utilization Review, Medical Necessity Determination, Prior Authorization Decisions (Tabled Res 410 2020). The resolution asks that (1) the Texas Medical Association urge physicians to bring their concerns regarding decisions made by physicians working for insurance companies to the attention of the Texas Medical Board and Texas Department of Insurance, as these decisions affect patient outcome, and that TMA create a clearinghouse of all complaints against insurance companies and insurance doctors and aggregate this data; and (2) the Texas Delegation to the American Medical Association take this resolution to the AMA House of Delegates, urge the AMA House of Delegates to adopt similar policy and urge the AMA Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs to devise ethical opinions similar to the TMA Board of Councilors’ opinions on medical necessity determination and utilization review. Referred for study with report back.