The U.S. House of Representatives has started the process of  repealing one of the Affordable Care Act’s central cost-cutting reforms:  the Independent Payment Advisory Board. The purpose of the board as  originally conceived, however, was to protect the Medicare program from  special interests. For too long these special interests have wielded  their money and used their lobbyists to block or delay commonsense  reforms that would strengthen Medicare and put the program on a  sustainable path.
With the Independent Payment Advisory Board, policy recommendations  will be driven by science, data, evidence, the expert advice of  physicians, and the input of stakeholders—not by the lobbying clout of  special interests. The final say will still rest with Congress, but  doing nothing will no longer be an option.
The Independent Payment Advisory Board is essential to reducing  health care costs while improving the quality of care. The board will  save taxpayers money, limit the growth in Medicare spending, and reduce  federal budget deficits and the federal debt. It will do so by changing  the way health care is paid for and delivered—not by rationing care or  cutting benefits. If the Independent Payment Advisory Board is repealed  or hamstrung, the only alternative would be to ration care by  privatizing Medicare, shifting costs to beneficiaries, and restricting  eligibility.
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