Chicago - UPI
The American Medical Association House of Delegates, meeting in Chicago, voted to explore alternative ways of financing Medicare. The AMA Council on Medical Service -- which recommends policies and actions on socioeconomic factors affecting medicine -- presented a report on options for changing the current way of financing Medicare. The report recommended building on \"existing policies to support making Medicare a defined contribution program,\" and urged the doctors to vote in favor of a resolution to support \"transitioning Medicare to a premium support program,\" Clinical Endocrinology News reported. Currently, the Medicare program is a defined benefit program which guarantees enrollees receive a package of healthcare benefits. The defined contribution -- or premium support program -- has Medicare pay beneficiaries a finite amount of money to purchase health insurance privately on their own. A few days before the meeting, Council on Medical Service Dr. Tom Sullivan said in a statement the report\'s favored resolution was withdrawn because the council \"believes there is a need to put in additional work on a revised report.\" However, the Louisiana delegation succeeded in bringing the resolution back on the table and the resolution was hotly debated during a committee meeting. Dr. Nancy Nielsen, the immediate past-president of the AMA, cautioned against moving quickly and said a wrong move could raise the ire of senior citizens during an election year. he AMA voted to direct the council to report back to the AMA at its interim meeting -- after the U.S. election in November, Clinical Endocrinology News said.