April 17, 2007
Seattle Post-Intelligencer op-edBill
treats licensed chiropractors fairly
By Sen. Rosa Franklin
A patient walks into a clinic with a broken arm. The
patient’s primary care doctor is booked solid. Although the
clinic has two other medical doctors, the patient is told
the insurance provider won’t allow him to see the other
available physicians. That’s because his health insurance —
the coverage the patient pays monthly premiums for — only
extends coverage if a patient is seen by the assigned
primary care doctor.
Sound unfair? Of course it is! And so is the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer’s April 11 editorial suggesting that Gov.
Chris Gregoire veto
Senate Bill 5597 for “unjustifiably benefiting one
group of medical practitioners” —in this case,
chiropractors.
Let’s look at the facts. SB 5597 passed both the House
and Senate with bipartisan support. Lawmakers supported this
legislation because it allows patients to receive
chiropractic care in a clinic in which they are already
established patients when their current doctor is
unavailable.
Under the bill, if a patient’s regular chiropractor has a
contract to deliver care under a health insurance plan, then
another chiropractor employed at the same clinic would be
allowed to provide the same chiropractic services and under
the same insurance plan, if the second chiropractor meets
the plan’s qualifications.
Curiously, opponents have stated the bill will increase
access to chiropractors, which would cost more money because
patients will actually use the services that they are
already paying for through premiums. In contrast, the P-I
editorial claims that this bill has “little or nothing to do
with expanding access to care.”
Lack of access is exactly why this legislation is needed.
The truth: This bill doesn’t increase any benefits that now
exist under a patient’s health plan nor does it change an
insurer’s requirements that verified contracted providers
meet quality standards, adhere to contract expectations and
provide cost-effective care. And it doesn’t increase the
number of times a patient can be seen by a chiropractor,
which is limited to about 10 to12 visits annually, under
most health plans.
One particular insurer, for example, covers less than
half of the doctors licensed to provide chiropractic care in
Washington. Would an insurer consider excluding half of
providers from any other health profession? Would an insurer
consider not allowing a patient to see another medical
doctor in the same clinic just because his or her primary
provider is booked for days?
The bottom line is this: SB5597 provides chiropractic
patients with access to licensed health care providers who
have the ability, as documented in numerous health studies,
to treat spinal conditions with better outcomes and at a
lesser cost and without expensive drugs or surgical
procedures.
As a legislator, I have seen insurers treat chiropractors
and other non-MD providers unfairly. That’s why I supported
this bill and similar legislation, which allows patients to
receive the health care that works best for them.
SB5597 remedies yet another bias by insurers against
non-medical providers and the patients who rely on them.
Based on the strong bipartisan support the bill has
received, Gov. Gregoire needs to ignore the questionable
motives of those calling for a veto, and sign SB5597 into
law.
Senator Rosa Franklin, D-Tacoma, is a former
registered nurse with more than 40 years of health care
experience. She is vice-chair of the Senate Health &
Long-Term Care Committee.
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