AdvaMed Critical Of House Approach To Setting Minimum Benefits Package
This article was originally published in The Gray Sheet
Executive Summary
A provision in the recently passed House health care reform bill designed to define qualifying requirements for a health plan to be included in a new national insurance exchange would give too much power to the government over use of devices, industry reps say
You may also be interested in...
Device Tax, Health Reform Close To Reality As Conference Committee Meets
As the House and Senate work to meld their respective 2,000-page health care reform bills into a single politically viable plan, the device industry remains most intently focused on a mere seven pages of each: the device tax provisions
Device Tax, Health Reform Close To Reality As Conference Committee Meets
As the House and Senate work to meld their respective 2,000-page health care reform bills into a single politically viable plan, the device industry remains most intently focused on a mere seven pages of each: the device tax provisions
St. Jude's Departure From AdvaMed Highlights Inherent Industry Tensions
St. Jude Medical CEO Daniel Starks has resigned from AdvaMed's board of directors and the company has left the organization, citing "strong dissent" over how to respond to proposed medical device fees in pending health reform legislation