The American College of Chest Physicians warns of impact of Braidwood Management ruling
April 4, 2023
The American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) opposes the federal
district court’s recent
ruling
in Braidwood Management Inc. v. Becerra and applauds the
Department of Justice for acting so swiftly to appeal this decision. The court's remedies strip the guarantee of no-cost preventative benefits
away from the 151 million people insured because of the Affordable Care Act
(ACA) and who currently have access to care such as smoking cessation
services, guideline-indicated lung cancer screening, and tuberculosis
testing.
“CHEST’s mission is to champion the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of
chest diseases, with prevention paradoxically facing the most barriers.
Creating awareness among patients and advocating for measures that impede
and inhibit serious disease from taking root offer the highest potential
for improving public health and curbing healthcare spending,” said Doreen
Addrizzo-Harris, MD, FCCP, President of CHEST.
If this ruling stands, preventive care becomes a privilege based on
socioeconomic status when we already know tremendous disparities exist in
health care. While health services research has found many factors for
this, access and cost routinely top the list. This ruling will widen this
gap further and undo years, perhaps decades, of progress.
“We know what happens when you add a cost burden to things like lung cancer
screening: people opt out. They miss an opportunity for early detection and
improved survival rates,” Dr. Addrizzo-Harris added. “At a time when our
community is intensely focused on eliminating the stigma of lung cancer and
expanding care like screening and cessation to historically marginalized
people, this decision is poised to remove years of progress. The Biden
Administration's Cancer Moonshot will fail those most at risk.”
The ruling asserts that the ACA cannot require coverage for the
recommendations developed by the US Preventative Services Task Force
(USPSTF) because the USPSTF is not empaneled in accordance with the
Appointments Clause of the Constitution.
CEO Robert Musacchio, PhD, elaborated: “CHEST invests substantial resources
and effort in creating evidence-based clinical practice guidelines
following a methodology similar to the USPSTF. As an organization that puts
great care into managing CHEST panelists' conflicts of interest in our
guideline process, we assert that what the Court has suggested allows
politicians to introduce substantial conflicts. We are appalled at the
further attempt to insert politics between clinicians and their patients.”
The
CHEST 2021 lung cancer screening guidelines
align with the USPSTF, and the CHEST
Tobacco Dependence Toolkit
is a key resource for providers along with cessation and screening
programs.
“Unfortunately, the impact of this decision extends far beyond the patients
served by our membership, with a detrimental impact on mental health
services, maternal health, child development, heart disease, the
proliferation of sexually transmitted disease, and more,” Dr. Musacchio
noted. “CHEST will work with the broader medical community, advocacy
groups, and policymakers to ensure the public has equitable access to the
services that will improve and sustain their lives.”
CHEST strongly urges the Federal Circuit Court to reverse this decision and
asks employers and insurers to support and continue lifesaving,
first-dollar coverage for preventative services.
CHEST also joined an amicus brief to inform the court of the repercussions that decision could have on preventive care access.