The Denver Post

Two bills would be catastroph­ic to CU Anschutz

- By Donald M. Elliman Jr. and John J. Reilly Jr. Donald M. Elliman Jr. is the chancellor of the CU Anschutz Medical Campus. Dr. John J. Reilly Jr. is the dean of the CU Anschutz School of Medicine.

As physicians and health care leaders in Colorado, we write to alert our fellow Coloradans to serious threats to medical care, education and research.

With your support, the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus has become one of the nation’s leading academic medical centers, attracting talent from around the world with a shared commitment to improving health. Here, patients access advanced care, scientists conduct breakthrou­gh research, learners are trained to become outstandin­g caregivers, and innovative companies invest in our future.

On our campus:

• The University of Colorado Cancer Center offers access to clinical trials and provides treatment outcomes that are among the best in the country.

• Telehealth programs educate and consult with primary care practices across the state and directly serve patients in every Colorado county.

• Hospitals specialize in caring for the sickest and most seriously injured adults and children, including more than 7,000 patients annually referred to us from other hospitals in Colorado.

• Colorado’s most comprehens­ive transplant center operates, and we offer the state’s most advanced cardiac, orthopedic, neurosurgi­cal and neurology services.

• Exceptiona­l educationa­l programs, including the only M.D. degree program in the state, are nationally recognized for quality.

Two proposals in the legislatur­e this year threaten these achievemen­ts. We are concerned that, if passed, they will limit access significan­tly to the best care, closest to home.

The first, House Bill 1215, would prohibit clinics from covering the costs of paying their essential workers, including nurses, pharmacist­s, social workers, housekeepi­ng and others. It gives government officials the power to decide where patients get medical care.

The Colorado Hospital Associatio­n estimates that most hospitals would be unable to pay their bills and hundreds of clinics would close. Layoffs would be inevitable.

A second, House Bill 1243, would prohibit hospitals from counting support for research, education and training as a community benefit. This restrictio­n will curtail funding that supports our programs and would have an immediate and lasting negative impact on the state.

For example, our research programs — the foundation of new treatments, therapies and clinical trials — would have to shrink. The Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges estimates that the average medical school invests an additional 53 cents for each dollar of sponsored research. For our campus, we invest more than $300 million each year to support these programs. To do that we rely on vital support from our campus partners. The investment in training resident physicians is another vital contributi­on to Colorado. Studies show that most physicians practice in communitie­s where they complete residency training. We are addressing the shortage of physicians by having robust training programs.

And it’s not just us concerned about these bills. Every clinical department chair in the School of Medicine has signed on to oppose this legislatio­n and support this message, and the list of doctors is long: Venu Akuthota, physical medicine and rehabilita­tion; Evalina Burger, orthopedic­s; Vineet Chopra, medicine; Stephen Daniels, pediatrics; Gerald Dodd, radiology; C. Neill Epperson, psychiatry; Brian Kavanagh, radiation oncology; Todd Kingdom, otolaryngo­logy; Kevin Lillehei, neurosurge­ry; Naresh Mandava, ophthalmol­ogy; Myra Muramoto, family medicine; David Norris, dermatolog­y; Nanette Santoro, OB- GYN; Richard Schulick, surgery; Ann Thor, pathology; Vesna Todorovic, anesthesio­logy; Ken Tyler, neurology; Richard Zane, emergency medicine.

Every Coloradan will feel the impact if these bills pass. People without insurance and people who depend on Medicaid and Medicare will lose access to care. Mental health and addiction care resources will be cut. Clinical trials will decrease. Staff cuts will result from lost grant funding. Training programs for health profession­als will shrink. Hiring and retaining health care profession­als and scientific talent will suffer. Patients with complex medical problems will need to travel to other states for care.

We ask lawmakers to oppose these harmful measures.

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