Mission Statement
The New Jersey State Society of
Anesthesiologists, Inc. is an organization of physicians dedicated to upholding the
highest standards of the profession of anesthesiology and committed to serving as an
advocate for anesthesiologists and their patients.
Statement of Policy
The New Jersey State Society of
Anesthesiologists is the recognized component society of the American Society of
Anesthesiologists, Inc. in the State of New Jersey. The New Jersey State Society of
Anesthesiologists was incorporated in 1961 as a voluntary, non-profit association of
physicians interested in the practice of anesthesiology. Membership is a privilege, not a
right. Individuals are entitled membership by virtue of licensure certification or other
means. As stated in its bylaws, the society was formed for the following purposes:
To advance the science and art of
anesthesiology.
To stimulate interest and promote progress
in the scientific and educational aspects of the specialty of anesthesiology.
To seek the betterment of the individual
member of this society, and to protect his or her interests within the structure of the
bylaws of this society and of the American Society of Anesthesiologists.
To uphold, adhere to and promote the aims,
principles and purposes of the American Society of Anesthesiologists as set forth in the
bylaws of that organization.
The NJSSA recognizes the Principles of
Medical Ethics of the American Medical Association as the basic guide to the ethical
conduct of physicians. The NJSSA also recognizes the practice of anesthesiology as the
practice of medicine.
History of NJSSA
In 2005 the ASA celebrated
the 100th year anniversary of organized anesthesiology. The ASA traces
its roots to Long Island anesthesiologists who organized in 1905. The
celebration was scheduled to be held in New Orleans but was cancelled
because of hurricane Katrina. Instead the 100th Centennial celebration
was held in Chicago in October 2006.
The NJSSA was established in 1948 and was incorporated under Title 15
Corporation and Associations not For Profit on July 28, 1961.
The office of the NJSSA was located at 24 Pennington Street in the city
of Paterson, county of Passaic and state of New Jersey. The name of the
registered agent was James Toombs, MD, 200 Lincoln Ave., Ridgewood, New
Jersey.
The first five trustees were:
G.L. D'Alessandro, MD (United Hospitals)
G.T. Henderson, MD (St. Peter's Hospital)
J.R. Toombs, MD (Paterson General)
A. Dear, MD (Beth Israel Newark)
N. Palma, MD (Paterson General)
During World War II, physicians received a
crash course in Anesthesiology and were sent overseas. In 1948 there were but a handful of
residency trained anesthesiologists. The American College of Anesthesia offered
certification by exam until 1982. Most providers were family practitioners who
administered anesthesia part time. Others had learned by serving a preceptorship in the
operating room. These various providers came together to meet at restaurants including The
Newarker at the old Newark Airport and Stouffers located where the Short Hills Mall now
stands.
By 1957 only 16% of
anesthetics were administered by residency trained anesthesiologists.
Yet jobs were hard to find in New Jersey. The non-boarded
anesthesiologist resented the Board Certified anesthesiologists. Large
hospitals were staffed by the G.P. / anesthesiologists who referred
their surgical cases and received from the surgeon the right to
administer the anesthesia. "Stables" of CRNA's were common as well as
unlicensed foreign doctors.
Many insurance companies
failed to recognize the new specialty. Blue Shield had a fixed fee
schedule including $15.00 for labor and delivery and $35 for a
cholecystectomy. It was not the best of times but the result was the
need for anesthesiologists to band together for the common good. The
NJSSA met those needs!
In 1963 the Director of
District V was Nicholas Palma, MD from Paterson General Hospital who is
credited with establishing the first recovery room in New Jersey. His
partner was James Toombs, MD and their small office across from Paterson
General became the NJSSA headquarters. Dr. Toombs followed Dr. Palma as
Director. In order, Dr. A. Lucas, Dr. G. Shapiro, Dr. R. Moore and Dr.
J. Tyler have served as Directors District V of the ASA. Dr. K. Mirsky
is the current District Director.
As the membership grew,
the office was moved to 2424 Morris Ave, Union, N.J. the home of the
Academy of Medicine with Linda Bartolo managing all Society's business.
The year was 1974. In 1979 the office was moved to Lawrenceville, in
1993 to Princeton Junction, in 2000 to the Medical Society Building at 2
Princess Road in Lawrenceville, in 2002 to 3 Regent Street in Livingston
and in 2006 to our current address at 26 Eastmans Road in Parsippany.
Linda Bartolo has served as the Executive Director of the Society for
the past 32 years. In 1990 Dr. Ervin Moss became Executive Medical
Director of the NJSSA, the only practicing anesthesiologist to hold such
a position within the ASA.
The NJSSA was proactive in
the 70s and 80s in the economics of anesthesiology attempting to gain
recognition of the specialty, which was undervalued as to reimbursement.
It supported the concept of the ASA RELATIVE VALUE GUIDE and argued
against the use of a percent of a surgeon's fee, which was then used by
most insurance companies. The NJSSA was named in the Federal anti-trust
action against the ASA because of the use of the ASARVG. The ASA spent
millions to defend the use of the RVG and won the case.
In 1970 Medicaid based its
fees for anesthesia on a 1956 Blue Shield Plan. Prudential Insurance had
been awarded the Medicaid contract. All attempts to gain information
from Medicaid which included political pressure from Blue Shield were
unsuccessful. In 1975 the NJSSA sued the State of New Jersey based on
below market value of our services. The Courts ruled against the NJSSA
stating that the doctors of New Jersey could better care for the poor
than the State of New Jersey. Unfortunately Medicaid fees for anesthesia
are still amongst the lowest in the United States as of today despite a
budget increase promised for 2002 as a result of a Coalition formed by
our Lobbyist. At present, fee for service fees are $9.30 per unit. As
Medicaid switched to HMOs the NJSSA lead the protests that the HMOs did
not increase reimbursement to doctors despite State Medicaid premiums
based on 80% of commercial rates. Even under the promised increase in
HMO payments, there is no mechanism in place to force the HMOs to pass
increases on to doctors.
In 1975 the NJSSA created
a Negotiations Team. Dr. Ervin Moss, Executive Medical Director,
attended the AMA Training Program on Negotiations and formed a team
consisting of Dr. A. Lucas and Dr. J. Woolwich. The team brought
equality to the table, which resulted in increases in anesthesia
reimbursement and respect from the insurance industry.
In the mid 1970s a
malpractice crisis arose in New Jersey with the withdrawal of the
carrier. The State of New Jersey failed to act and as a result the
Medical Inter Insurance Exchange was created by doctors who funded the
company by investing $7500 in bonds that later were reimbursed. Once the
Insurance Commissioner realized the doctors were going to form their own
company, it created a company that did not require a bond thus draining
some doctors out of MIIX. In general, anesthesiologists supported MIIX.
Unfortunately, due to over expansion and poor management MIIX failed
and was not allowed to write policies in New Jersey since the early
2000’s. A limited fund of money is available to settle outstanding
claims. Once this money is used the State Reinsurance Fund will pay out
a maximum of $300,000. A New Jersey Court has ruled that the doctor can
be liable from personal assets, for awards above $300,000. A new company
was created out of the ashes of MIXX and is called MIIX Advantage.
In 1976 the membership of
the NJSSA in a Statement of Policy voted to set a ratio of one
anesthesiologist supervising no more than two CRNAs. Despite the allowed
Medicare ratio of 1 to 4. the 1 to 2 ratio is being followed in the
majority of case. Recently we have had an invasion of Anesthesiologists
from Pennsylvania and Florida that have taken over facilities in New
Jersey and are using 1 to 3 and 1 to 4 ratios. The 1 to 2 ratio is more
than 30 years old and, in my opinion has become a standard of care in
New Jersey despite not being a regulation or law.
The crisis in malpractice
had been created by huge jury awards in malpractice cases. To address
this issue the NJSSA decided that its attention should be on Risk
Management, Patient Safety and Quality Care. The concept being that not
having tragic incidents, the trial lawyers would have no basis of
claims. In 1984 it identified the dangers of Office Based anesthesia as
a result of the death of a 16-year-old during an abortion. This
awareness was put in writing to the Board of Medical Examiners which
marked the beginning of a struggle to regulate offices that has not
reached full fruition in 2006 despite passage of the Regulations in
1998. Malpractice premiums have decreased in the last 15 years. In 1989,
$18,000 would buy 1m/3m. Today this same amount would buy 2m/4m, when
available.
From 1985 to 1989, a year
before the creation of the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation, a
committee of the NJSSA met with the New Jersey State Department of
Health to formulate hospital and surgicenter Regulations. This
Regulation requires the Chief of Anesthesia to be Board Certified or a
Fellow of the College by exam before 1982. It defined obsolete machines
and required 50% of all anesthesia machines to be replaced within 6
months. Monitoring including oximetry and end tidal PCo2 were mandated
as well as a reporting mechanism. Staffing was defined and nurse
anesthesia providers were required to be under physician supervision. In
2000 the Regulations were revised to include a difficult airway cart and
ACLS and PALS when indicated for all anesthesiologists.
From 1990 to 1998 the
NJSSA actively pushed the New Jersey Board of Medical Examiners to pass
Office Based Surgery and Anesthesia Regulations. The Regulations were
passed in 1998 except for one paragraph dealing with alternate
privileging which was blank. As a result of lobbying by those who did
not want the required hospital privileges, the Board of Medical
Examiners offered an alternate pathway to privileging by the BME. As
soon as the OBA regulations were passed the NJANA (CRNAs) files a suit
against the BME for dictating nursing practices by requiring that
general anesthesia in offices be supervised by an anesthesiologist. This
was, and is the requirement in hospitals and Ambulatory Surgery Centers.
The lower court ruled that the case was not "ripe" because the
Regulation was incomplete without the alternate privileging section. The
BME knew that there was a law suit down the road and did not complete
the paragraph until 2002 at which time the CRNAs lost in the lower court
and appealed in the Appellate Court and lost 3 to 0. In May of 2005 the
case was heard by the New Jersey Supreme Court. Their decision was with
the BME, in that the Regulations addressed how doctors should practice,
not nurses. It also declared that Anesthesiology is the practice of
Medicine and that the education of an MD is superior to that of a nurse.
One day before the trial, Dr. Moss received the ASA's Second
Governmental Award along with Senator Bill Frist in Washington. The
following May 2006, Dr. Moss received Samba's Distinguished Service
Award for his work in patient safety.
Unfortunately the
alternate privileging process was outsourced and as of December 2006
the applications have not been completely processed leaving the
possibility that surgeons could still perform procedures in their
offices that they are not privileged to perform in hospitals. This
represents a public danger and requires constant pressure from the NJSSA.
Nevertheless the office regulations have become the benchmark and have
been used as a model by other states. Total number of years spent on the
project is 22.
The NJSSA has not only
acted in the interest of its membership but has acted as a patient
advocate on fee complaints. The membership voted a Statement of Policy,
which addressed obstetrical epidural billing. It limited the charges to
base units plus time units spent in direct contact with the patient. In
another Statement of Policy the requirement that an epidural for OB not
be administered without the presence of the Obstetrician and that once
the epidural is in place an Obstetrician must remain in house.
Besides its role in the
increase in patient safety and the economic betterment of its
membership, the NJSSA provides CME credits through lectures at our
annual meeting each year. The year 2007 marks the 48th Annual New Jersey
Postgraduate Seminar to be held on March 31, 2007 at Forsgate Country
Club in Jamesburg, New Jersey. In earlier years the Annual Meeting was
held in Cherry Hill, New Jersey and then moved to Trump Plaza, Atlantic
City, New Jersey.
New Jersey is unique in
that there are no rural hospitals. All hospitals have anesthesiologists
on staff. No patient in New Jersey is more than 20 minutes away from a
trauma center by helicopter. There are about 400 nurse anesthetists in
New Jersey with about 50% of hospitals and Surgicenters utilizing the
anesthesia care team. There has been a drain on manpower because of the
number of offices providing surgery and the decrease in Surgicenters. In
addition the drop in Residents during the mid 1990's and the increase in
Residents from overseas will result in a further drop in anesthesia
providers in the next decade. The recent failure of the Congress to fund
fairly teaching of residents in a ratio of 2 to 1 attending, will cause
further closing of residency programs. The future will find CRNAs
graduating at twice the number as physician anesthesiologists.
2006 found the NJSSA
engaged in a dispute with Aetna who plans to deny colonoscopy and upper
GI procedure sedation administered by anesthesia providers to patients
between the ages of 18 and 65 unless there is medical necessity. The
NJSSA has a sponsor for an Assembly Bill that would state that the
decision for the need for sedation is that of the operating doctor and
the patient and not an insurance company or HMO. New York State will
have s similar Bill introduced as may Connecticut. Another issue
concerns Propofol. Many consider it a general anesthetic. If so,
administration by CRNAs in offices under supervision of a
non-anesthesiologist would be in conflict with the office regulations
which states that when general is administered by a CRNA in an office,
there must be a supervising anesthesiologist. At the time the
regulations were written, Propofol was not in use. The NJSSA and The
NJANA are seeking a solution.
At present the NJSSA has
862 active members, 6 affiliate members, 85 resident members, 143
retirees and 11 student members for a total of 1107. The Cherenson Group
provides office management. The NJSSA retains an attorney and a
lobbyist.
The NJSSA is in District V
of the ASA. We have 9 delegates and 9 alternate delegates to the ASA
House of Delegates, a Director and an Alternate Director. At present Dr.
Roger Moore is a national officer of the ASA serving as Vice-President.
He will become the first anesthesiologist from New Jersey to become
President of the ASA.
The New Jersey State Society of Anesthesiologists may be reached:
Phone: 973-597-0936
Fax: 973-597-0241
Ervin Moss, MD
Executive Medical Director
December, 2006 |