At STFM, Advocacy is a Verb =========================== * Hope Wittenberg * Jerry Kruse The prospect of dramatic health care reform has spurred increased interest in governmental advocacy by STFM members. For some, the potential strain of primary health care needed by millions of newly insured Americans has struck a chord of anxiety and sparked an interest in advocacy. Most STFM members, however, welcome the opportunity to be participants in health system change that promotes primary care and its corollary benefits to society. Since the first draft of this article, the loss of a 60-vote Democratic majority in the Senate has made immediate passage of reform legislation less likely. Regardless, our work is cut out for us. New legislation would bring a myriad of opportunities and challenges, and STFM and its members must stand ready to think creatively, respond rapidly, and influence effectively. Should health care reform fail, our work is to assure that another generation doesn’t pass before Congress addresses reform again. It is our hope that the enthusiasm engendered this year will be harnessed and used for even more effective advocacy efforts. Each family medicine educator and primary healthcare professional should carefully assess his or her role in advocacy in the new healthcare construct. These questions are essential: 1. What items for health care reform are most important for an effective, efficient, equitable system? 2. What items are most important to impact the medical education system to train the workforce needed for such a system? 3. What should I do if I haven’t participated in advocacy efforts yet? 4. Do those currently active in advocacy efforts really need my help? A loud, unified voice from family medicine is needed, and STFM provides the organizational structure for you to be an effective advocate. ## ORGANIZATION OF GOVERNMENTAL ADVOCACY AT STFM Family medicine organizations operate cooperatively in the advocacy arena. STFM conducts federal legislative and regulatory advocacy through its office in Washington, DC. The 4 academic family medicine organizations (STFM, ADFM, AFMRD, and NAPCRG) jointly support an office and staff in Washington under the banner of the Council of Academic Family Medicine (CAFM). Hope Wittenberg (Director, Government Relations) and Joe Cody (Government Relations Assistant) monitor, analyze, and advocate for legislation important to academic family medicine. This office also supports 2 governmental advocacy committees. One is the STFM legislative affairs committee, chaired by Dr Jerry Kruse, and the other is the Academic Family Medicine Advocacy Committee (AFMAC), which has representatives from STFM, ADFM, AFMRD, NAPCRG, and the AAFP. These committees develop policy for key issues such as Title VII funding and operation, Medicare Graduate Medical Education (GME) structure and funding, primary care research, and primary care workforce development. ## STFM ADVOCACY AGENDA The DC office advocates on behalf of academic family medicine to Congress and to agencies of the Executive Branch. The DC office assists members with analysis of legislation, provision of legislative updates and briefings, and transmission of alerts to members about issues important to academic family medicine. The DC office regularly meets with legislators and their staffs, and with executive agencies, to discuss funding for Title VII. During the appropriations process, STFM advocates for increased Title VII funding to better support family medicine infrastructure and programs. This advocacy, coupled with a renewed commitment from the Obama administration and Congress, led to a substantial increase in appropriated funding for Title VII this year. The DC office has also been integrally involved with the reauthorization of Title VII, and reauthorization language in now included in both the House and Senate healthcare reform bills. GME reform is a key area for family medicine, and the DC office promotes policies to develop a more robust primary care workforce. In 2008, the STFM Legislative Affairs Committee and AFMAC responded quickly to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission’s call for more accountability in GME with a dramatic proposal to improve the Medicare GME process. Since then, the DC office has launched an advocacy campaign for this plan, which proposes to make direct GME payments to primary care residency programs and community-based entities, and to ensure adequate incentives for training in ambulatory and community-based settings. The DC office analyzes legislation and its effect on healthcare and on the discipline of family medicine. Policy papers and one pagers, and brief overviews are provided on the STFM Web site, along with legislative updates in the *CAFM Briefing Room* [http://www.stfm.org/advocacy/](http://www.stfm.org/advocacy/). The AAFP and CAFM jointly sponsor the annual Family Medicine Congressional Conference (FMCC). The DC office is intimately involved in the development of the agenda for FMCC. This conference educates participants on legislative priority issues, trains attendees on how to lobby on Capitol Hill, and enables participants to put these skills to use with federal legislators and their staff ([http://www.aafp.org/fmcc](http://www.aafp.org/fmcc)). The FMCC has become a major tool for faculty development in advocacy skills, both in Washington, and within your academic institution and community. ## ROLE OF STFM MEMBERS The DC office is a resource that helps clarify the intricacies of the legislative process and is instructive in advocacy efforts, but is dependent on the active participation and leadership of STFM members. Congress listens to those who provide care and teach. Here is what our colleagues say about advocacy Dan Lasser, MD, Chair, University of Massachusetts: “When you start doing this, you learn that the members of Congress and other people who are involved with policy actually do want to hear from constituents and people that have concerns about health policy and we have a lot to offer to the whole legislative and health policy process.” Jeffrey Borkan, MD, PhD, Chair, Brown University: “If we are not out there [advocating], we are going to continue to have a medical system that looks the way it is, if we are not out there, people are not going to get care.” Jeffrey Cain, MD, Denver, CO: “The same lessons we learn for teaching medical students work for teaching legislators.” What these colleagues realize is that advocacy starts from the heart, with a message for better health-care—and the process flows easily from there. Dr Cain continued his earlier comments, “I didn’t start out being an advocate; I just wanted to help protect kids from tobacco. We started doing *Tar Wars* and found out those lessons we learned about advocacy with kids health transferred into legislative advocacy too”. Likewise, Dr Kruse, the current chair of the STFM Legislative Affairs Committee, didn’t start as an advocate. With the encouragement of colleagues, he became involved in ADFM and STFM advocacy, and can speak to the rewards of advocacy through the development of relationships with people in the offices of senators and representatives. Because family physicians are armed with the strongest and most elegant data, it generally takes only a few visits to become a trusted healthcare advisor to the legislators and their staff. STFM has much to offer to help you develop skills in advocacy. The DC office is there to help. Please call our staff in Washington about any question you may have about the legislative process, or about specific legislation, policies, or advocacy tips. We salute those who are committed to advocacy, and ask for continued involvement. We ask a new generation of advocates to step forward to amplify the message. If you do, health and health care in the United States will improve. * © 2010 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.