- DOC Access Act reintroduced amid growing Capitol Hill vigor for VBM reform
- U.S. House, Senate approve VA OD physician-level recognition legislation
- Citing array of concerns and complaints, Congress ramps up scrutiny of vision benefit manager industry
- How the AOA and affiliates are fighting for reimbursement and coverage fairness
- Are you ready for the Eyeglass Rule of 2024?
- NIH, NEI consolidation plan ‘jeopardizes’ vision research, draws AOA opposition
- Bill seeks better fix to Medicare Physician Fee Schedule cuts
- How Chevron ruling could impact optometry
- Takeaways from CMS’ proposed 2025 Physician Fee Schedule
- FTC issues 10-year Eyeglass Rule update as AOA renews demand for crackdown on medical device scammers
- AOA joins other groups seeking Supreme Court reversal of decision favoring ERISA authority
- AOA sees positives in federal children’s eye health legislation
- CMS heeds AOA recommendations on Medicare supplemental benefits
- 'All the advocacy firepower’ called up at AOA on Capitol Hill
- What optometry’s advocates are championing at AOA on Capitol Hill
- Capitol Hill inquiries into plan abuses are expanding
- Vision plan abuses top of mind? Register for AOA’s town hall on reimbursement, coverage fairness advocacy
- 15 advocacy highlights of 2023
- CMS takes aim at Medicare Advantage plans misrepresenting vision benefits
- Fighting for veterans, fighting for optometry
- AOA: No letting up on Eyeglass Rule advocacy
- AOA and AFOS: ‘Cut through the noise’ and empower licensed doctors of optometry to provide greater access to care to veterans
- A force to reckon with
- U.S. House investigative committee calls for scrutiny of vision plans
- Retail optical lobbying group name change allays AOA, affiliate concerns
- Doctors of optometry challenge reasoning behind proposed Eyeglass Rule changes at FTC workshop
- Contact lens safety legislation proposes banning robocalls
- Help voice optometry’s priorities at AOA on Capitol Hill: Here’s how
- Part of the solution: Optometry groups join AOA in submitting actionable solutions for workforce shortages
- Hatch Act permits issue advocacy by doctors of optometry
- AOA makes robust rebuttal to FTC over proposed changes to Eyeglass Rule
- DOC Access Act introduced amid growing patient calls for Congress to act
- bill seeks advancement for VA doctors of optometry
- Are you adhering to the Contact Lens Rule
- AOA decries misleading Medicare Advantage advertising
- Gaining access A win for veterans and doctors of optometry
- Congress heeds AOA’s call to stop Medicare pay cuts, but lawmakers’ plan falls short
- Proactive advocacy gets early eyeglass rule gains, notice of potential new burden
- AOA PAC plays outsized role in 2022 midterm elections
- Veterans notch win as VA rescinds restrictive language governing community ODs
- Supporting Medicare Providers Act
- Federal student loan forgiveness: What to know
- Medicare Pay Cuts 2022
- 2022 Capitol Hill Recap
- AOA and South Carolina doctors expose and defeat retail lobby group’s influence scheme
- Medicare Pay Cuts March 2022
- Hold Medicare Advantage plans accountable
- Hubble Contacts slapped with 3.5 million penalties restrictions and supervision
- Medicare pay cuts, once delayed, looming without Congressional action
- Bipartisan AOA-backed bill targeting abusive discount plans gets boost from policy-expert report delivered to Congress
- Advocacy in optometry
- U.S. House, consumer groups mull federal action against DTC contact lens sales schemes
- Medicare Cuts Averted
- Medicare vision efforts fizzle 10 percent pay cuts still loom
- Optometry’s advocates going FAR beyond the call
- Lawmakers host AOA, patient and consumer advocates for VBM abuse briefing as Congress expands probes
- AOA-AFOS make case to Department of Veterans Affairs for access-boosting national practice standards
- Medicare expansion: The long road to here and now
- House pens Medicare vision benefits
- Congress sets deadline to ink Medicare vision expansion language
- White House extends student loan relief, AOA continues push for NHSC inclusion
- 4 questions about Medicare vision expansion answered
- AOA, AFOS work to ensure optometry well represented in formation of national practice standards by Veterans Affairs
- Medicare expansion
- Congress urges administration to fully implement provider nondiscrimination law
- Department of Veterans Affairs Optometry Service and doctors of optometry
- Medicare Vision Expansion
- AOA-backed DOC Access Act reintroduced to combat anti-competitive vision plans
- 2021 Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill Wrap-up
- Contact lens prescription verification failings targeted by new legislation
- Advocacy Bootcamp
- Medicare Telehealth Expansion
- 2 percent Medicare sequester delayed
- Doctors of optometry obtain 2.1 billion in federal relief
- CL rule takes effect
- Medicare Sequester
- Expanded COVID-19 vaccinator workforce includes doctors and students of optometry
- NBEO decisions provoke AOA-AOSA response
- Congress’ COVID-19 relief package HHS funds-ERC extension
- Why staff involvement is critical
- 2021 Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill
- Ohio activates eligible doctors for COVID-19 vaccine administration AOA focuses new relief efforts
- Congress President Biden asked to activate optometry for COVID-19 vaccination response
- AOA- AOSA-backed federal student loan relief extended through September
- AOA takes on anti-optometry lobbying group’s deceptions
- Contact Lens Rule implications key tax and Medicare pay fixes among AOA wins
- AOA and AOSA make appeal to extend suspension of student loan payments
- AOA-backed DOC Access Act gains U.S. Senate companion
- Contact Lens Rule bill gains backing
- Contact Lens Rule changes take effect Oct 16
- 1-800 Contacts notifies patients not to wear AquaSoft lenses due to lens defect
- Contact Lens Rule Modernization Act introduced in the U.S. Senate
- Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill Recap
- Championing paraoptometrics
- Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill 2020
- AOA doctors warn FTC of potential adverse impact of new amendment
- Concerns as optometry students prepare for boards
- Elevating optometry through media advocacy
- AOA finds allies in fight against new FTC contact lens prescription paperwork mandate
- Proposed payment model would have put burden solely on shoulders of doctors of optometry
- Optometry help divert emergent eye cases from ER COVID-19
- Medicaid CHIP relief funds
- AOA address increased cost personal protective equipment
- AOA and state affiliates put optometry's concerns front and center in Washington
- AOA petitions NAVCP member plans temporary relief during emergency
- Pandemic relief bill will help optometry practices nationwide
- AOA mobilizes for doctors in national response to pandemic
- AOA assembles industry leaders set future guidance telehealth services
- AOA secures legislative win provides direction Medicare telehealth services
- AOA calls for FDA investigation into retailers remote vision test
- How and why you should get involved in advocacy
- AOA ensures Medicare legislation recognizes eye exams
- reauthorization of higher education act
- Legislation targets contact lens prescription verification shortcomings
- DOC Access Act fights harmful vision plan abuses
- AOA on Capitol Hill 2019
- The big picture
- AOAs advocacy at top of their game
- Tusculum denied optometry program by institutional accreditor
- Remembering John McCain
- Tusculum media campaign prompts AOA insistence on accreditation standards
- FTC offers revised Contact Lens Rule
- 2018 AOA on Capitol Hill makes history
- AOA on Capitol Hill 2018
- FTC contact lens paperwork proposal update
- FTC workshop wrapup
- Californias congressional delegation joins bi-partisan call to stop FTC paperwork proposal
- Every doc has their day—on the Hill
- FTC Contact Lens Workshop
- DOCACCESS
- FTC Contact Lens Rule Workshop
- Tax Reform Passes
- Scam Alerts
- Better Care Reconciliation Act
- AOAs 247 advocacy is shaping news coverage
- AOA and GOA backed bill take aim at antipatient anticompetitive abuses
- AOA launches Health Policy Institute
- AOA alerts states to NAVCP backed noncovered services bill
- Senate VA chairman deals blow to TECS program
- AOAs patient safeguards reflected in final Cures Bill
- Fullcourt press AOAs 2016 advocacy highlights
- Proposed Contact Lens Rule misguided
- 3 ways to be an all star advocate
- AOA-PAC chair talks importance of contributions
- FTC proposes Contact Lens Rule changes
- AOAs privacy appeal prompts change
- AOA calls for federal investigation
- Bill seeks 90 day EHR reporting period
- Advocates urge federal action against contact lens resellers
- FTC issues warning letters related to Contact Lens Rule
- Recess over Congress considers AOA backed bills
- AOA president stands up for ODs and patients at Senate hearing
- Truth in Healthcare Marketing
- Vision Quest
- AOA provides model legislation to fight forced discounts
- Day of action Grow support for DOC Access Act
- letter from the president prioritizing optometry
- Rumors of meaningful uses demise have been greatly exaggerated
- Year end legislation advances AOA priorities
- Contact lens care guides scrutinized by FDA panel
- AOA-backed legislation aims to boost eye exams among seniors with diabetes
- 3 tips for becoming an AOA keyperson
- Lobbyists hired to oppose AOA ADA backed DOC Access Act
- AOA calls for antitrust protection before Supreme Court case
- New legislation would provide more flexibility in EHR incentive programs
- AOA defends doctors against new attack on Harkin law
- doctors of optometry score win on prescribing law
- AOA submits comments on FTC Contact Lens Eyeglasses rules
- FTC seeks feedback on Contact Lens and Eyeglasses rules
- Rethinking eye health and vision care
- Optometrys advocates mobilize during Congressional recess
- AOA steps up efforts to guide NAM vision study
- AOA advocacy helps avert Medicare cuts in trade bill
- Supreme Court dismisses ACA challenge AOA backed provisions remain in full effect
- AOA lobbies for changes in EHR Incentive Programs
- HHS reverses course on Harkin Law guidance
- AOA advocacy helps shape Cures Act
- Medicare seniors deserve better coverage for eye care
- Optometry takes Capitol Hill
- CMS proposes shorter meaningful use reporting periods
- What you need to know about MACRA the new Medicare pay reform law
- AOA continues fight to improve meaningful use in 2015
- CMS to ease meaningful use reporting periods
- AOA Contact Lens watchdog group to track report illegal contact lens sales
- How to engage with local elected officials
- Medicare payments increase by 75 percent in 10 years
- AOA urges members to lobby for loan repayment bill at CAC
- Congress spending bill addresses optometrys priorities
- Doctors of optometry step up as pandemic sets in
- Medicare pay cuts loom without Congress action
AOA-PAC election report: Optometry has outsized impact on 2024 elections
November 7, 2024
Tap into the AOA’s interactive 2024 elections map to see how hundreds of pro-optometry U.S. House and Senate candidates fared and learn how advocates can get more involved in the fight in our nation’s capital for patients and the future of the profession.
Tag(s): Advocacy, Federal Advocacy
AOA-PAC, the only political action committee committed to fighting and winning for optometry in Washington, D.C., had an outsized impact on the 2024 elections by reinvesting nearly $2.2 million into the races for more than 300 U.S. House and Senate seats—with a nearly 93% success rate.
Billed as one of the most consequential elections in modern memory, the 2024 general election is no less consequential for the profession as optometry’s advocates increasingly take the fight directly at policies aimed at undermining and ultimately controlling how doctors of optometry run their practices and care for their patients, including the abuses of health and vision plans, turf-obsessed efforts of organized medicine, and schemes of skip-the-trip-to-the-eye-doctor profiteers.
Below, view the AOA-PAC's interactive map with a full list of endorsed candidates and incumbents, and see optometry’s advocates in action throughout the past year.
The growing strength and reach of optometry’s joint political action arm, AOA-PAC, is a major reason why the AOA is consistently named by Washington, D.C., insiders as one of the most effective advocacy organizations in the nation’s capital. However, with less than 10% of AOA members enlisted as 2024 AOA-PAC investors, optometry’s hard-won seat at the Washington, D.C., policy-making table is increasingly at risk.
⏩ 3 ways you can support AOA’s federal advocacy priorities.
Election night may be over but optometry’s political and policy work continues. Hundreds of candidates who just won their elections are already reaching out to AOA-PAC in search of help retiring their campaign debt. Help us make sure that the new 119th Congress is the most pro-optometry one yet by making your 2024 AOA-PAC investment today.
Congress’ increasing focus on vision benefit manager abuses
The 118th Congress witnessed significant progress for optometry’s advocates in generating awareness and federal action against abusive health and vision plan policies, progress that AOA will build upon with the next Congress.
Increasingly, vision benefit managers (VBMs) have come under fire on Capitol Hill with multiple bipartisan, bicameral probes into costly, controlling and care-limiting practices, including:
- A Government Accountability Office investigation, spurred by a U.S. House committee and subcommittee with direct jurisdiction over health care issues, concerning VBM consolidation, market concentration and the impact on patients.
- A U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Accountability request for information from the Federal Trade Commission on the agency’s role in preventing unfair and harmful practices in the vision marketplace.
- The U.S. Senate Committee on Appropriations language calling for a new federal probe into VBM abuses and the growing trend of VBMs sidestepping state vision plan protection laws by inappropriately claiming federal preemption from those laws. The Senate panel echoed the case that the AOA and the American Dental Association (ADA) are making to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Likewise, Congressional support continues to grow for a legislative solution to VBM abuses in the form of the Dental and Optometric Care (DOC) Access Act. H.R. 1385 / S. 1424 now enjoys near-record support in the House and Senate, with more than 100 lawmakers backing the effort buoyed by coalition advocacy from not only the AOA and ADA but also Patients Rising, National Consumers League, and nearly a dozen other patient and consumer advocacy groups. And recently, a Congressional briefing on VBM abuses was held under the direction of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee in September, while advocates also focused on VBM policies during the 2024 American Legislative Exchange Council Meeting for state legislators.
These significant developments in Washington, D.C., and beyond were the focus of the AOA’s Town Hall on Reimbursement and Coverage Fairness on Oct. 29. Over 300 optometric professionals attended the live briefing to hear about AOA and affiliate efforts to rein in VBM abuses, including helping secure $2.9 million back to optometry practices in 2023-24.
Looking for more information about health and vision plan advocacy? Start here:
- The AOA Health Policy Institute Report on stagnation in vision plan fee schedules.
- The Avalon Health Economics Report on plan mandates leading to higher costs, less convenience and worse health outcomes.
- The DOC Access Act Fact Sheet with information on the priority legislation.
Having issues with a VBM policy? Report difficulties or challenges with health or vision plans to stopplanabuses@aoa.org.
AOA Federal Keypersons Program seeks new volunteers
Personal involvement in the political and legislative process is among the most important contributions that AOA members can make to their profession. That grassroots participation is critical to helping convey optometry’s priorities on Capitol Hill.
Through the AOA Federal Keyperson Program, over 95% of U.S. congressional offices in the 118th Congress are directly connected with a doctor keyperson. Those keyperson connections—forged by civic, religious, professional or political relationships—help ensure optometry has a way to provide legislators with accurate, trusted information about optometry’s priorities. But new connections are needed for the 119th Congress ahead of its seating in January 2025.
- Interested in becoming a keyperson? Have an existing relationship with a newly elected or reelected federal legislator, or willing to forge a new relationship—fill out the AOA’s keyperson form to alert AOA’s Federal Advocacy team. Watch the AOA Federal Keyperson program relaunch webinar from Oct. 28 in AOA EyeLearn.
- Want more information about volunteering as a federal keyperson? Contact AOA Federal Advocacy staffers to learn about the AOA Federal Keyperson Program.
The AOA’s Federal Keyperson Program has a long history of fighting and winning for optometry, from physician recognition under Medicare in 1986 to recent wins in the fight against abusive health and vision plans. Help ensure optometry connects at least one keyperson with every House and Senate member, so our pro-patient, pro-access advocacy agenda gets heard.
3 ways you can support the AOA’s federal advocacy
The seating of a new Congress in January 2025 means not only a new challenge but also a new opportunity for optometry’s advocates. Here are three ways AOA members can get involved in the profession’s federal advocacy:
- Access the AOA Action Center. Familiarize yourself with the AOA’s priority issues, such as the DOC Access Act, and learn how you can make contact with your legislators. Text “AOA” to 855.465.5124 to join the fight from your mobile device.
- Consider becoming an AOA Federal Keyperson. While optometry’s opponents may have deep pockets to hire an army of lawyers and lobbyists, we can overcome those advantages through the direct, personal advocacy of the AOA’s Federal Keyperson Program. Have a relationship with your U.S. Senators or House member or want to develop one to help further AOA’s federal advocacy agenda? Consider becoming a Keyperson today!
- Invest in AOA-PAC. Use your eight-digit, AOA membership ID number and log in from your computer to make an immediate investment to support the profession. Or, text EYES to 41444. Please consider an immediate $50 investment as we move beyond the general election cycle.
*Contributions to AOA-PAC are for political purposes and are not tax deductible. Only AOA members and other eligible persons may contribute. Contributions will be screened and those from non-eligible persons will be returned. You have the right to refuse to contribute without fear of reprisal. You will not be advantaged or disadvantaged because of how much you give or because you do not give.