2025 Legislative Wrap-Up: TMA Deflects Onerous Reporting Regs for Independent Practices
By Jessica Ridge Texas Medicine September 2025

 Physician Autonomy_webcorrect 

The Texas Medical Association was mindful of the repercussions of far-reaching health care consolidation legislation that affects all physicians and likewise succeeded in defeating a bill with a Pandora’s box of unintended consequences.  

House Bill 2747 would have imposed onerous reporting requirements on even small physician practices for uncomplicated business transactions, such as merging practices or signing a lease, plus significant financial and civil penalties if those reporting requirements weren’t met. 

Rep. Greg Bonnen, MD (R-Friendswood), notes that while there is value in better understanding the horizontal and vertical transactions occurring in health care, HB 2747 would have been overly prescriptive in its effects on independent private practice.  

As the legislation was debated at the Capitol, so too a TMA resolution calling for increased oversight of private equity, a driving force in vertical integration, drew debate on the floor at the 2025 House of Delegates and is under study. 

The defeat of HB 2747 is “a good example where TMA was” on the issue, said Zeke Silva, MD, chair of TMA’s Council on Legislation. 

During session, “We were the only voice coming forward and saying ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa – I understand what we’re trying to accomplish here, but we need to think about what this means to the [tens of thousands of] practicing physicians in our state,’” Dr. Silva said. 

Related 2025 Legislature wrap-up stories:

‘A United Force’: Physicians Answered the Call for Patients, Medicine This Legislative Session

Inside the Capitol – Lessons from the 89th Legislative Session


Access to Care – Advanced

Scope Creep Defense Preserves Physician-Led Care, Patient Safety

Texas Physician Workforce Gets Budget Boost 

Texas Medicaid Enrollment Could Benefit from Modernization Funding

Measles Outbreak and E-Cigarettes Shape Session Debates


Practice Viability – Supported

Harmful Insurance Bills Defeated by Physician Advocacy

New Technology Laws Take Effect Sept. 1

Medical Liability Risks Fail to Find Foothold in Texas

 

Physician Autonomy – Preserved

Life of the Mother Act Provides Clarity Around Medical Emergency Exception for Pregnant Patients 

TMA Helps Craft Balanced Noncompete Compromise

 

Last Updated On

September 02, 2025

Originally Published On

August 28, 2025

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Jessica Ridge

Reporter, Division of Communications and Marketing

(512) 370-1395
Jessica Ridge

Jessica Ridge is a reporter for Texas Medicine and Texas Medicine Today whose work has also appeared in Texas Co-op Power. She grew up in San Antonio and earned a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Texas at Austin. She lives in Wells Branch with her husband, a quartet of pets, and a houseful of plants.

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