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Roger Steven

Medical Staff Bylaws Requirements For Joint Commission Accreditation - 0 views

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    Overview: Joint Commission standards set a high bar for hospital medical staff bylaws. Since the 2011 changes to MS 01.01.01, bylaws must meet 37 elements of performance including hearing provisions, credentialing requirements, department director duties and more. But don't stop there-additional requirements are scattered through other Joint Commission standards. Each standard, element of performance and their quirks will be addressed and means of compliance explored. Why should you Attend: Joint Commission accreditation, sought by the overwhelming majority of American hospitals, hinges upon compliance with the Standards and their Elements of Performance set forth in the Joint Commission Accreditation Manual for Hospitals. Some of the most complex, detailed standards involve medical staff bylaws provisions and processes. Federal legal requirements change frequently in ways that unexpectedly affect these Joint Commission standards. This webinar addresses the most up -to-date Joint Commission requirements and industry best practices for medical staff bylaws compliance. Areas Covered in the Session: Joint Commission Standards for Hospitals Medical Staff Bylaws Hospital accreditation requirements Who Will Benefit: Medical Staff President Bylaws Committee Chair Chief Medical Officer Vice President of Medical Affairs Chief of Staff Director of Medical Staff Medical Staff Attorney Hospital Counsel Medical Staff Manager Speaker Profile Elizabeth A. Snelson represents medical staffs across the country, focusing on medical staff bylaws, and works for medical societies on medical staff issues. A frequent speaker on medical staff legal issues, Ms Snelson presents at medical staff leadership retreats, and in programs sponsored by state medical staff services associations and medical societies, the American Medical Association, the American Bar Association, and other organizations. She is Past President of the American Society of Medical Association Counsel, Vice Presi
Roger Steven

Disposition of Records and Records Retention for Medical Records, Including Electronic ... - 0 views

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    Overview: Today's health care delivery occurs in a diverse, fast-changing, multidisciplinary health care environment. This often presents challenges to the health care professional that are not easy to navigate. Medical records and their confidentiality have long been the exclusive province of state law, but has now been recognized for some time in the federal HIPAA statutes and federal regulations. Differing and even conflicting sources of requirements at the state level still exist for the retention and disposition of medical records. These sources may vary based upon the specific health care practitioner - whether physicians, dentists, psychologists, or other health care providers, including mental health practitioners. As to the specific, individual health care practitioner, state laws mandate their confidentiality, retention, and even their specific content with regards to patient, clinical records. In addition to these clinical requirements, additional state laws set forth the content and retention of other types of records kept by the professional, such as supervisory agreements with other professionals subordinate to them as well as their own unique record content requirements. With the majority of medical records moving to an electronic format, special rules now exist with regard to the confidentiality, security, retention, and disposition of electronic medical records. This is particularly important as state laws continue to allow for and regulate the provision of telemedicine by various health care practitioners. For example, while psychotherapy and mental health services are ideal treatments to offer over the internet, that is, by simultaneous audio-visual transmission between the doctor and the patient, the risks of breaches of confidentiality also vastly increase. And when the successful doctor-patient relationship is over, how does the health care practitioner providing a mental health service dispose of these electronic records? In addit
Roger Steven

Disposition of Records and Records Retention for Medical Records, Including Electronic ... - 0 views

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    Overview: Today's health care delivery occurs in a diverse, fast-changing, multidisciplinary health care environment. This often presents challenges to the health care professional that are not easy to navigate. Medical records and their confidentiality have long been the exclusive province of state law, but has now been recognized for some time in the federal HIPAA statutes and federal regulations. Differing and even conflicting sources of requirements at the state level still exist for the retention and disposition of medical records. These sources may vary based upon the specific health care practitioner - whether physicians, dentists, psychologists, or other health care providers, including mental health practitioners. As to the specific, individual health care practitioner, state laws mandate their confidentiality, retention, and even their specific content with regards to patient, clinical records. In addition to these clinical requirements, additional state laws set forth the content and retention of other types of records kept by the professional, such as supervisory agreements with other professionals subordinate to them as well as their own unique record content requirements. With the majority of medical records moving to an electronic format, special rules now exist with regard to the confidentiality, security, retention, and disposition of electronic medical records. This is particularly important as state laws continue to allow for and regulate the provision of telemedicine by various health care practitioners. For example, while psychotherapy and mental health services are ideal treatments to offer over the internet, that is, by simultaneous audio-visual transmission between the doctor and the patient, the risks of breaches of confidentiality also vastly increase. And when the successful doctor-patient relationship is over, how does the health care practitioner providing a mental health service dispose of these electronic records? In addition to
Roger Steven

Understanding Medical Identity Theft and ways of preventing it - 0 views

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    Understanding Medical Identity Theft and ways of preventing it Medical Identity Theft is a common phenomenon in today's situation, where most health records are digitized. Although a lot of precaution goes into the security and protection of these records, Medical Identity Theft is a cause for worry. medicalIdentityTheft The most common types of data that are stolen are Social Security Number (SSN), name and the Medicare number, the most potent tools with which to impersonate and manipulate data. Why do crooks steal medical data? Medical Identity Theft happens mainly because hackers and mischief-makers access protected data to lay hands on confidential information about patients, using which they obtain medical care on behalf of the person/s whose records they steal or purchase expensive medicines. In many cases, a Medical Identity Theft is detected only after one gets a bill for a purchase or service that was never made. medicalIdentityTheft Medical Identity Theft is also committed to buy drugs and obtain fake bills that are then submitted to Medicare in the name of the original holder of the medical record. These acts can significantly dent a person's credit rating. More importantly, when wrong information or fictitious diagnosis is made into the medical record, it can lead to dangerous consequences. Ways of protection of medical data The Office of the Inspector General (OIG), which comes under Health and Human Services (HHS), realizing the gravity of the problem of Medical Identity Theft, has formulated the "3D" approach to protect medical data and prevent Medical Identity Theft. These are: Deter: One of the ways of protecting medical data is to prevent Medical Identity Theft. Users should be cautious about parting with information to anyone who claims, over phone, to have a new scheme whose enrolment requires the Social Security Number. Detect:Many fraudsters accost people at accessible public places to announce supposedly "new" medical schemes. Governm
Roger Steven

Seminar on Effective and Efficient Internal and Supplier Quality System Auditing for Me... - 0 views

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    Course "Effective and Efficient Internal and Supplier Quality System Auditing for Medical Devices" has been pre-approved by RAPS as eligible for up to 12 credits towards a participant's RAC recertification upon full completion. Overview: Do you want to understand how to do efficient and effective internal and supplier audits that meet all the requirements of your external auditors, but also add value to your company? Are you confused by all the requirements and guidance documents for medical device quality management systems and are tired of wading through all the regulatory language they contain. This course is for those who will do internal or supplier audits, manage an audit process for these or other company audits. This course will provide you with an easy to understand presentation on the auditing process as well as the requirements you will need to audit under ISO 13485 and the FDA Quality System Regulation (cGMP) Both FDA Quality System Regulation (QSR) and ISO 13485 require that companies do internal audits. However, because the FDA does not look at the content of internal audits, some companies do not get feedback on the true effectiveness of their internal audit system from the FDA during FDA Inspections. ISO 13485 auditors do look at internal audits, but are most concerned that you define a process that meets the requirements of the standard and are following your process. Both require that you define Auditor training is required, but this sometimes just requires reading the company's procedure, although most external auditors will look for more than this. Do you need to train new auditors for yours medical device quality management system or to audit your suppliers? Or do you need to improve the training of your internal and supplier auditors so that they add value to these audits? If you need to do either of these, this seminar will provide this training. In addition to auditing skills and hands-on auditing exercises, this seminar will provide an ove
sachin_cmi

Medical transcription services has tremendously changed the way of delivering patient r... - 0 views

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    Medical transcription services are health reports that are typed out from dictated medical reports by medical professionals, such as doctors, dentists, and physicians. These reports contain vital information regarding a patient's health and are crucial to their care. This service offers data accuracy and data-driven insights for making an easy decision regarding patient treatment and care. Medical transcription services can be classified into Discharge Summary (DS), History and Physical Report (H&P), Operative Note or Report (OP), Consultation Report (CONSULTS), and Pathology Report (PATH) & Radiology Report. Continuous advancement in the medical transcription services market is expected to drive the growth. For instance, in October 2020, ETranscription, a Canadian transcription company, launched its new website and platform to expand its high-quality transcription services. The company has offered a free trial and reduced rates to help hospital streamline their workflow. Moreover, updates support a seamless online transcription process while delivering secure, accurate, and cost-effective services. This service effectively reduces clinical documentation time and enables doctors to plan the patient's treatments. Increasing adoption of technologies such as digital health, telemedicine, and EHR is further anticipated to foster the growth of the medical transcription services market in the near future. Read more @ https://coherentmarketinsights-blog.blogspot.com/2020/12/medical-transcription-services-has.html
Roger Steven

A brief understanding of the uses of medical coding - 0 views

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    With more than a 100,000 practitioners in this discipline; medical coding is catching up as a viable profession for many in the US and away. Medical coding is emerging as a completely specialized profession in the healthcare sector. This is how the core of their professional work needs to be understood: Uses of medical coding On the face of it, medical coding is used for filing healthcare claims, but the usefulness of this profession goes beyond this. The data churned out by medical coding helps healthcare professionals make more accurate diagnosis and help in enhanced treatment protocols. Ensuring accuracy in medical coding is crucial to administering proper healthcare. Medical coding not only ensures a systematic and standardized manner in which third parties claim payment; the critical data that medical coding generates can be harnessed for further use The information contained in medical coding data in the form of medical codes is a precise indicator of a patient's health history. This information, when refined, helps actuaries take decisions on making investments for their business By feeding policy makers and public health departments with important information on the incidence of diseases, medical coding also fosters proper allocation of resources to the particular segment of the healthcare industry about the kind of services that the community requires at a given point of time. This leads to an improved outlook for the general health of the patient population and reduces wastage of fund allocation. Learn more on this topic by visiting : http://bit.ly/23ajt0v
sachin_cmi

Increasing Demand for Emergency Medical Supplies to Augment the Medical Supplies Market... - 0 views

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    Medical devices play an important role in the delivery of many health care services. Medical supplies refer to any item (basic medical products) that is necessary for treating injury or illness. In the medical parlance, medical supplies generally are understood to mean items that are low cost, disposable, easily available, and in high enough quantity so that the buying department has enough standing orders to ensure the supply of the items when they are in demand. Increasing prevalence of chronic diseases across the globe, especially in North America, is expected to propel the growth of the medical supplies market. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), chronic diseases such as diabetes, cancer, and heart disease are the leading causes of death and disability in the United States. Moreover, proactive government initiatives, increasing demand for infection control measures to curb the occurrence of hospital-acquired infections, the rising number of surgical procedures, and increasing demand for medical supplies are expected to augment the growth of the medical supplies market. Read more @ https://coherentmarketinsights-blog.blogspot.com/2021/03/increasing-demand-for-emergency-medical.html
Roger Steven

Seminar on Supplier Management for Medical Device Manufacturers at Washington, DC - 0 views

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    Course "Supplier Management for Medical Device Manufacturers" has been pre-approved by RAPS as eligible for up to 12 credits towards a participant's RAC recertification upon full completion. Overview: Supplier selection and management is one of the critical issues for medical device manufacturers. Suppliers provide materials and services to the device manufacturer, which means that they can be critical to performance and delivery of your device. Neither the FDA nor your notified body regulates your suppliers (with a few exceptions). They expect you to have an effective process to ensure your suppliers perform in the regulatory environment. How well do you understand the requirements for supplier management? Could you pass a regulatory audit or inspection without any issues? This course delivers the tools, templates, and methods to help participants implement an effective and efficient supplier management program. This two-day hands-on course provides a clear understanding of the underlying principles of supplier management. The course uses exercises to solidify understanding. In addition, the course uses FDA Warning Letters to illustrate the points and help you learn from others. As part of the practical implementation, the course includes receiving acceptance activities, outsourced processes, process validation at the suppliers' location, supplier auditing techniques, and supplier issues in management review. The course uses the Global Harmonization Task Force (GHTF) framework, but expands it to cover other issues and techniques important in effective implementation. Why should you attend: Since FDA regulations do not allow them to audit your suppliers unless they make finished medical devices, they require that you have sufficient control over them. But from time to time the FDA makes a reinterpretation of what this means. This happened within the last f 5 years, so if you supplier management program is older than that, you need to make major changes in you supp
instapayhealth

Medical Coding Audit Services in US: Maximizing Revenue and Compliance - 0 views

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    Are you struggling to ensure accurate medical coding practices while keeping costs under control? Look no further! Instapay Healthcare Services is here to revolutionize your medical coding audit experience. ✅ Why Choose Instapay Healthcare Services? ✔️ Quality Assurance: Our certified auditors ensure accuracy and compliance with industry standards. ✔️ Affordable Pricing: Say goodbye to excessive overhead costs with our competitive pricing model. ✔️ Customer Satisfaction: We prioritize your needs, providing personalized services tailored to your requirements.
sachin_cmi

Single-use Medical Device Reprocessing is Witnessing Massive Boom with the Outbreak of ... - 0 views

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    Single-use medical device reprocessing refers to cleaning, disinfection, testing, sterilization, and remanufacturing of a used medical device to be put in service again. The reuse of single-use medical devices first began in the late 1970s. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), around 20 to 30% of the U.S. hospitals reported having reused at least one type of single-use device. The reuse of single-use devices involves ethical, regulatory, legal, medical, and economic issues, which have faced controversy in the last two decades. The reuse of single-use medical devices has increased typically due to the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak. In general, there are two categories of products that can be reused: active and inert. Active products are required for making new products, while inert products are used for making old products stronger, newer, longer-lasting, and more effective. The useful products that are generated are called inert products. These are products that have a certain amount of value because of their function. They are available in different forms like paper, paperboard, metals, plastic, etc. These products can either be reclaimed from the environment, or produced by industries and used for manufacturing purposes. The mobile devices that need to be recycled for single-use medical device reprocessing include diagnostic devices, sterilization equipment, biopsy instruments, blood glucose analyzers, blood pressure monitors, disposable gloves, medical imaging devices, and many more. Read more @ https://coherentmarketinsights-cmi.blogspot.com/2020/12/single-use-medical-device-reprocessing.html
instapayhealth

Maximize Revenue with Expert Medical Coding Audit Services | Instapay Healthcare by Ins... - 0 views

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    Looking to ensure accurate medical coding for your healthcare facility? Look no further! Instapay Healthcare Services offers top-notch medical coding audit services that guarantee precision and compliance. Explore our services today and experience a seamless coding process! Fax:- 9179607960
instapayhealth

The Untold Benefits of Outsourced Medical Coding Audit Services - 0 views

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    Instapay Healthcare Services offers reliable and accurate medical coding audit services and efficient medical billing solutions. With our expertise, your healthcare practice can stay compliant and streamline administrative processes. Contact us to learn more about our services and how we can assist you in delivering quality patient care. Fax:- 9179607960
instapayhealth

Medical Coding Audit Services Ensuring Accuracy in Healthcare Coding and Consulting wit... - 0 views

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    Accurate medical coding is vital for healthcare organizations to maintain financial stability, provide efficient patient care, and contribute to meaningful data analysis. Medical coding audit services offered by Instapay Healthcare Services ensure accuracy, identify areas for improvement, and provide expert guidance to optimize coding practices.
P3 Healthcare Solutions

Switching to Cloud Isn't Easy for Pharmaceutical Industry - 0 views

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    The modern healthcare industry is the amalgamation of technology and medical services. With this growing trend of health IT, data security and privacy have become the main concerns for physicians. Be it, medical billing, MIPS & MACRA, electronic healthcare records (EHRs), digital collection and storage have taken the paramount place. Read More: https://www.p3care.com/blog/switching-towards-cloud-services-isnt-easy-for-pharmaceutical-industry/ Call us for medical billing services: (844) 557-3227 Visit us: https://goo.gl/maps/XPsjJvfmHzptEs9TA Tags: Medical Services Medical billing services, MIPS 2022, MACRA, MIPS Reporting, Healthcare
instapayhealth

Medical Coding and Audit Services: Unlocking Efficiency in Healthcare - 0 views

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    Struggling with medical coding in the healthcare industry? Look no further! Instapay Healthcare Services offers expert medical coding and audit services, streamlining your processes and saving you time and resources. Let us unlock efficiency for your practice today! Fax:- 9179607960
instapayhealth

Top Medical Coding Audit Services in US: Overcoming Challenges for Accurate Billing - 0 views

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    Looking to streamline your medical coding audits and ensure maximum accuracy? Look no further! Introducing Instapay Healthcare Services - your trusted partner for top-notch medical coding audit solutions in the US.
Roger Steven

Clinical Documentation Improvement - 0 views

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    Overview:   Review 6 points of high quality evidence based clinical documentation Review of 7 criteria that all entries in a patient record should include Impact of documentation on coding and claims Impact on audits and ability to defend an audit When an audit is initiated, the completeness of documentation becomes critical in the ability to support what you have reported. Let's take a look at areas in which weaknesses are often found.  Why should you Attend:  The granularity and accuracy of the ICD-10 code set is supported by quality clinical documentation. It is anticipated that payers will increasingly become less flexible in allowing non-specific codes. The use of unspecified codes will likely lead to rejected claims if it is possible to report the more definitive condition. In most cases, unspecified should not be reported unless there is clear evidence to support the inability to report the detailed option.  Is your E & M level supported in the documentation? If you have never experienced scrutiny of your billing patterns by payers and other entities, you may not be aware of weaknesses that lead to recovery of funds or other costly consequences. Your documentation will be key in supporting diagnoses, service codes and acuity of the patient. It is not just payers who engage in audits. Others include State medical boards, Qui Tam and possible reporting of questionable practices by patients. Do your billing patterns and documentation stand up under reporting scrutiny? This presentation will review areas in which you may not be as strong as you think!  Areas Covered in the Session: Significance of abnormal lab results Measurement of lesions, when taken and inclusion of margins Start & stop times & methodology for infusions & discrepancies in billing Diagnostic testing and medications should be supported in a diagnosis Depth of wounds and cause should be clear Severity of illness Diagnosis present on admission? Who Will Benefit: Coders Billers Rev
Roger Steven

Claims Follow Up, Appeals and Self Pay Collections - 0 views

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    Overview: Many medical entities are increasingly struggling to manage revenue effectively. Self pay is on the rise due to high deductibles. Bad debt is increasing. What is your plan to manage these areas? Staff trained in denial management? Variances? Are they handling these areas in a timely manner? Payers have time limits in which dollars can be salvaged. Missing those strategic times mean dollars lost. Don't leave money on the table. We will discuss multiple avenues in which strong training and timely action can equal $$$. Why should you Attend: Don't lose hard earned revenue. Learn tips to strategic follow up, when and how to manage the appeal process. Is the claim appealable? Partial payments and why? Today's industry of high dollar deductibles create the necessity to expend additional efforts on self-pay accounts. There is a significant difference in collecting small co-pays and managing large balances. Bad debt creep? What is your plan for managing these areas? Areas Covered in the Session: Hire the right staff - Then engage in ongoing education Variances and denial management Billing compliance Coding for specificity, co-existing conditions and correct modifiers Supporting medical necessity CCI edits and unbundling Productivity Claims follow up Payer processing edits Additional development requests Handling problem claims and appeals Who Will Benefit: Coders Billers Revenue cycle Physicians, mid-level providers Nurses Claims follow-up Managers Speaker Profile Dorothy D. Steed is an Independent Healthcare Consultant and Educator in Atlanta. She was a Medicare specialist for a large hospital system and a physician coding audit supervisor for another hospital system, with 38 years of experience in healthcare. Additionally, she is an instructor at a state technical college in Atlanta, provides auditing & training in both facility and physician services, and has been a speaker at several healthcare conferences. Ms. Steed has written articles for
vbcuremart

The Role of Healthcare Facilitators in Medical Tourism - 0 views

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    Medical tourism is growing by leaps and bounds as people realize the benefits of cost saving and the excellent treatment they receive in countries other than their own. People from the CIS, for instance, had to look to European countries like Germany, France, and the UK for treatment and in all these countries the treatment is expensive not to speak of stay and travel. Asian countries like India, Thailand and Sri Lanka are proving to be the better alternatives. The deterrent is how to find the best facility at the best cost and proceed. This is where a healthcare facilitator steps in and takes care of everything much to the relief of the patient and his family. The vital bridge Healthcare facilitators act as the vital bridge between the patient and the treatment facility that matches their needs. If you are in the US, UK, Australia, the CIS countries or in any African country and wish to find the best facility in India, for instance, the facilitator is the one to get in touch with. They maintain a database of hospitals and surgeons across the country, know their specialization and how much treatment can cost. Healthcare facilitators put you in touch with a medical institution that will give the best in terms of quality of treatment and cost. They do this by first going through your medical records and getting their panel of medical experts to match the ailment with a hospital. Patients get the benefit of expertise and save time and a great deal of money in the process. Patients receive invaluable assistance in: * Travel to the hospital * Scheduling appointments * Recommendations so that they receive personalized care * Supervision by the facilitator's own doctor to ensure that everything is being done right and, if not, patients may be switched to another hospital * Assistance with documentation and paperwork * Assistance with the procurement of medications * Negotiating the best rate with a discount for stay and treatment * Assistance to fam
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