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Roger Steven

The Physician Payment Sunshine Act - an understanding - 0 views

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    The Physician Payment Sunshine Act: The Physician Payment Sunshine Act, also called Physician Payments Act, is a piece of legislation passed by the American Congress in 2010. It came to be enacted along with the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare. The purpose of this legislation is to ensure transparency in the financial relationships that exist between the pharmaceutical industry, teaching hospitals, and physicians. What the Sunshine Act requires is this: Manufacturers of drugs and medical devices, and organizations that purchase in groups (Group Purchasing Organizations or PGO's) have to report payments or their equivalent that they make to physicians and teaching hospitals. Items that are considered equivalent to money payments, transfers of which have to be reported are clearly mentioned. These include the following: Meals Honoraria or grants Gifts Entertainment Speaking fees Writing services, such as research papers or manuscripts Travel reimbursements Purchase of items such as teaching materials and journals, which are paid either directly to physicians or teaching hospitals, supplied either directly or through a third party Funding for research Another core reporting requirement: Another requirement of the Sunshine Act is that when manufacturers of drugs and medical devices and group purchasing organizations have physicians who have a stake in some or another form in their organizations; this has to be reported to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). These reporting requirements apply to all kinds of physicians, who are either specialists or are general practitioners. However, the following are excluded from reporting by the Sunshine Act: Nurses Support and office staff Residents Medical students Physicians assistance Advance practice nurses Physicians need not report: The Sunshine Act requires information about these payments and transfers to be made by the paying medical device and drug companies, and not by physicians.
Roger Steven

The Sunshine Act: Reporting for Clinical Trials - 0 views

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    Overview: The Sunshine Act, or Open Payments Program, requires manufacturers of drugs, medical devices, and biologics that participate in U.S. federal health care programs to report certain payments and items of value given to physicians and teaching hospitals. This Act was part of a healthcare reform bill adopted in March 2010. It came about due to requests for increased transparency about the financial relationships between physicians and industry. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) issued the final rules in 2013 which implemented the Sunshine Act. Why should you Attend: Anyone required to adhere to the Sunshine Act standards or anyone interested in knowing what must be reported and made public. Areas Covered in the Session: Purpose of the Sunshine Act Who is required to report under the Sunshine Act? What is reported? Exclusions Tracking Penalties Useful links Who Will Benefit: This webinar will provide valuable assistance to all personnel in: Human Subjects Research Healthcare interested in exploring the field of Clinical Research Clinical Research Coordinators Principal Investigators/Physicians Administration in charge of Clinical Research Regulatory Compliance Speaker Profile Sarah Fowler-Dixon is Education Specialist and instructor with Washington University School of Medicine. She has developed a comprehensive education program for human subject research which has served as a model for other institutions. She crafted budgets, policies, procedures, reporting, and training for the new program. She has initiated the planning, development, authorship and implementation of many human subjects research policies, practices, guidelines, submission and reviewer forms often working with state and federal authorities. She has provided consultation regarding ethical, federal, state, and institutional requirements for faculty and staff both in the design and execution of their projects and teaches research ethics and regulatory affairs and the fu
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