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Understanding Climate and Disability Justice: Mitigating Structural Barriers to the Right to Health

Bill of Health

In Jackson, Mississippi, where 80% of the population is Black, poverty levels are high (a function of structural racism), and 1 in 3 adults report having a disability, the harms of climate change-related flooding, droughts, and lack of safe drinking water were exacerbated last year by legacy of infrastructure deficits.

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OIG-LEIE, GSA-SAM, and State Medicaid Exclusion Lists: What’s the Difference?

Provider Trust

In 2012, GSA announced it was migrating data from the EPLS to a new and more comprehensive system called the System for Award Management (SAM). They publish exclusion records in different formats and with varying amounts of data, making it difficult and resource-intensive to identify a match within your population.

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April-July 2022 State Regulatory Developments

New Jersey Healthcare Blog

771(a), the Department of Law and Public Safety, Division of Consumer Affairs, State Board of Pharmacy proposed new rules setting forth the requirements to allow a pharmacy to have licensed pharmacists and registered pharmacy technicians perform limited pharmaceutical functions at a location other than on the premises of a pharmacy.

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How to Increase Your Health Plan’s CMS Star Ratings to Earn More Revenue In 2021

Innovaare Compliance

The Affordable Care Act of 2010 mandates the CMS to make quality bonus payments (QBPs) to Medicare Advantage (MA) organizations that achieve at least four stars in a 5-star quality rating system and, starting in 2012, the CMS incentivizes health plans to improve member experiences by increasing the QBP amount, based on their star rating.

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Court Denies Motion to Dismiss Based on Implied Preemption

Drug & Device Law

606.160(d)) and the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act, which requires that an individual’s biometric data—such as fingerprints—be destroyed “within 3 years of the individual’s last interaction” with the entity that collected the data. 2012) (citing Smith–Haynie v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. , 2d 51, 55 (D.D.C. 3d 575, 578 (D.C.

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