Remove Blog Remove Fraud Remove HIPAA Remove Regulations Compliance
article thumbnail

Why Do Healthcare Facilities Use Corporate Compliance Programs?

MedTrainer

These programs help to promote lawful and ethical conduct within healthcare organizations and minimize the risk of legal violations, such as fraud, abuse, and other unethical behaviors. Why do healthcare facilities use corporate compliance programs? What is Corporate Compliance in Healthcare?

article thumbnail

The Role of Compliance Officers in Healthcare Organizations: Challenges and Responsibilities

American Medical Compliance

In fact, 61% of the compliance teams from a Thomson Reuters report also work on long-range strategies for their companies by putting regulatory and legislative changes as a top priority. Compliance officers take on a more complex task such as the creation of medical compliance plans for their company’s long-term success.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

The History of Healthcare Compliance

MedTrainer

The protection of patient data, adherence to privacy regulations like the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) in the United States, and the prevention of cyber threats have become paramount concerns. Compliance in healthcare began to encompass billing, fraud, and abuse prevention.

article thumbnail

The OIG Work Plan Decoded

Compliancy Group

The OIG’s work in this area serves as a critical guidepost for healthcare organizations to protect patients, foremost, and the healthcare providers themselves by keeping them on track for compliance. The OIG Compliance Work Plan identifies significant risks and areas that require attention within the healthcare system.

article thumbnail

OIG General Compliance Program Guidance November 2023

Healthcare Law Blog

Thereafter, OIG said it planned to update existing industry-specific compliance program guidance (ICPG), which would include tailoring each to address fraud and abuse risk areas specific to a particular industry and describing the compliance measures that industry could take to reduce these risks [2].