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Who Is Responsible For Compliance In Healthcare?

MedTrainer

Healthcare compliance. Just as perplexing is who is responsible for compliance in healthcare organizations. The answer has as many layers as the definition of compliance itself. The answer has as many layers as the definition of compliance itself. And they’d be partly right.

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Regulatory Changes for PDE Reporting in CY 2024 and Beyond

Innovaare Compliance

On October 13, 2023, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) published the Readiness List for CY 2024. This has been a very useful tool for Medicare Advantage Organizations (MAO) to check their readiness to fulfill requirements in the new contract year.

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Properly Classify Grievances to Improve Member Experience using Inovaare’s Grievance Management Software

Innovaare Compliance

Healthcare organizations establish Compliance Departments with the primary purpose of providing compliance oversight for the organization. Operational teams—such as the Member Services Department and the Appeals & Grievances Department—have significant compliance regulations, so they must know to maintain compliance.

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ONC’s HTI-1 Places Undue Burdens on Healthcare Providers, Health IT Developers

Healthcare IT Today

Many of our concerns center on the proposed implementation timeframes associated with various concepts included in HTI-1, as well as ONC’s failure to sufficiently consider the burden compliance will place on provider organizations and health IT developers. 31, 2024, compliance timeline is unrealistic.

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Continuing Consolidation in Orthopedic Medicine

Healthcare Law Today

Finally, billing and coding mistakes can have an adverse effect on earnings, value, and create compliance concerns. Thus, compliance with the AKS is vital to the health of the overall relationship. This is especially important given new legislation and regulatory guidance regarding surprise billing. Section1320a-7b).

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The Supreme Court Denies Petition Challenging CMS’s Overpayment Rule

Health Care Law Brief

Under the traditional, or fee-for-service (FFS), Medicare program, CMS directly pays providers a predetermined rate for the items and services furnished to patients under Medicare Parts A and B. CMS’s Payments to MA Plans. In turn, an MA plan pays providers a negotiated rate for the items and services they render to enrollees.

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CMS Corrects Inadvertent Omissions in Recent Stark Law Regulatory Amendments, Clarifies Reach of the Prohibition Related to Indirect Compensation Arrangements

Health Care Law Brief

Earlier this month, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released its final rules for the 2022 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (PFS Final Rule) and 2022 Medicare Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System and Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment System (OPPS Final Rule). Both rules take effect January 1, 2022.