[03/01/19]
Posted on March 1, 2019 in Federal Advocacy
Published by: Hall Render
NATIONAL CMS paid $84M for nursing home services that didn’t meet Medicare rule, audit finds S. judge will not block Amazon-Berkshire-JPMorgan health venture’s new hire Senate Inquiry On Drug Prices Echoes Landmark Hearings Held 60 Years Ago Physician burnout rate drops 10.5 points after spike The metrics healthcare leaders check daily Amazon exec says... READ MORE
[02/22/19]
Posted on February 22, 2019 in Federal Advocacy
Published by: Hall Render
NATIONAL HHS launches payment model for ambulance providers Medicare ambulance rides may no longer end up at ER Healthcare billing fraud: 8 latest settlements 3 revenue cycle leaders on their hospital’s biggest concern now that standard charges are public 4 strategies for keeping your millennial healthcare workers Rural hospitals face widespread closures CMS can... READ MORE
[02/21/19]
Posted on February 21, 2019 in HR Insights for Health Care
Published by: Hall Render
The legality and use of medical marijuana has been changing rapidly over the last decade. The rules for prescribing medical marijuana vary under state law, but the sale, possession, production and distribution of marijuana, or the facilitation of these crimes, remains illegal under U.S. federal law. This landscape creates uncertainty for many physicians but... READ MORE
Tags: 212(a)2, CPB, Customs and Border Protection, Immigration, medical marijuana
[02/19/19]
Posted on February 19, 2019 in HR Insights for Health Care
Published by: Hall Render
In SuperShuttle DFW Inc.¹, the National Labor Relations Board (“Board”) held that it would return to its longstanding and previously defined framework for determining whether a worker is classified as an employee or an independent contractor under the NLRA (“Act”). The issue in SuperShuttle was whether franchisees who operate shared-ride vans for SuperShuttle Dallas-Fort... READ MORE
Tags: Common-Law, Independent contractor, National Labor Relations Board, nlra, SuperShuttle
[02/19/19]
Posted on February 19, 2019 in Health Information Technology
Published by: Hall Render
The Office for Civil Rights (“OCR”) announced that a health system in California (the “System”) was required to pay a $3 million fine and adopt an extensive corrective action plan to settle potential violations of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (“HIPAA”). The System operates several hospitals, including a rehabilitation hospital... READ MORE
Tags: Cottage Health, ePHI, health it, HIPAA, HIPAA Breach, OCR, OCR enforcement, PHI
[02/19/19]
Posted on February 19, 2019 in HR Insights for Health Care
Published by: Hall Render
The EEO-1 filing website will open in early March. The filing deadline has been extended to May 31, 2019. Both dates were pushed back as a result of the recent, partial federal government shutdown. Luckily for employers, the controversial pay data disclosure requirements remain on indefinite hold, as we previously reported; however, covered employers still... READ MORE
Tags: Audit, EEO-1, EEO-1 report, EEOC, Federal Contractor, OFCCP, Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
[02/15/19]
Posted on February 15, 2019 in Federal Advocacy
Published by: Hall Render
Government Funded After Congress Borders on Another Shutdown Congressional negotiators have reached an agreement on a funding deal that avoids another partial government shutdown that would have occurred at midnight tonight. The measure would fund nine out of fifteen federal departments through September 30, 2019. President Trump is expected to sign the legislation into... READ MORE
Tags: cms, ET3 Model, government shutdown, health it, Medicare, Medicare Buy-In, This Week in Washington
[02/15/19]
Posted on February 15, 2019 in Health Law News
Published by: Hall Render
Beginning April 1, 2019, Medicare Part C and D plans, PACE organizations and 1876 cost contract plans (“Plans”) will be required to deny payment for services rendered or prescriptions ordered by any provider on the new Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (“CMS”) Preclusion List. The Preclusion List, which was first made available to... READ MORE
Tags: cms, Listed Providers, Medicare Part C, Medicare Part D, National Provider Plan and Enumeration System, NPPES, pecos, pharmacy, pharmacy benefit managers, Preclusion List
[02/15/19]
Posted on February 15, 2019 in Health Law News
Published by: Hall Render
On January 29, 2019, the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (“OIG”) published Advisory Opinion 19-02, which approved an arrangement allowing a pharmaceutical manufacturer to loan smartphones to financially needy patients in order to assist with medication adherence. OIG stated that it would not impose sanctions against the parties for... READ MORE
Tags: Anti-Kickback Statute, Civil Monetary Penalties, Digital Medicine, FDA, Loaner Device, oig, smartphones
[02/15/19]
Posted on February 15, 2019 in Federal Advocacy
Published by: Hall Render
NATIONAL How hospitals use biometrics to prevent patient ID errors, speed service Bonus pay for doctors can boost quality of care OCR sets record in 2018 for HIPAA enforcement actions Healthgrades names ‘America’s Best Hospitals’ 2019 Private equity pushes into healthcare: 9 latest deals 50 best healthcare supply chains in North America, rated by... READ MORE