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April
4, 2005 |
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REIMBURSEMENT
• Five-Year Review
of Cardiology Codes is Under Way
• CMS Tests Payment
Accuracy |
MEDICAL
LIABILITY REFORM
• Missouri, Montana
Strengthen Liability Laws
• South Carolina
Awaits Action by Governor |
QUALITY
IMPROVEMENT
• Free Audioconference
on HIPAA Security Rule |
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LEGISLATIVE/REGULATORY
• Tobacco
Control Bill Introduced
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REIMBURSEMENT |
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Five-Year
Review of Cardiology Codes is Under
Way
As
part of a mandated review of CPT codes,
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) will be surveying physicians
in early May to determine actual work
times for procedures. It is
imperative that every ACC member who
receives a survey respond immediately
to ensure that cardiovascular services
are appropriately valued. Survey results
will be used to determine reimbursement
for the next five years. |
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CMS
Tests Payment Accuracy
CMS
recently announced a three-year demonstration
in California, Florida and New York
that will evaluate methods of reducing
inappropriate billing by Medicare
providers. As part of the demonstration,
CMS will work with recovery audit
contractors to evaluate claims for
overpayments or underpayments. The
program will target claims that are
often improperly coded, such as claims
where Medicare
is not the primary payer or for bundled
services. Click
here to read the CMS announcement.
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MEDICAL LIABILITY REFORM |
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Missouri,
Montana Strengthen Liability Laws
Missouri
Gov. Matt Blunt signed legislation
last week that creates a $350,000
limit on noneconomic damages in medical
liability lawsuits. The new law, which
goes into effect Aug. 28, requires
lawsuits to be filed in the county
where the alleged injury occurred
and provides a stricter interpretation
of joint and several liability. “Missourians
deserve access to health care and
businesses deserve the right to create
jobs,” Blunt said. “This
legislation will do both.” Click
here to read the Governor’s
statement.
Severe
shortages of specialists in rural
areas of Montana prompted Gov. Brian
Schweitzer to sign four bills to ease
the medical liability burden on physicians.
The legislative package enforces stricter
criteria for determining expert witnesses,
protects physicians from being sued
for medical errors made by another
provider, prohibits a physician’s
apology from being used in a medical
liability claim and protects hospitals
from being sued for the work of independent
contractors.
These laws will go into effect July
1, 2005. Visit www.protectpatientsnow.org
to get a state-by-state analysis of
the fight for medical liability reform.
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South
Carolina Awaits Action by Governor
South
Carolina physicians are hoping that
Gov. Mark Sanford signs a bill capping
noneconomic damages at $350,000 in
medical liability cases. The legislation
would also create additional qualifications
for expert witnesses. Sanford has
been a strong supporter of liability
reform and recently
signed a law aimed at preventing frivolous
lawsuits from ever reaching the courtroom
(see
related story).
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| QUALITY
IMPROVEMENT |
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Free
Audioconference on HIPAA Security
Rule
CMS
will host a free teleconference on
April 6 to help health care providers
comply with the HIPAA
Security Rule by the April 20
deadline. The Security Rule governs
collection, storage and transmission
of patients’ protected health
information. The teleconference is
from 1 – 2 p.m. ET, and interested
members can find out more at www.sharpworkgroup.com.
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| LEGISLATIVE/REGULATORY |
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Tobacco
Control Bill Introduced
Congress
recently introduced bipartisan legislation
that would authorize the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) to closely
monitor and regulate tobacco products.
The Senate and House bills are identical
to legislation introduced and supported
by the ACC last year. The bill would
not allow the FDA to ban cigarettes,
but the agency could regulate tobacco
products, reduce usage of the additive
nicotine, curb advertising to children
and mandate the use of bolder health
warnings on tobacco packaging. The
ACC continues to work with the Campaign
for Tobacco Free Kids to support
passage of this legislation. Click
here to learn more.
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| Questions?
Comments? Send your feedback to epubs@acc.org
and include the name of the publication
in the subject line. |