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April
25, 2005 |
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IMAGING
• Rhode Island
Bills on the Move
• California Imaging
Bill Introduced
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REIMBURSEMENT
• Reimbursement Survey
Reminder |
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MEDICAL
LIABILITY REFORM
• Medical
Liability Bill Goes to Arizona Governor
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QUALITY
IMPROVEMENT
• HHS Considers
Penalties for HIPAA Violations
• Patients Will
Evaluate Hospitals with CMS Survey |
IMAGING |
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Rhode
Island Bills on the Move
The
Rhode Island House Committee on Corporations
approved two bills impacting the delivery
of imaging services. The first bill,
which is supported by the ACC, would
amend Rhode Island law to permit accreditation
by any national recognized organization
instead of requiring accreditation
by the American College of Radiology
(ACR). The Committee also approved
legislation that would apply the certificate
of need process to medical equipment
used for magnetic resonance imaging
services, positron emission tomography
services and computer
tomography scan services regardless
of cost. The ACC is working closely
with its Rhode Island Chapter on these
two bills.
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California
Imaging Bill Introduced
After
a recent legislative victory, the
California Chapter of the ACC faces
another onerous piece of imaging legislation.
A bill was introduced last week that
prohibits any person other than a
qualified diagnostic radiologist from
billing for diagnostic imaging procedures
under workers compensation. The bill
instructs physicians treating patients
who may be suffering from a job-related
injury to refer the patient to a qualified
diagnostic radiologist who the physician
believes can best perform the required
imaging services. The ACC opposes
this bill and will work with other
members of the Coalition for Patient-Centered
Imaging (CPCI) to ensure this legislation
does not move forward.
If
you are interested in helping the
ACC fight state and federal bills
that restrict imaging services by
qualified providers, visit http://www.acc.org/advocacy/advocacy.htm
and click on the Cardio Advocacy Network
(CAN). CAN members are the ACC’s
key contacts on legislative issues
that affect cardiovascular specialists,
including imaging
ownership and referral, Medicare physician
payments and medical liability reform.
Join CAN now to protect your patients
and your practice.
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REIMBURSEMENT |
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Reimbursement
Survey Reminder
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. Every
ACC member who receives a survey should
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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| MEDICAL
LIABILITY REFORM |
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Medical
Liability Bill Goes to Arizona Governor
The
Arizona legislature recently passed
a bill that would place restrictions
on expert witnesses who testify in
malpractice lawsuits. The legislation
stipulates that only licensed health
care providers in the same specialty
as the defendant could serve as expert
witnesses in
malpractice lawsuits. The bill currently
awaits approval by Gov. Janet Napolitano.
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| QUALITY
IMPROVEMENT |
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HHS
Considers Penalties for HIPAA Violations
On
April 18, the Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS) published
a proposal that outlines the basis
for liability and procedures for imposing
civil money penalties for practices
that violate the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA) Administrative Simplification
Rules. The proposed rule would amend
the existing rules relating to the
investigation of noncompliance and
issuing monetary penalties to make
them apply to all of the HIPAA Administrative
Simplification rules, rather than
exclusively to the privacy
standards. HHS is seeking comment
on the proposed rule by June 17. Click
here to read the HHS Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking.
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Patients
Will Evaluate Hospitals with CMS Survey
Patients
will soon have a say in how their
hospital performs thanks to a survey
under development by the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).
The survey differs from traditional
hospital report cards, which gather
clinical data on best practices and
patient outcomes, by measuring the
overall experience of a patient’s
stay. The survey is intended to provide
a standard tool for patients to evaluate
their stay, from interactions with
health care professionals to the cleanliness
of hospital facilities. CMS intends
the survey to be voluntarily
implemented by hospitals, but has
not excluded the possibility of using
the survey to calculate hospital reimbursement.
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