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Keeping up with all the new payer requirements "is getting overwhelming," reports Margie Mukite, director of patient access at Advocate Condell Medical Center in Libertyville, IL. Here are some trends the department is seeing:
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Payers are frequently requiring additional clinical information from the provider or medical staff as to the medical necessity for a procedure or surgery, says Nan Olivieri, a supervisor at the Financial Clearance Center at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis.
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Has your access staff been wrongly blamed for mistakes, delays, or other problems related to clinical areas? To avoid this problem, patient access must "link themselves with clinical departments and establish a relationship a tight one," says Barbara Snodgrass, patient access manager at Legacy Mount Hood Medical Center in Gresham, OR. Snodgrass gives these recommendations:
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As hospital compliance officers prepare for a proposed increase in patient access to medical records' information, another proposed rule increases access to laboratory results. Comments on the laboratory proposed rule must be received by Nov. 14.
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When an interdisciplinary team including patient access, insurance verification, and radiology personnel was formed to reduce claims denials, "realizing where denials are coming from was definitely our first step," reports Brian A. Todd, CHAM, manager of patient access staff development and training at Lourdes Health System in Camden, NJ.
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Leon Rodriguez, the new leader of the government's HIPAA privacy and security enforcer, last served as chief of staff and deputy assistant attorney general for the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division.
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Beginning Jan. 1, 2012, providers must use the new HIPAA 5010 transaction standards to conduct certain administrative transactions such as claims, remittance, eligibility and others, but not all providers are ready for the transition to new standards, and that lack of preparedness could affect transition to ICD-10 as well.
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More than 57,000 complaints of Privacy Rule violations were received by the Health and Human Services' (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) between April 2003 and December 2010. More than 250 large data breaches, defined as those involving the protected health information of more than 500 individuals, occurred in 2009 and 2010.
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During morning surgery rush times, registrars at Indiana University Health North Hospital in Carmel began monitoring the actual time patients were arriving in a database.