Articles Tagged With: COVID-19
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Registrars Working Same Jobs, But in Different Spaces
COVID-19 led a 10-hospital system based in Maine to create remote work arrangements for each facility, based on staff size and other variables.
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Massive Remote Work Arrangement Going Well (Mostly)
Few patient access departments had successful remote work programs in place before COVID-19. Since the pandemic began, facilities have made some major adjustments. The following is a summary of how the field is faring with these unusual arrangements.
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Some Big Revenue Cycle Changes Are Here to Stay
For patient access, some changes with COVID-19 are just temporary. Others probably are going to be permanent. Read on to learn about some new practices with long-term implications for revenue cycle operations.
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Auth Requirements Are Relaxed During COVID-19 Crisis — Or Are They?
Relaxed authorization requirements sounds like great news. However, payers are vague on the specifics. For this reason, some patient access leaders are erring on the side of caution and continuing to secure all authorizations per usual protocol.
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‘Top-to-Top’ Approach Needed on Relaxed Rules
Many health plans are waiving authorizations for specific diagnostic testing or services. Clarity is needed on what exactly the waivers mean in specific cases.
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Waived Cost-Sharing Is Questionable Help to Hospitals
Hospitals may not charge patients with any type of insurance cost-sharing for COVID-19 testing and related services, according to the Families First Coronavirus Response Act. This will certainly help patients. For hospitals, it probably means more lost revenue.
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CARES Act Offers Mix of Relief, Confusion for Struggling Hospitals
A $100 billion injection of relief funding for certain hospitals and other healthcare providers is just what the doctor ordered. However, for others, the money they will receive does not come close to addressing the shortfalls they are experiencing.
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Social Media Use and Disordered Eating in Young Adolescents
The authors of this exploratory study in 996 young adolescents found an association between time spent on social media, number of social media accounts, and evidence of disordered eating behaviors.
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Black Elderberry Supplementation for Upper Respiratory Infection Symptoms
SYNOPSIS: A meta-analysis of results from four randomized, controlled clinical studies evaluating the effect of black elderberry supplementation suggests that the botanical significantly reduces upper respiratory symptoms due to common cold and influenza viruses.
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Shortcuts in Clinical Trials May Cause More Harm Than Good
Dozens of potential treatments for COVID-19 are under investigation: existing antiretrovirals, anti-malaria drugs, monoclonal antibodies, and Chinese traditional medicines among them. Additionally, companies are rapidly developing new drugs. But poorly designed studies subject patients to the risks of adverse events without learning if the intervention works.