Access Management
RSSArticles
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Not All Revenue Cycle Employees Want a Job That Is Patient-Facing
Sometimes, unhappy registrars find a better fit outside patient access. -
Controversy Developing Over Vaccine Passports
Concerns are emerging about individual rights, equal access, and how anyone would enforce mandates.
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Whistleblower Exception Allows Reporting HIPAA Violations with PHI
Healthcare professionals can find themselves in a quandary when they want to report fraud or other concerns within their organizations because doing so could require disclosure of protected health information. That could seem like a HIPAA violation; fortunately, there is a whistleblower exception that covers this scenario.
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Busy Year for Right of Access Settlements in 2021
At press time, OCR had settled five Right of Access investigations so far in 2021, four of those since President Biden was sworn in to office on Jan. 20.
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Right of Access Settlements Yield Lessons, Insight on OCR Approach
With nearly 20 settlements so far, the Office for Civil Rights is showing its determination to protect patients’ rights to obtain their medical records from healthcare entities.
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Case Managers Help Resolve Inpatient Claims Issues
Admission notification denials are no longer happening at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, FL, thanks to collaboration between patient access and case managers.
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Revamped Processes Prevent Admission Notification Denials
Some patients clearly meet the medical criteria for a hospital admission. Despite this, the health plan refuses to pay the claim — because staff did not notify the health plan soon enough.
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Simple Changes Cut Wait Times in Registration Areas
Delays can be caused by slow registrars, the need for interpreters, too many patients scheduled at the same time, or talkative patients, among many other things. To cut wait times, two centers in North Carolina have tackled these issues and more.
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In 5 Minutes, Patient Access Can Stop Lost Medicaid Coverage
Researchers analyzed Medicaid claims data from 2017. They found 22.9% of patients with a homelessness code experienced coverage interruption at least once vs. 18.8% of Medicaid patients without a homelessness code. Other common reasons people lose their Medicaid coverage include income changes, residency changes, the insured is no longer pregnant, the insured’s children age out, noncompliance with status updates, or the insured is no longer disabled.
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Surprise Bill Legislation Means Big Changes for Patients and Hospitals
“Bad news travels fast, and good news travels more slowly ... It’s a major problem, and it will take years to unwind the anxieties that have been created.”