Skip to main content

All Access Subscription

Get unlimited access to our full publication and article library.

Get Access Now

Interested in Group Sales? Learn more

Medical Ethics

RSS  

Articles

  • Collect, but give excellent service

    When a bonus was first offered to registrars at the University of Tennessee Medical Center in Knoxville for meeting specific collection amounts, customer service was top of the mind for patient access leaders.
  • Train registrars as interpreters

    While some patient access employees at Cincinnati (OH) Childrens Hospital Medical Center were bilingual, they werent qualified to serve as interpreters. Now these employees will be offered training based on Kaiser Permanentes Qualified Bilingual Staff Model and Program.
  • Access staff coped with ED volumes

    Staffing shortages and having to pull staff from other areas due to volume surges in the emergency department (ED) were two challenges Annemarie Rappleyea, CPAR, patient access supervisor for the ED at Community Medical Center in Toms River, NJ, faced during Hurricane Sandy.
  • Patient ID pitfalls plague HIE networks

    As patient access staff well know, managing patient identities is one of the hidden problems of health information exchange (HIE) and electronic health record (EHR) technology, according to the National Association of Healthcare Access Management (NAHAM).
  • Say thank you after a crisis

    Here are some ways that patient access managers showed registrars their appreciation after Hurricane Sandy
  • Access has role to prevent penalties

    Hospitals are getting penalized for preventable readmissions, due to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Acts linking of Medicare payments to the quality of care that hospitals provide.
  • Does patient need interpreter services?

    If patients are financially cleared and pre-registered before they present for services, this situation give you the opportunity to obtain demographic information, but do you also consider the patients need for an interpreter at that point?
  • Recordings of IRB meetings show gaps in discussions

    There have been many surveys of IRBs and their operations gauging how long protocols take in their journey through review, how much it costs to operate a human subjects protection program, and IRB members' attitudes about various aspects of their work.
  • National Children's Study tests shared IRB model

    The first babies brought into the National Children's Study while they were still in utero are now about three years old. And they're not all that's grown.
  • Quality improvement study hampered by IRB concerns

    Pay-for-performance initiatives, which provide bonuses for physicians, hospitals and other providers who meet certain performance standards, are increasingly used by insurers such as Medicare to try to improve quality and efficiency.