5 Common Medical Practice Denials and Remedies: September 2014
RemitDATA’s Aaron Hood explores the most common unexpected denials at practices nationwide, with a special focus on internal medicine. Source: physicianspractice.com
People Aren't Perfect and EHRs Can't Change That
Computer systems will never make good deciders and people will never make good robots. Source: physicianspractice.com
The Key to Physician Financial Success
One important skill that helped you become a physician can also help you become financially successful. Unfortunately, many forget it after residency. Source: physicianspractice.com
Solutions to 3 Common Accountable Care Tech Challenges
Technology is a must in accountable care coordination, but also presents challenges. Here are three solutions to achieve the goal of quality patient care. Source: physicianspractice.com
Clean Up Your A/R Before the End of the Year
The end of the year is approaching rapidly and one thing you do not want to do is drag old A/R into the New Year. If you have any A/R from 2013 or (gasp!) 2012, it’s time to look at those claims and make a decision if you are going to continue to chase them, […]
Health Reform Will Continue Despite Republican Victories
I believe that the Republican victories during the midterm elections will have little effect on the future of Obamacare. Here’s why. Source: physicianspractice.com
Internal Audit Pass Rates; Nonphysician Credentialing
Our practice does internal chart reviews on our physicians for coding accuracy. What do you feel is an appropriate passing score? Source: physicianspractice.com
Six Tech Trends Physicians Should Watch in 2015
Here are six of the biggest healthcare technology trends on the horizon, and what they mean for physicians. Source: physicianspractice.com
When Burnout Happens to Good Physicians
Here are three things to keep in mind next time you find yourself rushing through tasks or working late hours at your medical practice. Source: physicianspractice.com
Obamacare's Coming Crisis of Acuity
A pillar of the Affordable Care Act, “personal responsibility,” changes the issue from keeping a doctor to affording one for most working families. Source: physicianspractice.com