-
At times, patients face lengthy wait times due to missing or invalid orders in registration areas. These long waits decrease satisfaction scores for patient access. Educate provider offices on situations in which patients were inconvenienced. Have physicians use online scheduling, which requires ICD9 and diagnosis codes. Scan orders so they can be located online.
-
Like many patient access leaders, Linaka Kain, DE, a disability examiner and Medicaid specialist at Trinity Regional Health System Rock Island, IL, is expecting a large influx of newly eligible patients coming on to the Medicaid program as a result of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) in 2014.
-
At the Silver State Health Insurance Exchange in Carson City, NV, workers have been counting down the days until Oct. 1 on an office corkboard, according to a report in Kaiser Health News.1 Now it is only days to the deadline for opening the online marketplaces that are a linchpin of the federal health law known as Obamacare, the report said.
-
"Churn when otherwise-eligible Medicaid beneficiaries are disenrolled and re-enrolled in the program is a frequent problem and will continue to be so under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), according to Benjamin D. Sommers, MD, PhD, assistant professor of health policy and economics at Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.
-
All across the country, states, hospital associations, communities, and emergency departments (EDs) are attempting to deal with the growing incidence of prescription pain medication abuse, overdoses, and deaths.1 Opioid pain medications now kill more Americans than cocaine and heroin combined, and over the past five years, there have been more drug-induced deaths than motor vehicle accident deaths.2
-
-
Consent to an intervention or treatment is generally implied when a patient comes to the ED, but there are some exceptions to this, according to Andrew H. Koslow, MD, JD, an assistant clinical professor of emergency medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston, MA, and an emergency physician (EP) at Steward Good Samaritan Medical Center in Brockton, MA.
-
Diagnostic errors are the most common, most costly, and most deadly medical errors, according to a recent analysis of 25 years of malpractice payouts from the National Practitioner Data Bank.1
-
Too often, ED staff dont report violence due to onerous reporting processes, according to Terry Kowalenko, MD, clinical associate professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor. Research suggests that violent incidents occurring in EDs are far more frequent than statistics reveal.1-3
-