According to Bain & Co, nearly one-quarter of physicians employed in health-system-led organizations are considering switching employers.
How to Almost Make Half a Billion Dollars: The Arizona Wound Graft Fraud
If you thought health care fraud required medical knowledge, think again.
Nudge Triggers a $17 Million False Claims Act Settlement
A fraud by any other name would smell as bad.
What’s Lurking in Your Business Acquisition? Nearly $60 Million in Lessons from Pfizer and Biohaven
Buying a healthcare business, from a medical practice to a medicine manufacturer, is a lot like buying a house—you hope for the best, but sometimes, there’s wood rot hiding under that fresh paint.
Will the Whistleblower Law Be Whistled Out?
Is the False Claims Act’s whistleblower provision illegal?
Aetna Health v. Radiology Partners and the Danger of Pass-Through Billing
There are, depending upon the particular arrangement, potential end runs around contractual pass-through billing prohibitions, but they are highly fact specific and technical.
The Crisis Caused By the Lack of Crisis Planning.
Although any particular crisis can’t be predicted, classes of crisis are capable of prediction and, even if that is not true of a specific situation, the way in which your group or business will respond to a crisis can, should, and must be planned far in advance.
Lesson from McKinsey – Avoiding Consultants from Hell
Are you sure those consultants are helping to improve your business? Or are they potentially sending you to jail?
More On Overturning the No Surprises Act
It you haven’t yet read it, see my December 16, 2024, post, Now’s The Time to Overturn the No Surprises Act, for part 1 of this thread.
When that post was published on LinkedIn, my friend James Prudden commented, asking me how patients would be protected if the No Surprises Act were repealed. Here’s my response to James.
Now’s The Time to Overturn the No Surprises Act
Re-frame the issue for what it really is: Surprise physician services stealing. Now’s the time for the No Surprises Act, and each state counterpart, to go.










