There are, depending upon the particular arrangement, potential end runs around contractual pass-through billing prohibitions, but they are highly fact specific and technical.
Tag: bill
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on LinkedIn, my friend James Prudden commented, asking me how patients would be protected if the No Surprises Act were repealed.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.
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.
Certifying to Medicare that you’re here when you’re really there is a ticket to nowhere, or maybe to jail.
Although health care fraud doesn’t require the involvement of telemedicine, with advances in telemedicine come “advances” in criminal schemes.
Although health care fraud doesn’t require the involvement of telemedicine, with advances in telemedicine come “advances” in criminal schemes.
Ride along with Mark as he muses over whether Medicare recovery auditors are themselves committing fraud.
Criminal and, at least, serious civil, liability lurks in many neat neighborhoods. Create your own neighborhood watch to make sure that it’s not lurking behind your medical group’s otherwise metaphorical neat lawn.
Listen to Mark as he discusses how many medical group leaders come to him for help when they’ve got a “problem” and they’re looking for a solution.
What you know, both about the FCA and about the falsity of claims is now even more relevant.