Events Calendar

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Proper Management of Medicare/Medicaid Overpayments to Limit Risk of False Claims
2015-01-28    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
January 28, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9AM AKST | 8AM HAST Topics Covered: Identify [...]
EhealthInitiative Annual Conference 2015
2015-02-03 - 2015-02-05    
All Day
About the Annual Conference Interoperability: Building Consensus Through the 2020 Roadmap eHealth Initiative’s 2015 Annual Conference & Member Meetings, February 3-5 in Washington, DC will [...]
Real or Imaginary -- Manipulation of digital medical records
2015-02-04    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
February 04, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Orlando Regional Conference
2015-02-06    
All Day
February 06, 2015 Lake Buena Vista, FL Topics Covered: Hot Topics in Compliance Compliance and Quality of Care Readying the Compliance Department for ICD-10 Compliance [...]
Patient Engagement Summit
2015-02-09 - 2015-02-10    
12:00 am
THE “BLOCKBUSTER DRUG OF THE 21ST CENTURY” Patient engagement is one of the hottest topics in healthcare today.  Many industry stakeholders consider patient engagement, as [...]
iHT2 Health IT Summit in Miami
2015-02-10 - 2015-02-11    
All Day
February 10-11, 2015 iHT2 [eye-h-tee-squared]: 1. an awe-inspiring summit featuring some of the world.s best and brightest. 2. great food for thought that will leave you begging [...]
Starting Urgent Care Business with Confidence
2015-02-11    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
February 11, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Managed Care Compliance Conference
2015-02-15 - 2015-02-18    
All Day
February 15, 2015 - February 18, 2015 Las Vegas, NV Prospectus Learn essential information for those involved with the management of compliance at health plans. [...]
Healthcare Systems Process Improvement Conference 2015
2015-02-18 - 2015-02-20    
All Day
BE A PART OF THE 2015 CONFERENCE! The Healthcare Systems Process Improvement Conference 2015 is your source for the latest in operational and quality improvement tools, methods [...]
A Practical Guide to Using Encryption for Reducing HIPAA Data Breach Risk
2015-02-18    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
February 18, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Compliance Strategies to Protect your Revenue in a Changing Regulatory Environment
2015-02-19    
1:00 pm - 3:30 pm
February 19, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Dallas Regional Conference
2015-02-20    
All Day
February 20, 2015 Grapevine, TX Topics Covered: An Update on Government Enforcement Actions from the OIG OIG and US Attorney’s Office ICD 10 HIPAA – [...]
Events on 2015-02-03
EhealthInitiative Annual Conference 2015
3 Feb 15
2500 Calvert Street
Events on 2015-02-06
Orlando Regional Conference
6 Feb 15
Lake Buena Vista
Events on 2015-02-09
Events on 2015-02-10
Events on 2015-02-11
Events on 2015-02-15
Events on 2015-02-20
Dallas Regional Conference
20 Feb 15
Grapevine
Articles

Attorneys see developing request in Health awareness Specialty

attorneys

Stuck in a stagnant legal career, or just starting out with no job openings in sight? The antidote may be a switch to health care law.

Attorneys with experience in health care have a good career prognosis in Nashville, thanks to federal reform efforts that are generating volumes of legal work in a wide range of activities involving health care companies.

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, passed in 2010 and largely upheld by the Supreme Court last year, has created a host of new regulatory and compliance issues for health care providers.

Billing for services under Medicare and Medicaid is under greater scrutiny. The switch to electronic medical records is raising privacy concerns. And downward pressure from all sides on medical service reimbursements is forcing many providers to merge, enter partnerships or even go bankrupt.

“That’s what is driving the growth in health care practices,” says Phil McSween, who chairs the health law group at Baker Donelson Bearman Caldwell & Berkowitz, the nation’s 10th-largest health care law firm measured by number of attorneys who are members of the American Health Care Lawyers Association. He counts about 120 lawyers engaged in the health care practice.

“Health care has always been a dynamic field, but reform has accelerated that.”

His firm has nearly doubled the size of its health care group in the past five years or so, and has made significant additions to its health care practice this year. About 20 percent of firm revenues are derived from health care companies, he said.

Waller Law, Nashville’s largest law firm, is ranked third by the AHCLA.

This spring, it hired four new lawyers in its health care practice. Last June, Waller expanded in Austin, Texas, to serve the large health care market there and, shortly after, won a contract to help the Texas Health Services Authority develop a platform for the sharing of electronic medical records statewide.

Waller attorneys from Austin and Nashville will help negotiate vendor agreements and provide counsel on privacy and security compliance.

Waller has also recently helped a health care provider negotiate a complex Chapter 11 bankruptcy and is assisting Brentwood-based LifePoint Hospitals in building a large regional hospital network in a joint venture with Duke University Health System.

“Health care is our signature and the focus of our firm,” says chairman John Tishler. “Health care covers all areas.”

The practice area does cover a lot of ground, making the legal and business side of health care as intellectually rich and challenging as practicing medicine. Health care lawyers may deal with mergers and acquisitions, compliance, medical defense, labor and employment, pharmaceutical litigation, privacy, bankruptcy or intellectual property.

Adding a new layer of complexity are the host of new regulations contained within the PPACA that are designed to move the nation’s health system toward covering all residents with government-sponsored insurance (Medicare for Americans 65 and older and Medicaid for the poor) or private insurance (from carriers such as Aetna, Cigna and Blue Cross and Blue Shield), emphasizing access to primary care and disease management so medical issues can be diagnosed and treated early, and changing the way providers are paid to incentivize better care over more care.

Hospitals and physicians, traditionally reimbursed by private and government payers for medical services based on a fee-for-service model (i.e., a set fee for a doctor’s appointment, a surgical procedure or other medical service), will now be paid based on quality outcomes – how healthy they can keep patients.

They are being required to form accountable care organizations through which they work together to coordinate patient care by sharing data through the use of electronic medical records (EMR).

Across the country, physicians are dismantling their practices and becoming direct employees of hospitals to avoid the large capital expenditures required to buy and implement EMR technology to share patient data with hospitals.

The downward pricing pressure combined with increased expectations is generating mergers and acquisitions among health care providers, as well as bankruptcies for those who have defaulted on loans.

“Typically you don’t have bankruptcy attorneys that specialize in health care, but they’re getting more and more involved now by having to learn that specialty,” says Scott Mertie, president of Kraft Healthcare Consulting in Nashville, who is not an attorney but is one of six members of the American Health Care Lawyers Association task force on health care reform.

A great deal of legal activity is also being generated in compliance, as health care claims come under greater scrutiny by Medicare, Medicaid or other payers reviewing whether a claim should have been paid, Mertie says.

Many states are expanding Medicaid by opening eligibility to more residents. Services for Medicaid patients are typically covered at a much lower rate than services covered by commercial insurance carriers in employee health benefit packages.

State and federal agencies will be going over claims with a fine-toothed comb for any sign of fraud or abuse – making more medical claims subject to audit.

“That work has definitely bumped up this past year and I expect it to continue in years to come. Compliance, coding and documentation … that area is just booming,” Mertie says.

Kraft’s coding and documentation practice area has grown from one full-time employee to four in two years, Mertie says. Half the work is from providers seeking to stay in compliance. The other half is from attorneys called in to defend billing issues.

For providers found to be out of compliance, the ramifications are serious.

“If the bill was done improperly… they may not only not be paid, but may be subject to criminal liability, may be excluded from Medicare programs or have future Medicare payments just shut off,” McSween says. “It’s a tough environment.”

More than 250 health care-related companies, 15 of them publicly traded, are based in Nashville, according to the Nashville Health Care Council. But even hospital and health care companies based in much bigger markets look to Nashville for legal advice.

“Health care companies around the country will hire Nashville lawyers because if you’re a Nashville health care lawyer you’re kind of credentialed,” McSween says.

“And Nashville firms are generally seen as a value compared to the Washington, Chicago, Boston firms that we usually are across the table from.”

That means Nashville is not only a capital for health care, but a capital for health care law. And unless the nation moves to nationalized health care, there’s little chance the work will go away.

“There’s no movement to deregulate healthcare,” McSween says. “It’s becoming a bigger piece of the GNP and what the government spends its money on. We’ll have to spend less, and there will be harder fights for the dollars in health care.”

(Source)