Emergency Medicine Jobs Allow ER Doctors’ Travel Opportunities

August 18th, 2011 by admin No comments »

 

There are advantages of being a part of an emergency medicine jobs service. Many times you have the opportunity to provide emergency room health care around the country for short snippets of time. Sometimes the positions are temporary. Other times you are a part of a rotating schedule. This means you could be in an emergency room in California one week and in Iowa the next. Some doctors prefer to stay in one place, only working at one hospital.

Everywhere has a need for quality emergency room care, as trauma can happen anywhere and at any given time. While some places are busier than others and tend to have more severe cases more frequently, quality care is needed at every hospital. This is why an emergency medicine jobs service is so valuable. The doctors who provide care through these services travel around the country helping where they are needed.

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Emergency Medicine Physician Billing Compliance – Medicare, PPACA, RACs, HITECHs

August 18th, 2011 by admin No comments »

 

Since Medicare Audits began they have primarily been used as information gathering. However with the passing of the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006, which made recovery audit contractors extension into all 50 states mandatory by 2010, and adding the passage of PPACA and the effects of HITECH, audits are coming from all directions. More importantly they are being used to recover over-payments and possibly with penalties. What do we do as ED physicians?

Look for physicians with outlying data. Check your standard deviations for over performing E&M levels, critical care and procedures. If you find outliers, then prepare a document that substantiates why they are outliers and/or identifies what the physician(s) is doing wrong, document education and follow up that they have corrected the issues. Not only can you do this with over performers but also under performers to improve charge capture. In my experience, for every over performer, there are three under performers. In effect, a compliance program that also focuses on charge capture will, in the final analysis, have a positive impact on revenue.

Determine why they are outliers. There are a number of legitimate reasons that a particular physician may higher significantly higher level 5s, critical care time etc… Some of the causes to look at are:
1. Triage acuity pick ups
2. Shifts worked
3. Admission percentage
4. How long out of residency
5. Percent of charts with a well thought out differential
6. number of hours worked with mid level coverage versus the group average

Perform periodic education for all physicians and mid-level providers. At least annually present to your group some form of documentation training. Document this training and have everyone sign off on completion of the training. For example, have an annual dinner/company retreat and include a ~3 hour presentation on documentation training/reminders, group and individual performance measures and annual updates. Just about everyone looks forward to this as sort of a group retreat and open forum on these issues.

Provide a documentation guide. Whether your ED physicians use EMR, dictation, templates or another form of documentation, a readily available reference is vital to compliantly capturing all of your services in the ED. We perform so many different procedures and services in the ER (everything from cerumenectomy to observation) that many physicians not only find themselves not knowing exactly how to document them, but sometime physicians do not know what they don’t know so that either they fail to document services rendered or do so in a non compliant manner. We have found that having a comprehensive guide to documenting specific to the practice and that is group specific and done in consultation with your coders is vital to charge capture and compliance. Every coding department or system will have slight variations on exactly what they want to see to capture a service (for example, for a splint procedure, do that want to see documented that the physician was present when the splint was applied or just examined afterwards and what are the best words to communicate etc…)

Here is an example from a section of one of our documentation guides:

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What Can an Emergency Dentist Do For Your Teeth?

August 17th, 2011 by admin No comments »

In the case of a dental emergency you will need to contact an emergency dentist. This is a type of dentist that is on call twenty-four hours a day to take care of any dental emergencies. There are all sorts of different processes that one of these dentists can work with.

Teeth can break out of the mouth for a variety of reasons including from sports injuries. An emergency dentist can help to get teeth back into your place. The dentist will work to take the recovered took that needs to be put back in with ease. The dentist will flush the socket that the tooth was in so that the tooth can be properly placed back in. Temporary orthodontic wire will generally be used to help keep the tooth in place while it is being settled back into its old spot through the creation of new blood vessels in the area that attach to the root.

For chips in the teeth the dentist can work with various devices. Proper enamel shaping can work to help with using enamel shaping. The use of a veneer or crown can be used for more severe cases. An emergency root canal can also be applied for cases where nerves are damaged.

Crowns or other implants can also be damaged. The installation of a new crown can be used in some of the most severe cases but in other cases the crown will need to be filled or remolded so that it will look its best. An emergency dentist can work to help with handling this condition.

» Read more: What Can an Emergency Dentist Do For Your Teeth?