Spouse cannot sue SNF based on Federal Nursing Home Reform Amendments
By
Marty Stempniak
Apr 18, 2019
The wife of a Washington nursing home resident cannot sue a provider by citing a federal law that sets standards for facilities.
Operator must pay $465,000 to settle pregnancy and disability discrimination charges
By
Marty Stempniak
Oct 26, 2018
A Western New York skilled care provider has agreed to pay $465,000 to settle charges that it discriminated against pregnant and disabled employees.
Technology to address claim denials debuts
Jun 26, 2018
Change Healthcare today unveiled a new technology that helps providers reduce one of the leading causes of claim denials.
Trump budget plan would carve 18% from HHS, add millions to combat healthcare fraud
By
Mar 17, 2017
President Donald Trump’s proposed budget plan for fiscal year 2018 slash the budget for the Department of Health and Human Services while putting additional funds into fraud prevention.
Medicaid official opposes ACA replacement bill ‘despite political messaging’
By
Mar 10, 2017
Chief medical officer of the Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services Andrey Ostrovsky, M.D., took to Twitter on Wednesday to express his concern with legislation of the GOP’s new healthcare plan.
Former SNF nurse pleads guilty to stealing morphine, replacing it with saline
By
Jan 12, 2017
A former employee of a Massachusetts skilled nursing facility pleaded guilty on Tuesday to charges that she stole morphine from the facility and replaced some of it with saline.
SNF, feds resolve dispute over sign language interpreter access
By
Oct 14, 2016
A Pennsylvania nursing home has reached a resolution with federal officials in a dispute over the facility’s ability to provide a sign language interpreter for a prospective resident.
Court: HHS can’t delay Medicare appeals backlog case
By
Sep 21, 2016
The Department of Health and Human Services won’t be able to push off litigation over its overwhelming backlog of Medicare appeals, a federal court ruled on Monday.
Potentially fatal drug errors missed by electronic ordering systems, report finds
By
Apr 08, 2016
Computerized physician order entry systems don’t always catch potentially harmful or fatal medication errors, according to a report released Thursday.
Post-acute care largely explains geographic differences in Medicare spending, report affirms
By
Tim Mullaney
Jul 29, 2013
Geographic variances in post-acute care largely account for differences in Medicare spending patterns, supporting healthcare reform measures that encourage better acute and post-acute coordination, according...