October 27 - 29, 2019
2019 Clinical Practice Compliance Conference
Nashville, TN, United StatesHandouts
Sunday, October 27
P1 “Yes, a Physician May Bill Medicare for Incident-To Services of Another Physician” and Answers to Other Questions about Incident-To Policy |
P2 Supporting Clinical Excellence and Co-Location Compliance |
P3 Patients Over Paperwork: E&M Options? |
P4 Navigating the Compliance Pitfalls of Telemedicine |
P5 All About Appeals and Grievances: Review of the Regulations and How to Navigate Your Way Through These Processes at a Medicare and Medicaid Health Plan |
Monday, October 28
GENERAL SESSION GS1 HHS-OIG Compliance Priorities: Trends, Technology, and Takeaways |
GENERAL SESSION Emotional Intelligence: How to Develop and Use These Skills to Build Mutual Success |
101 Preparing for the On-Site Regulatory Inspection |
102 Ensuring Medical Necessity: The Overarching Criteria of Evaluation and Management Documentation |
201 Do the Right Thing: Leading a Federally Qualified Health Center’s Response to a Medicare Targeted Probe & Educate (TPE) Audit |
202 Identifying Compliance Problems in Your Practice |
301 Timed Psychotherapy Under the Revised CPT Construct: Looking Back on the First Year of the New Billing Standards vs. the Standard of Care |
302 Physician Recruitment Agreements: The DOs and DON’Ts of Income Support |
401 Incident-To Billing: The Convergence of Access, Documentation, and the Bottom Line |
402 Can the Provider Dismiss the Patient from Their Practice? |
Tuesday, October 29
GENERAL SESSION HHS Cybersecurity Top Threats and Best Practices |
GENERAL SESSION Lessons Learned from Recent Physician Practice Enforcement Actions |
501 DEA Compliance Bootcamp 101 with Case Studies |
502 CMS Audit Success: Prescriber Oversight and Documentation Strategies |
601 Evolution of Monitoring Tools in Physician Practice to Identify Risk |
602 Identifying Unexpected and Practice-Saving Clinical Risk Exposures: A Case Study |
701 Integrity without Ignorance |
702 Compliance in a Time of Crisis |