Your Article Summary
Medicare's no-pay rule has little financial impact
American Medical News , 10/28/09
O'Reilly KB – The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has estimated that rules that took effect in October 2008 and denied payment for "reasonably preventable" hospital–associated conditions would save the government $21 million and encourage patient safety improvement.
Related Articles
Medicare Spending for Previously Uninsured Adults
Annals of Internal Medicine, 10/13/09
Relevance Score: 94%
CMS announces Medicare premiums, deductibles for 2010
American Hospital Association News, 11/13/09
Relevance Score: 93%
Cms proposes new rules for medicare advantage and prescription drug plans to better serve beneficiaries
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Press, 10/26/09
Relevance Score: 91%
Medicare pricing gets new look; RUC process revisited
American Medical News, 10/23/09
Relevance Score: 91%
CMS will hold town hall meeting on Sec. 935 appeals
American Hospital Association News, 10/14/09
Relevance Score: 91%
Today in Finance...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
How New Standards For Tougher Error Rate Were Applied In This Years 2009 Improper Payments Report
AMN Healthcare, 11/20/09
Health care utilization in Ecuador: a multilevel analysis of socio-economic determinants and inequality issues
Health Policy and Planning, 11/20/09
Some specialists will see extra cuts in Medicare pay
American Medical News , 11/19/09
Today in Strategy and Ethics...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Adoption And Spread Of New Imaging Technology: A Case Study
Health Affairs, 11/20/09
Technology is only part of the design equation
Health Facilities Management, 11/20/09
How New Standards For Tougher Error Rate Were Applied In This Years 2009 Improper Payments Report
AMN Healthcare, 11/20/09
Article Search
Sponsor


See Latest Articles


