Physician's Practice - November 2008 - (Page 2) EDITOR’S NOTE B O B K E AV E N E Y CASUALTIES OF THE CULTURE WAR without retribution by hospitals or states — a right protected in various federal laws since the 1970s — Leavitt is proposing regulations that go much further. They would grant staff virtually unlimited power to hobble the normal operations of ordinary practices, under the guise of their “right” to decline to be involved practices they deem morally repugnant. The new regulations would cover every entity that accepts Medicare or Medicaid, including (most likely) your practice. The breathtakingly broad language would “protect” not only doctors and nurses but other clinical assistants and even administrative staff — indeed, everyone who works in your office. The services in question need not be abortion-related. Far from it. The rules would cover referrals, counseling, the prescribing of contraceptives — you name it. And everything from checking vitals to scheduling the patient’s appointment to pharmacists’ filling your prescriptions could be considered part of “the service” to which anyone might object. The language states that the rules apply to anyone who participates in “any activity with a logical connection to a procedure [or] health service … This includes referral, training and other arrangements of the procedure, health service, or research activity.” Anyone? Any activity? Including “other arrangements”? Can a medical assistant refuse to check the blood pressure of a patient whose visit is partly to discuss birth control? Can your frontdesk staffer decline to schedule a pregnant teen who wants to come see you to discuss her options, or a longtime patient who needs a Plan B prescription? Can your check-out clerk refuse to provide a referral to a urologist to consult on a vasectomy? HHS is being intentionally vague on questions like these — but apparently, yes, on all counts. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists warns that “personal beliefs of pharmacists, schedulers, even volunteers and custodians could influence the information patients receive or stop patient care.” No wonder Equal Employment Opportunity Commissioners have come out against it, saying it would lead to “profound confusion and extensive litigation.” You think? HHS is also not saying when it will decide on its final regulations — it hadn’t acted as of this writing — but you can be sure it will do so before the clock runs out on the current administration. Leavitt can act unilaterally. He need not hold hearings or gain Congressional authority — and most likely, he won’t bother. There’s already too much overheated rhetoric in America’s battles over religion and social issues; I’m not jumping into that fray. But this is a business issue, and at its heart is a simple question: Should garden-variety primary-care practices’ ability to provide commonplace family-planning and counseling services become the latest casualty in the culture wars? No one should be dragooned unwillingly into providing an abortion. Of course not. Under existing law, no one is. But these regulations go acres too far. Patients will be harmed. PROPOSED FEDERAL RULES COULD HOBBLE YOUR PRACTICE “But if the time should ever come … when my office would require me to either violate my conscience or violate the national interest, then I would resign the office; and I hope any conscientious public servant would do likewise.” — John F. Kennedy, 1960 As the second Roman Catholic ever nominated by a major party for the presidency of the United States, Kennedy spoke those words in response to the question on everyone’s mind: To whom would a President Kennedy owe primary allegiance? The American people? Or the Vatican? Forced to choose between his conscience and the job, he said, he would quit. Kennedy’s words echo today as an eloquent counterpoint to our generation’s childish preference to assert our “rights” rather than accept our realities and live with our choices. The latest example: Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt’s recent discovery of your employees’ right to undermine your practice by refusing to do their jobs if doing so would offend their moral sensibility. Unsatisfied with the long-established “right of conscience” of healthcare workers to opt out of providing services like abortion 2 | PHYSICIANS PRACTICE | NOVEMBER 2008 • Bob Keaveney is the executive editor of Physicians Practice. Tell him what you think at bkeaveney@physicianspractice.com. WWW.PHYSICIANSPRACTICE.COM http://WWW.PHYSICIANSPRACTICE.COM
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Physician's Practice - November 2008 Physician's Practice - November 2008 Contents Death of Solo Practice Just a Myth Letters HSAy What? Noteworthy Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey ’Tis the Season to be Neutral Ask the Experts Evaluating Paperless Labs HR in a Box? The Guide Coding Third-Party Audits on the Rise Branding the Cash-Only Practice Intra-Office Tug-of-Wars Stickin‘ Up For Yourself Classifieds Advertiser Index Physician's Practice - November 2008 Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Physician's Practice - November 2008 (Page Cover1) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Physician's Practice - November 2008 (Page Cover2) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Physician's Practice - November 2008 (Page 1) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Physician's Practice - November 2008 (Page 2) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Physician's Practice - November 2008 (Page 3) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Physician's Practice - November 2008 (Page 4) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Contents (Page 8) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Contents (Page 9) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Death of Solo Practice Just a Myth (Page 10) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Death of Solo Practice Just a Myth (Page 11) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Letters (Page 12) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Letters (Page 13) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Letters (Page 14) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Letters (Page 15) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Letters (Page 16) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Letters (Page 17) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - HSAy What? (Page 18) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - HSAy What? (Page 19) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 20) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 21) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 22) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 23) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 24) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 25) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 26) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 27) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 28) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 29) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 30) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 31) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 32) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 33) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 34) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 35) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 36) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Finding Lost Revenue: The Search for Billing and Coding Gold (Page 37) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey (Page 38) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey (Page 39) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey (Page 40) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey (Page 41) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey (Page 42) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey (Page 43) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey (Page 44) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey (Page 45) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Getting More: Our Annual Physician Compensation Survey (Page 46) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - ’Tis the Season to be Neutral (Page 47) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - ’Tis the Season to be Neutral (Page 48) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 49) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 50) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 51) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 52) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 53) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 54) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Evaluating Paperless Labs (Page 55) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Evaluating Paperless Labs (Page 56) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - HR in a Box? (Page 57) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - HR in a Box? (Page 58) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - HR in a Box? (Page 59) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - HR in a Box? (Page 60) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - The Guide (Page 61) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - The Guide (Page 62) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - The Guide (Page 63) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - The Guide (Page 64) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Coding (Page 65) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Coding (Page 66) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Third-Party Audits on the Rise (Page 67) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Third-Party Audits on the Rise (Page 68) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Third-Party Audits on the Rise (Page 69) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Third-Party Audits on the Rise (Page 70) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Branding the Cash-Only Practice (Page 71) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Branding the Cash-Only Practice (Page 72) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Branding the Cash-Only Practice (Page 73) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Branding the Cash-Only Practice (Page 74) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Intra-Office Tug-of-Wars (Page 75) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Intra-Office Tug-of-Wars (Page 76) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Intra-Office Tug-of-Wars (Page 77) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Intra-Office Tug-of-Wars (Page 78) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Stickin‘ Up For Yourself (Page 79) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Stickin‘ Up For Yourself (Page 80) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Stickin‘ Up For Yourself (Page 81) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 82) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 83) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 84) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 85) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 86) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 87) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 88) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page Cover3) Physician's Practice - November 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page Cover4)
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