A recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling in a lawsuit involving the application of the Wartime Suspension of Limitations Act to False Claims Act cases could have healthcare industry implications.
Legal & Regulatory Issues
Non-compete clauses have become a growing problem for Washington state physicians. Many say restricting where physicians can practice amid a physician shortage and deficiency of services in rural areas can mean patients' options for attaining necessary medical care are increasingly…
This article briefly outlines 23 key Anti-Kickback Statute, False Claims Act and Stark Law issues and thoughts. It provides:
Provider organizations completed reporting for the 2014 Medicare Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS) in the first quarter of 2015, where many scrambled in the final weeks and days to gather, organize and submit their data to CMS. And yet, with…
Since the enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, legal and regulatory issues in the healthcare arena have become more complex and more interconnected, necessitating healthcare professionals and executives keep a closer eye out for possible violations.
Margaret "Peggy" Curtin, former executive director of Hospital Sisters Health System St. John's Children's Hospital in Springfield, Ill., pleaded guilty Thursday to stealing more than $700,000 from the hospital over a 6.5-year period ending in 2014, according to The State…
From a New York hospital agreeing to pay $18.8 million to settle kickback allegations to a judge extending the restraining order in Ebola nurse Nina Pham's case, here are the latest healthcare industry lawsuits and settlements.
Karen Ignagni, president and CEO of America's Health Insurance Plans, is leaving to lead the New York City-based nonprofit health plan EmblemHealth.
Following a 15-month investigation into what the Drug Enforcement Administration is calling its largest operation against illegal trafficking of prescription drugs, DEA agents arrested seven physicians and 41 others Wednesday in Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi, according to the New…
A Florida neurologist has agreed to pay the federal government $150,000 to settle allegations that he violated the False Claims Act by providing medically unnecessary services to federal healthcare program beneficiaries, according to the Department of Justice.