This webinar is a must-attend program for any nurse, physician, or healthcare professional working in healthcare today. It will discuss the importance of documentation to avoid allegations of malpractice, substandard care, accreditation nightmares, and denial of reimbursement. Good concise documentation is the key to preventing claims of fraud and abuse. It is also important if the medical records are reviewed by the Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs), the Office of Inspector General (OIG), or CMS.
This program will help improve documentation skills. It will discuss legal issues in documentation, and the Joint Commission and CMS hospital CoP issues related to documentation requirements. It will provide over 50 recommendations to improve documentation. Many hospitals have seen an increase in documentation problems with the introduction of the electronic health record.
It will cover key problematic Joint Commission and CMS Hospital CoP requirements including some requirements effective November 29, 2019. It will cover what is required to be documented by the Joint Commission record of care chapter. It will help identify issues that need to be documented in order to be reimbursed by CMS and to avoid allegations of fraud and abuse and improper documentation by the RACs (recovery audit contractors). Is medical necessity documented in light of the two-midnight rule? It will include the requirement for the MOON form for outpatient observation patients and there is a new form in 2020. CMS now requires all patients who stay overnight to have an order that the patient is either an inpatient or placed in an outpatient observation bed.
It will cover the importance of documenting the presence of things like pressure ulcers which are one of the 14 hospital-acquired conditions (HACs) in which there will be no additional payment so hospitals could lose money if this is present on admission and not documented. This program will also assist in determining the fields that should be present as hospitals tweak or amend electronic medical records to capture the elements required by CMS and the Joint Commission.
This program will also include some things hospitals should do and document to prevent unnecessary readmissions. Hospitals will a higher than average rate of readmission are being financially penalized by CMS. This program will discuss how to document to comply with the CMS regulation on visitation including documentation if the patient wants their physician or family notified. This program will help hospitals as they move toward an electronic medical record to discuss some of the CMS and TJC documentation requirements that should be entered as a field. This program will cover the CMS requirements for protocols, standing orders, and order sets and how to document these into the medical record.
Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Chief Operating Officer (COO) Chief Nursing Officer (CNO), Nurse Managers, All Nurses, Nursing Supervisors, Compliance Officer, Joint Commission Coordinator, Quality Improvement Coordinator, Clinic Directors, Consumer Advocates, RAC coordinator, compliance officer, director of regulatory affairs, physicians, Risk Managers, Patient Safety Officer, Staff Nurses, Nurse Educators, Department Directors, Chief Medical Officer (CMO), physicians, Legal Counsel, Documentation Specialist, Health Information Management Director, and staff, department directors, PI director, and staff and anyone involved in the documentation process.
Sue Dill Calloway, R.N., M.S.N, J.D. is a nurse attorney and President of Patient Safety and Healthcare Consulting and Education. She is also the past Chief Learning Officer for the Emergency Medicine Patient Safety Foundation and a current board member. She was a director for risk management and patient safety for five years for the Doctors Company. She was the past VP of Legal Services at a community hospital in addition to being the Privacy Officer and the Compliance Officer. She worked for over 8 years as the Director of Risk Management and Health Policy for the Ohio Hospital Association. She was also the immediate past director of hospital patient safety and risk management for The Doctors Insurance Company in Columbus area for five years. She does frequent lectures on legal and risk management issues and writes numerous publications.
Sue has been a medico-legal consultant for over 30 years. She has done many educational programs for nurses, physicians, and other health care providers on topics such as nursing law, ethics and nursing, malpractice prevention, HIPAA medical record confidentiality, EMTALA anti-dumping law, Joint Commission issues, CMS issues, documentation, medication errors, medical errors, documentation, pain management, federal laws for nursing, sentinel events, MRI Safety, Legal Issues in Surgery, patient safety and other similar topics. She is a leading expert in the country on CMS hospital CoPs issues and does over 250 educational programs per year. She was the first one in the country to be a certified professional in CMS. She also teaches the course for the CMS certification program.
She also writes many articles for Briefing on the Joint Commission. She also writes articles on ambulatory surgery and present educational programs on ambulatory surgery issues. She was affiliated with Mount Carmel College of Nursing as an adjunct nursing professor for over seventeen years. She was also a trial attorney for eight years defending nurses, physicians and healthcare facilities.
She has been employed in the nursing profession for more than 30 years. Ms. Calloway has legal experience in medical malpractice defense for physicians, nurses and other health professionals. She is also certified in healthcare risk management by the American Society of Healthcare Risk Managers.
Ms. Calloway received her AD in nursing from Central Ohio Technical College, her BA, BSN, MSN (summa cum laude) and JD (with honors) degrees are from Capital University in Columbus. She is a member of many professional organizations. She has a certificate in insurance from the American Insurance Institute.
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