Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions with Full Rationale Answers

Practice Exam

Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions and answers with full rationale

Practice Exam

CPC Practice Exam and Study Guide Package

Practice Exam

What makes a good CPC Practice Exam? Questions and Answers with Full Rationale

CPC Exam Review Video

Laureen shows you her proprietary “Bubbling and Highlighting Technique”

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Practice Exam

2018 CPC Practice Exam Answer Key 150 Questions With Full Rationale (HCPCS, ICD-9-CM, ICD-10, CPT Codes) Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions with Full Rationale Answers

Practice Exam

Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions and answers with full rationale

Day 3 of HEALTHCON Regional Wraps Up Another Successful Conference

This year’s HEALTHCON Regional in Denver, Colo. Aug. 3-5, was a whirlwind of excitement, education, networking, and entertainment for professionals on both the revenue and clinical sides of healthcare. Attendees of this hybrid event had the opportunity to chat up friends and colleagues, visit with exhibitors, participate in prize-winning challenges, and attend a groovy disco […]

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AAPC Knowledge Center

A Successful Coding Career Starts With You

Breaking into medical coding requires resourcefulness and perseverance. From the very beginning of your medical coding career, there is one trait that will serve you well: resourcefulness. It is a skill that not everybody has, which becomes evident when speaking to new coders trying to break into the field. Misrepresentation of our line of work […]

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AAPC Knowledge Center

Build a Successful Outpatient CDI Program

Knowing when and how to query providers is key. Documentation deficiencies occur in both outpatient and inpatient settings, but clinical documentation integrity (CDI) programs have been implemented primarily in the inpatient setting only. Poor documentation can impact code assignment, reimbursement, and patient care in any setting. As most organizations strive for excellence in these areas, […]

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AAPC Knowledge Center

Ensure a Successful End to 2019!

I would like to take this opportunity to say thank you for serving as a local chapter officer! Without Local chapter officers we would not have successful local chapters. With year-end rapidly approaching, let’s go over the year end checklist to make sure your chapter is set up to make 2020 a successful year as […]

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AAPC Knowledge Center

May MAYnia Was Successful (As Usual!)

94% of all chapters participated in MAYnia either by sponsoring a seminar or hosting a meeting *11,730 members attended meetings (*Information available to date) 387 meetings were held 72 seminars were held To raise excitement for MAYnia we sponsored contests in March and April. We are proud to spotlight the eight chapters that had the […]

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AAPC Knowledge Center

Plan and Execute a Successful Annual Event

Host an event that offers your members CEUs, speakers, vendors, and networking ― and boost your finances. By Stephanie L. Moore, CPC, CPMA AAPC local chapters that are most successful have something in common: They host an annual event. Annual events are the primary way to produce income for your chapter, which in turn enables […]

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AAPC Knowledge Center

Your Chapter Can Be Successful if you Follow These Steps

Step #1 – Hold an officers’ meeting: Get acquainted with one another. The most successful chapters have leaders who work as a team and communicate openly. Together, review the responsibilities and general expectations of each officer as outlined in the 2019 Local Chapter Handbook. Allow each person to fulfill his or her respective role. Respect […]

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AAPC Knowledge Center

10 things you should know to ensure successful discharge planning

10 things you should know to ensure successful discharge planning

Learning objective

At the completion of this educational activity, the learner will be able to:

  • Identify strategies to comply with proposed Medicare changes to the discharge process

 

One of the more challenging aspects of a case manager’s job is helping to ensure a patient successfully transfers from the hospital to the next level of care. Under a set of proposed revisions to Medicare’s Conditions of Participation (CoP) announced in November 2015. This job may get even harder, more specific, and apply to more patients. The changes, among other things, will require hospitals, including critical access hospitals, to create discharge plans for more patients. Case managers will need a more direct plan to include patients and their caregivers in the discharge planning process, in particular taking into account their individual "goals and preferences." This discharge planning process will also need to start sooner?within 24 hours of admission instead.

So what can you do to ensure your organization is up for the challenge? In an April webinar titled "Discharge Planning: Realignment of Standards and Workflow," speaker Jackie Birmingham, RN, BSN, MS, CMAC, vice president emerita of clinical leadership for Curaspan Health Group in Newton, Massachusetts, and Janet L. Blondo, MSW, LCSW-C, LICSW, CMAC, ACM, CCM, the manager of case management at Washington Adventist Hospital in Takoma Park, Maryland, offered up some compliance tips that you can use to ensure your hospital is ready:

1.Assess your current discharge process. Under the proposed changes, the discharge planning process needs to start in the first 24 hours after the patient arrives at the facility. You’ll need to identify how your current processes work in order to make sure they comply with this timeline. Identify your current workflow?specifically, who does what, why they do it, and how it’s done. Ask the following questions:

  • What is your current case management model?
  • Who’s on your team?
  • What’s their role?
  • Who does the screening right now in the current
  • Who does the patient assessment?
  • Who makes referrals when you need to refer patients for services?
  • In your current model, do the nurses perform the assessment for patients who go home while the social workers do the placements? Or do you have nurses and social workers assess everyone? "If you’re having all your patients assessed right now, well, you’re ahead of the game already, because that’s the new proposal," said Blondo.

 

Also think about why your processes were designed the way they are. "If you have it on one unit a certain way and not on another, think about what you need to do to change your practice so that perhaps every unit you can do assessment on every patient," said Blondo. "If your model is something that doesn’t seem to make sense with the proposal, what can you do to change it?"

Changes to bring the model in line could include adding technology (e.g., laptops, tablets) to speed up the process, adding staff members, or reassigning current staff members. "Perhaps some of your social workers can do UR," said Blondo. Alternatively, maybe a staff nurse can do an initial assessment instead of a case manager, or perhaps a nonclinical staff member can take over certain tasks. Taking the time to examine your current processes and think about how they can be switched up to meet the new requirements will give you the foundation for a new plan.

2.Drill documentation. Hold physicians accountable for following through and documenting discharge plans and dates. "If they’re documenting in the chart the discharge date and plan, that makes your job a little easier, because you have that in the chart already and can discuss that with the patient and their family," said Blondo. Take advantage of pre-procedure assessments by ensuring they are included in the chart, then making sure staff members follow through on that plan. "You don’t want Joint Commission or the state coming to do their survey and then you find out the assessment is not getting done because your staff has decided they want to do something different. So make sure everyone is doing the same," said Blondo.

3.Focus on delays. Use these potential discharge changes in the CoPs as an opportunity for process improvement. Look at what’s causing delays in your current process?use this information to improve systems and boost patient satisfaction. "You’re going to improve, perhaps, length of stay with this increased attention with discharge planning," said Blondo.

4.Make rounds count. If you are currently using rounds, examine what they’re being used for and how they’re working. Blondo says it’s important to ask:

  • Are rounds being used for discharge planning?
  • Are they used for the patient experience to improve your scores?
  • Are they used for throughput or for some other reason?

 

After thinking about the current purpose your rounds serve, consider how they can be modified to fit your new objectives. "Many people just do one type of rounds per day, but you could actually be creative with these. There are some hospitals that I know of that divide rounds into different parts of the day," said Blondo. "For instance, you might want to think about doing rounds early in the morning for those patients that will be discharged [later] that day." The discussion could center on determining whether those patients are prepared to leave and have the right resources. Another idea is to add rounds to the short-stay area or outpatient area for procedures done late in the day. "And if you have case managers in the emergency room, you could ask them to round for those areas, catching any patients that might need something late in the day after your regular case management staff have left," said Blondo.

5.Understand patient options. This topic includes both big-picture and smaller issues. Case managers should focus on patient-based issues, which relate to talking to the patient, as well as on setting the patient’s broader goals and preferences. The organization’s systems must be set up to give patients a choice of postacute options. But keep in mind, when working with patients, you’ll always come across those who don’t like what you’re doing or who don’t agree with you and want to go another direction. "You need to have something standardized and something that you can fall back on when you’re presented with a patient and family who, in their eyes, have a reasonable goal and clinically or medically or psychosocially, they don’t," said Birmingham. Staff members must understand the concept of patient choice. "The staff must be comfortable that they are doing the right thing for the patient and the right thing for networks and the right thing for the organization."

It’s also important for staff to understand that the patient has the right to refuse the plan. "[The patient] may be in denial. They may be suffering grief," said Birmingham. The hospital should have a policy for patients leaving against medical advice (AMA), but case management must have its own discharge planning policy for those leaving AMA. In these instances, it’s not just enough to have the patient sign a paper, but rather actively assist the patient with the transition by ensuring that he or she has transportation and needed prescriptions. Even though there is an exemption for patients who signed out AMA and are readmitted the hospital, the hospital should have a plan for how to work with these patients, said Birmingham., said Birmingham.

You should also consider planning for a patient’s deficits related to loss of functioning, whether it be ADLs or IADLs. Birmingham recommended asking the following questions:

  • Is the patient medicated and therefore unable to participate in planning?
  • Does the patient need to have a conservatorship?
  • Is there conflict among the patient’s children or the patient’s siblings?
  • Does the patient have a family or responsible person?
  • Is the patient appealing the discharge?

 

A plan should be in place to address the answers to these questions.

6.Help patients achieve their goals. This is something that organizations should have been doing all along, but there is much more emphasis on it now. A problem arises when the patient’s goals and preferences don’t align with what is medically necessary or what is reasonable and necessary. In these instances, it may be wise to involve social workers. "Look at some of the things that patients might be going through?denial, grief that might affect their decision-making at the time," said Birmingham. "With the family dynamics, there might be family members trying to convince the patient to make a decision that isn’t really what the patient wants." Ultimately, the goal is to help the patient make the decision that is best for him or her, but also to think about what is medically the best option.

7.Involve the physician. Physicians are an integral part of discharge planning, so it’s important to make sure they are actively involved in the process. This communication between the patient and the physician needs to be sensitive to generational and cultural differences. "To involve perhaps some of the older patients, just have the doctor come in and say, ‘We want you to do this,’ " said Blondo. "That might not work for younger generation or baby boomers who are used to rebelling, but if you have the doctor come in and say, ‘This is what we’re recommending and this is why’ and help the patient to understand why it is recommended."

While it may be easier to foster good communication if you’re working with a hospitalist, it can be more of a challenge if the physician is community based. "How will you manage when the patient is transferred to another facility? It’s not been a problem if you’re transferring the patient to another hospital, but if that patient is being transferred to a SNF, there haven’t been that many times when the doctors have called to the doctor in that SNF to give them an update," said Blondo. Have a plan in place to ensure the communication lines are always open.

8.Work to decrease unplanned readmissions and improve patient outcomes. "Readmissions are an old problem with new incentives," said Birmingham. Readmissions can be strongly linked to location and patient access to resources, which shows that they often depend on factors other than the medical treatment the patient received. This underscores the importance of ensuring your patients have access to things like food and transportation when they leave the facility. "Is your [patient’s] area in a food desert? No car, no supermarket store within a mile?and that makes a huge difference," said Birmingham. If this is the case, your organization might want to develop or contact an existing program that delivers food to the homes of qualifying individuals. "Home health agencies could do that too for some programs to be able to provide some fresh groceries to some patients," she said.

Also find out if your patient has been readmitted in the past, a risk factor for readmissions. "You can look to see if a patient is readmitted from an acute level of care, but you’ll need to ask the patient if they’ve been in the emergency room in the past 30 days, if they were admitted from a facility SNF," said Blondo. "Often, that information is sent with them to the hospital, but you can ask them." Ask if the patient was receiving home health services prior to admission. Encourage physicians to include this type of information in the history and physical to ensure it won’t be missed.

"We’re never going to be perfect and have no readmissions, because some patients have a legitimate need to come back to the hospital within those 30 days, but look at your readmissions. Learn from who is coming back and think about what strategies you can put in place for that," said Blondo.

9.Keep the focus where it belongs. "Discharge planning is a patient-centered function," said Birmingham. "You can do utilization review without talking to the patient. You can do quality improvement without talking to the patient and family, but you can’t do discharge planning." For this reason, discharge planning can be very rewarding to clinicians who want to be involved in the patient’s care, and to be there for them when they’re at their most vulnerable.

10.Take your cues from the experts. While Medicare’s CoPs aren’t a cookbook on how to run your organization, they are a good place to start because they’re based on years of evidence. "Many of the changes in the original CoPs happen because commenters send in a comment to CMS and CMS responded and actually changed the proposed rule," said Birmingham. "Now, will they change these proposed [discharge planning] rules? I don’t think so, and I think that’s because they’ve been published as interpretive guidelines for over two years." That means these discharge changes are likely here to stay. Like all other CoPs, they should be blended into your workflow and your strategies and partnerships with other departments, said Birmingham.

HCPro.com – Case Management Monthly

Lawanna Brock- Successful Freelancer, Medical Writer, And Beauty Consultant

Lawanna Brock, an experienced freelance writer, is also a professional medical writer and a skilled beauty consultant and advisor. As Lawanna Brock is a skilled freelancer, she has done various projects like systematic literature reviews, mega-analysis, project/research papers, resumes, cover letters, articles, blogs etc. and worked on many more such topics that are related to medical areas. In addition to completing the freelance projects, Lawanna Brock has also a working experience of Primary Care Facility Administrator and Family Nurse Practitioner in medical field. She has also taught patient care in clinical unit and the physical, biological and pharmacological subjects to nursing students at the Walter State Community College. Now days, she is about to complete her PhD with an Accredited University studying Health Psychology.

Besides being a master is medical field, Lawanna Brock is also talented in designing and developing advertisements. She has established variety of newspaper advertisements, business cards, thank you cards, flyers, new patient welcome cards, job postings, and many more for her clients. She is also expert in using Adobe Reader 9, Acrobat, Microsoft Professional 2010 with Excel and Publisher Programs, PowerPoint, and EndNote too. Lawanna Brock has also worked on research papers and reports in the APA and AMA format for the welfare of her clients.

Moreover, Lawanna Brock has numbers of certifications for her beauty skills. Lawanna has broad knowledge in Laser Facial Procedures and Tattoo Removal, Teeth Whitening, Chemical Facial Peels, Microdermabrasion and Facial Machine Operation. Lawanna Brock has also attended Tennessee School for Beauty and Premier School for Permanent Cosmetics. She got certification in Botox Injection, Gel Nail Application, Permanent Cosmetics, Advanced Makeup Application, Eyelash Tabbing, Advanced Hair Cutting and hair coloration too. She writes various articles on medical esthetics, fashion, skin care, makeup etc. To know more about Lawanna Brock, her experience and other professional skills, browse through the websites- http://www.freelancers.net/getitwrite/profile.html, http://www.linkedin.com/pub/la-wanna-brock/21/98b/911, www.professionalfreelancemedicalwriter.webs.com/ and http://www.elance.com/e/edit/lawana/.

Cherry Benz is a technical writer, researcher and consultant who has a passion of writing and research. She has contributed a lot in technical writing, editing and often do research work for various companies. Nowadays, shes writing medical articles which are her core interest.

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Ways to Become a Successful Medical Malpractice Lawyer

The cases of the medical malpractice are generally the outcome of the negligence of any of the medical professionals. Basically, this includes immoral doing of these medical professionals while they practice their particular profession. So, being a medical malpractice lawyer will prove to be beneficial for you. One would not only earn good money but also the fame and the respect in the industry. And, also helping the people who have been wrongly treated by the medical professionals is a very noble task.

A person should always follow certain type of the instructions before obtaining any professional help from the medical malpractice lawyer. In the beginning, one should be having the degree of law. The degree of the law is the basic requirement before a person thinks for accomplishing the career of the medical malpractice attorney. This implies that the person firstly have to finish the course of the period of four years and then clear this examination is also important if the person wants to be accepted in school of the law.

After the completion of this law course, a person should get the appropriate license to practice law in that place. A thing to be noted here is that each and every different state is having different types of the requirements. So, the person should attain license for the practicing of the law according to the requisites. For such thing, one should consult the state’s government body which is concerned for the law of the medical malpractice. After the completion of these formalities, for becoming the expert as the medical malpractice attorney, a person is required for doing the practice under the guidance of the senior leveled lawyer. This senior lawyer should be chosen who is dealing in cases of the medical malpractice.

One of the means for having good experience as medical malpractice lawyer is basically through performing or working under a nice law firm who deals in the lawsuits of the medical malpractice. Being the member of a renowned law firm dealing in cases of the medical malpractice and having the best experience is a distinct method in order to earn an experience which would be equal to a life time experience for operating the cases of the medical malpractice.

It is very important for a person to find an appropriate law firm dealing in the medical malpractice. This will definitely give a person the chance in studying the unexpected and the least possible details that are involved in the cases of the medical malpractice. A person should thoroughly study every single law that is related with medical malpractices. Without the knowledge of related law exactly, a person cannot become a medical malpractice lawyer.

For becoming a very successful medical malpractice attorney, one should always be ready for providing necessary help to those people who are suffering because of the negligence of the medical professionals. The sufferer of the medical malpractice goes to medical malpractice attorney in the hope that the lawyers will be standing in the court on their behalf.

George Turner gives advice to clients who are looking for attorneys to handle injury related cases. To know more about the services of medical malpractice, medical malpractice lawyer new york, medical malpractice lawyers new york, medical malpractice law firm, personal injury New York, medical malpractice New York visit www.nbrlawfirm.com .

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