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Legal Updates

The Pandemic’s End: What Do the Ending National Emergency Proclamations Mean for Healthcare?

Emily Johnson, JD  |  April 21, 2023

As COVID-19 case counts fade from the headlines and people return to their pre-pandemic routines, rheumatologists and rheumatology professionals may be wondering what “the end” of COVID-19 is going to look like for them. Much of that answer lies in the status of the federal emergencies that have been declared in response to COVID-19. These…

Speak Out Rheum: To Prescribe Is Humane (Unless You’re In Texas)

Raymond Scalettar, MD, DSc  |  November 7, 2022

You are a rheumatologist in Texas. You are very well trained. Your mentors included some of the leaders in rheumatology, and you are respected by your colleagues and your patients. You know the devastation of untreated rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. A young woman with recent onset of systemic lupus erythematosus is your new patient. You…

How to Tackle Due Diligence in Advance of Selling Your Practice

Emily A. Johnson, JD  |  October 11, 2022

Healthcare businesses are a hot commodity in the market today. A buyer may even be interested in your healthcare practice right now. Whether or not you’ve gone down the road of selling your practice before, the process can be stressful and time consuming. A lot of the time and stress centers around one aspect of…

How to Navigate the Employment Offer

Emily A. Johnson, JD  |  September 6, 2022

There’s nothing quite as exciting as answering a phone call to hear the words: “You’re hired.” After hours of research and preparation, multiple interviews and a healthy dose of daydreaming about your first day, you’ve made it across the finish line. Except for one final hurdle—the negotiation process. Don’t overlook it. The negotiation process is…

Where Do Rules End & Compassion Begin?

Joel M. Kremer, MD, MACR  |  September 5, 2022

My long-standing patient with CRST syndrome (i.e., calcinosis cutis, Raynaud’s phenomenon, sclerodactyly and telangiectasia) had been losing ground over the past 18 months. BL was 54 and had developed restrictive pulmonary disease without radiographic pulmonary infiltrates. Her mean right heart pressures were moderately elevated by ultrasonography. But the greatest impact on her quality of life…

Set Up to Fail: The Criminalization of Clinical Practice

Philip Seo, MD, MHS  |  May 12, 2022

On Dec. 27, 2017, RaDonda Vaught killed Charlene Murphey, allegedly. Ms. Murphey was a lifelong resident of Gallatin, a suburb of Nashville, Tenn. She was well known from having worked at the local Walmart for 24 years, before she retired in 2012, when she was 65 years old.1 On Dec. 24, 2017, she was helping…

New No-Surprises Rules May Affect Rheumatology Services at Hospitals

Emily A. Johnson, JD  |  April 15, 2022

This month, we offer an overview of the federal No Surprises Act, which stipulates that healthcare insurers may not surprise patients with out-of-network care bills, instead requiring healthcare providers and insurers to broker price compromises between themselves. The No Surprises Act, enacted on a bipartisan basis in December 2020, protects patients from surprise billing from…

New Healthcare Price Transparency Requirements Are Complicated & Vary by State

Emily A. Johnson, JD  |  December 16, 2021

Healthcare law is ever changing, particularly with regard to price transparency. Key healthcare leaders and stakeholders have long argued for more stringent price transparency regulations in an effort to increase patient awareness regarding the cost of a hospital item or service prior to receiving the service. Such information is anticipated to enable patients to take…

HIPAA and PHI Cybersecurity Best Practices in the COVID-19 Era

Steven M. Harris, Esq.  |  September 14, 2021

When the first SARS-CoV-2 case was recorded, it was difficult to appreciate the extent to which cybersecurity concerns, particularly in connection to the protection of patient healthcare data, would enter into main­stream consciousness. Although many practices and healthcare organizations have recently adopted additional measures to safeguard patients’ protected health information (PHI) through expanded cybersecurity monitoring,…

The 21st Century Cures Act Information-Blocking Rule

Steven M. Harris, Esq.  |  April 17, 2021

The 21st Century Cures Act (Cures Act) became law on Dec. 13, 2016, and emphasized interoperability in the exchange of healthcare information between healthcare providers, health information entities and patients. The Cures Act underscored unimpeded access to patient electronic health information (EHI) upon request, in a manner that is secure and updated automatically, and prohibits…

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