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Practice Support Newsletter
December 2023
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Diversity Moment: Why is it Important to Reduce Implicit Bias
A few months back we talked about minimizing Implicit Bias in the primary care practice setting. We did not discuss WHY it is important to do so. What are the benefits? Why should practices care? Here are a few reasons:
- Improves patient experience & satisfaction. Satisfied patients tend to return for additional treatment (reducing no-show rates) AND recommend your practice to others.
- Supports an environment of inclusion and builds patient trust. Practices can tap into community resources and foster networks that help impact the communities in which they practice. This, in turn, may decrease disparities in care among different groups.
- Improves patient compliance with care and treatment goals. Patients that are satisfied and feel included may feel more involved in decision making and can be more compliant with meeting goals set by the care team. These steps tend to create better health outcomes for patients.
For additional reading on Implicit Bias, please refer to the Joint Commission Quick Safety Issue 23: Implicit Bias in Healthcare (April 2016).
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South Piedmont AHEC Continuing Education Suggestion
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Safety Stuff That Matters! A Compliance Webinar Series
This FREE series is a monthly, 1-hour session which will educate clinical and leadership staff about clinical compliance concerns at the practices that could affect patient safety. This monthly series will be held on the third Wednesday of each month starting January 17, 2024, from 12 PM – 1 PM. Topics include:
- OSHA is Here! No Need to Fear
- Who’s on First: The Role of the Infection Control Coordinator
- TIME OUT!! Management of a Blood Exposure
- No Wet Packages: Instrument Processing Done Correctly and Efficiently
- One Needle, One Syringe: Safe Injection Practices
Register now with South Piedmont AHEC
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NC Medicaid's New Innovations Waiver Dashboard
NC Medicaid has introduced an Innovations Waiver Waitlist dashboard to improve service delivery to individuals in need. This dashboard provides valuable insights into the individuals on the waitlist, categorized by county and LME/MCO. Its purpose is to ensure timely and appropriate services in appropriate settings.
NC Medicaid is continuously improving the dashboard and plans to expand its information to enhance our understanding of the population awaiting NC Innovations Waiver services.
For more details, please visit the following link: New NC Medicaid Dashboard - Innovations Waiver Waitlist.
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MIPS Data Validation Audits Have Begun!
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has contracted with Guidehouse to conduct MIPS Data validation Audits. The notification of selection and requests for information began in November and will continue through March 2024 with ad hoc requests through the end of 2024.
How do I know if my group or provider was selected?
- Be on the lookout for an email that will come from MIPS_DVA_Request@guidehouse.com
- The email will be sent to the person named as the Security Official in your HARP account.
What should I do to prepare?
- Ensure contact information is correct in the HARP platform.
- Review the “MIPS Data Validation and Audit (DVA) Factsheet PY 2022” by navigating to QPP Resource Library, completing a quick search and downloading the PDF.
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2023 MIPS Extreme and Uncontrollable Circumstances Exception and MIPS Promoting Interoperability Performance Category Hardship Exception Applications
The MIPS EUC Exception application for the 2023 performance year is now available and will close at 8 p.m. ET on January 2, 2024. If you believe you’ve been affected by an extreme and uncontrollable circumstance, you can apply for this exception whether reporting traditional MIPS, MVPs, or the APM Performance Pathway (APP)
For more information and to apply for an exception, visit QPP. |
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Don't Miss Out on Coding 99401 for Counseling Families on the new RSV Monoclonal Antibody!
Are you counseling families about the new RSV monoclonal antibody, Beyfortus? While Beyfortus may currently be in short supply there is probably no shortage of questions about it!
CPT 99401 may be used for counseling for children 0-19 months and may be billed once per day for providing education and counseling about the new RSV monoclonal antibody. There are no limits on the number of times the education may be provided to an eligible beneficiary's family. For more information see NC Medicaid Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) Guidelines for 2023-2024. |
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Upcoming ICD-10 Update Includes New Codes for Parkinson's and Other Conditions
The diagnosis codes on your claims sometimes play as big a role in determining whether you get paid as the service or procedure codes, so it’s important to prepare for the upcoming update to the ICD-10-CM. The update is effective for patient encounters on or after Oct. 1, 2023, and includes additions, deletions, and revisions to diagnosis codes common in family medicine.
For example, the current single code for Parkinson’s disease (G20) is expanding into these five codes:
- G20.A1 (Parkinson's disease without dyskinesia, without mention of fluctuations),
- G20.A2 (Parkinson’s disease without dyskinesia, with fluctuations),
- G20.B1 (Parkinson's disease with dyskinesia, without mention of fluctuations),
- G20.B2 (Parkinson’s disease with dyskinesia, with fluctuations),
- G20.C (Parkinsonism, unspecified).
ICD-10-CM is similarly expanding Z83.71 (“Family history of colonic polyps”) into four more specific codes:
- Z83.710 (Family history of adenomatous and serrated polyps),
- Z83.711 (Family history of hyperplastic colon polyps),
- Z83.718 (Other family history of colon polyps),
- Z83.719 (Family history of colon polyps, unspecified).
There will also be a new family of codes for chronic migraine with aura (G43.E-) and a new code for “Resistant hypertension” (I1A.0).
A complete set of the ICD-10-CM code changes that are effective Oct. 1 is available in the “Downloads” section of the 2024 ICD-10-CM webpage on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ website.
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South Piedmont AHEC – Formerly Charlotte AHEC Part of the NC AHEC Program
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