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Care Coordination/Care Management

Care coordination facilitates the appropriate delivery of health care services by integrating care activities across multiple providers who are dependent upon each other to carry out disparate activities in a single patient’s care. Every participant requires adequate knowledge about his/her own and others’ roles, as well as about available resources, and must rely on the exchange of information to acquire this knowledge.  Care coordination involves entities such as Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) and Medical/Health Homes; communication and sharing of information between and among providers; treatment, discharge, and transfer planning; and disease management.

Myth Buster: HIPAA prevents patients and families from accessing PHI



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Myth Buster: There are no required disclosures under HIPAA



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Myth Buster: Patient authorization is always required to release records under HIPAA



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Fast Facts: Patient Authorization Requirements to Disclose Health Information



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President's Budget Addresses Use and Disclosure of Health Information



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Medicare Releases Inpatient and Outpatient Hospital Charge Data

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released in May 2013 the average charges of more than 3,000 hospitals for the 100 most common Medicare inpatient procedures. On June 3, 2013, CMS also unveiled selected hospital outpatient data, including estimated average charges for 30 types of hospital outpatient procedures for Medicare beneficiaries.

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Fast Facts: What is the Meaningful Use Program?



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Fast Facts: What are HIOs and PHRs?



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Myth Buster: Healthcare providers violate HIPAA if they share patient information with public health authorities without first obtaining patient consent



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Fast Facts: For What Purposes do Public Health Agencies Use Patient Health Data?



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