What is OIG in Healthcare?
OIG in healthcare stands for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) – the Office within the HHS responsible for reducing waste, fraud, and abuse in HHS programs and improving efficiency. The Office is the largest OIG in any Federal Department, and employs more than 1,650 auditors, evaluators, and investigators, who are supported by teams of staff with legal, technological, and analytical experience. The Background to the Office of Inspector General The Office of Inspector General for the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (as the HHS OIG was known as at the time) was created in 1976 to “supervise, coordinate, and provide policy direction for auditing and investigative activities relating to programs and operations of the Department”. The Office was also tasked by Congress to detect and prevent fraud and abuse in programs financed by the Department, and to promote efficiency within the Department. One of the first tasks undertaken by the newly created OIG in healthcare was to establish the OIG HHS Exclusions List as required by...
Assessing Healthcare Compliance Gaps
Assessing healthcare compliance gaps can be challenging due to first having to identify which healthcare regulations and standards an organization is required to comply with before it is possible to compare the required state of compliance with the existing state of compliance in order to identify where gaps exist. Organizations in the healthcare industry have to comply with many different federal, state, and industry laws. They may also choose to adopt voluntary standards to maintain a professional accreditation or to demonstrate a good faith effort to be compliant. Due to the number of laws, standards, and other regulations, there are many examples of when compliant efforts can conflict with each other or duplicate each other. The number of conflicts and duplications can make assessing healthcare compliance gaps challenging. In addition, one of the most important laws affecting healthcare compliance – HIPAA – includes a clause that permits a “flexibility of approach” when deciding which security measures to implement. This clause could exempt an organization from complying with...
PHI Exposure Reported by Lone Peak Physical Therapy and First Choice Dental
Patient Records Potentially Viewed at Lone Peak Physical Therapy Lone Peak Physical Therapy, the operator of 10 physical therapy centers in Montana, had a break-in at its Bozeman billing office and clinical space on October 21, 2023. The robbery was detected on Monday, October 23, 2023, when staff returned to work. The robbery was reported to law enforcement and an inventory was conducted to determine which items had been stolen. They included a safe containing patient payments, billing information, and laptop computers. The laptop computers were encrypted so data on those devices cannot be accessed, nor can they be used to access the network. If the intruder attempts to pawn any of the stolen data, the Gallatin County Sheriff’s Department will be notified. There were locked filing cabinets in the office that contained hard copies of patient records. Lone Peak Physical Therapy said none of the hard copies appear to have been removed, but it is not possible to tell if any of those files were viewed. The files contained the records of 5,809 patients and out of an abundance of...
ONC Publishes HTI-1 Final Rule
The Health Data, Technology, and Interoperability: Certification Program Updates, Algorithm Transparency, and Information Sharing (HTI-1) Final Rule was published in the Federal Register today (January 9, 2024) by the HHS’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) and will take effect on March 11, 2024. The Final Rule implements provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act and updates the ONC Health IT Certification Program with new and updated standards to promote valid, safe, effective, and fair development and implementation of AI systems, in line with the principles and priorities of President Biden’s Executive Order 14110: Safe, Secure and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence. The Final Rule is intended to advance ONC-certified health IT interoperability, algorithm transparency, and data standardization to improve patient outcomes and reduce healthcare costs and implements. The Final Rule establishes new requirements for transparency for AI and other predictive algorithms that are part of ONC-certified health IT, which is...
How Patient Financing Solutions Can Improve Patient Outcomes
Patients are more inclined to seek medical care and follow through with essential treatments when healthcare providers offer patient financing solutions. Providing patients with the option of manageable monthly payments, healthcare providers ease the financial burden on patients and empower them to access the treatment they need. Benefits To Healthcare Providers Stronger Cash Flow – Flexible financing options enable patients to be consistent and reliable with their payments. Reduced AR – Reduce accounts receivable numbers, dramatically and quickly. More Focus On Patients – Patient financing and other convenient payment solutions allows healthcare staff to spend more time on patient care and less time handling financial issues and chasing patients for payment. More Patients – Healthcare providers who offer digital payment solutions, including patient financing attract more patients. Recent studies show that younger patients in particular are willing to switch to healthcare providers that offer digital finance and payment solutions. Improved Operating Margins –...



