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Are you the parent of a child
with a disability? Did you know that
medical malpractice could be the cause?
Was your child's birth injury caused by nature or medical
malpractice? We can investigate.
Our law firm concentrates on the
litigation of birth injuries nationwide. With an OBGYN, labor/delivery nurse and other experienced medical and legal professionals representing your rights, the
MEDLAW Legal Team offers families and children the resources and
experience necessary to successfully litigate healthcare
negligence claims.
Our medical malpractice attorneys focus on the representation of
families whose children have developed a disability as a
result of negligent medical care.
877-208-5484 |
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Healthcare Glossary of Terms
- Also See:
Cerebral Palsy Glossary
Any Willing Provider Laws
- Legislation that requires managed care
plans to accept into their networks any provider willing to agree to the
network's terms and conditions.
Board Certified
- A physician who has passed examinations
given by a medical specialty group and who has, as a result, been
certified as a specialist in this area of practice.
-
Capitation; Capitated Plan
- A method of paying participating
providers a fixed amount per member per month (PMPM) for each member
assigned to or enrolled with the provider. For these payments, the
provider is obligated to provide or arrange for a defined range of
health services to these members.
-
Case Management
- A process that focuses on the
coordination of services, with the development of an individualized
service or care plan based on the needs of a specific client. The
objective is to assure that the patient is given care in a setting that
meets medical necessity and is the appropriate level of care to ensure
the best outcome. A component of "Utilization Management" (see below).
-
Coinsurance
- Percentage of benefit payments made by
members of the health care plan (e.g. 20 percent of the charge for
covered services). Coinsurance differentials may be included in a plan
design to encourage use of network providers. Coinsurance also may be
included to discourage inappropriate utilization, to help finance a
health care plan, and to have members share the cost of their health
care.
-
Concurrent Review
- Monitoring of the medical treatment and
progress toward recovery once a patient is admitted to a hospital to
assure timely delivery of services and to confirm the necessity of
continued inpatient care. This monitoring is under the direction of
medical professionals. A component of "Utilization Management" (see
below).
-
Coordinated Care
- Links the treatments or services
necessary to obtain an optimum level of medical care required by a
patient from appropriate providers. It is also another term for "Managed
Care" used by federal government officials.
-
Copayment
- The flat dollar amount paid by members
of a health care plan for designated benefits (such as $10 or $15 per
office visit at the time of service). Copayments may be included in a
plan design to discourage inappropriate utilization, to help finance a
health care plan, and to have members share the cost of their health
care.
-
Cost Sharing
- Having the users of a health care plan
share in the cost of medical care. Deductibles, coinsurance, and
copayments are all examples of cost sharing.
-
Credentialing
- The process used by managed care
companies to examine and verify the medical qualifications of health
care providers before admitting them to the health network.
-
Deductibles
- A pre-defined flat dollar amount paid by
members of a health care plan toward the cost of covered services before
the plan begins to pay benefits.
-
Defensive Medicine
- Use of unnecessary treatments,
procedures or other medical services by doctors to minimize the threat
of a malpractice lawsuit.
-
Discharge Planning
- Medical personnel of a health plan
working with the attending physician and hospital staff to assess
alternatives to hospitalization, evaluate appropriate settings for care,
and arrange for the discharge of a patient, including planning for
subsequent care at home or in a skilled nursing facility. The goal is to
determine when patients are ready to go home, and to provide a more
comfortable, cost-efficient setting for continued treatment.
-
Fee-For-Service Insurance
- (See Indemnity Insurance).
Gatekeeper
- A primary care physician in a managed
care environment who is responsible for managing the patient's overall
care and who must authorize all specialist referrals. In most health
maintenance organizations (HMOs), the secondary care is not covered by
insurance if the primary care physician does not approve it.
-
HMO
- One of the ways medical care is
provided. The HMO contracts with physicians in a community to serve as
Primary Care Physicians for patients covered by the HMO. Physicians in
the HMO provide health care to the members for a fixed (capitated) fee
or for a discounted rate. Delivery of health care is managed by each
member's Primary Care Physician, who personally provides the care or
refers the patient to a specialist.
- There are several types of HMOs:
-
Group Model HMO
- The HMO contracts with a
multi-specialty medical group to provide care for HMO members at a
negotiated fee. HMO members are required to receive all medical care
from the physicians in the group, unless referral is made to an
outside physician.
-
Independent Practice Association (IPA) Model HMO
- An arrangement where the HMO
contracts with an IPA to provide comprehensive health care for a
negotiated fee. The IPA is a group of independent physicians that
has organized to contract with managed care health plans. The
physicians continue in their existing individual or single-specialty
group practices. Physicians are compensated for their services by
the IPA on a per capita, fee schedule, or fee-for-service basis.
-
Network Model HMO
- The least centralized form of
HMO. The HMO health plan contracts with individual physicians or
physician groups (who are not part of an IPA) to provide care for a
negotiated fee. Physicians work out of their own offices and do not
necessarily provide care exclusively for HMO members.
-
Staff Model HMO
- The most centralized form of an
HMO. The physicians are contracted or salaried employees hired to
provide care for members of the HMO exclusively. Premiums and
revenues go to the HMO.
-
Mixed Model HMO
- Elements of two or more of the
models above.
-
Indemnity Insurance
- Traditional health insurance, sometimes
call "Fee-For-Service" insurance. Patients may choose any physician or
hospital, and the insurance company will reimburse a certain percentage
of costs, usually after the patient pays an annual deductible.
Copayments and deductibles today are growing as companies find it more
difficult to afford this type of insurance coverage for their employees.
-
Managed Care
- A coordinated approach to the design,
financing, and delivery of health care, which balances price and
utilization controls with access to high quality care.
-
National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA)
- A national group responsible for
devising and monitoring quality measurements and standards for health
care entities.
-
Network
- Groups of physicians, hospitals and
other health care providers working with the health plan to offer care
at negotiated rates.
-
Network Provider
- Physicians, hospitals or other providers
of medical services that have agreed to participate in a network, to
offer their services at negotiated rates, and to meet other negotiated
contractual provisions. Also called a "participating provider."
-
Open Enrollment
- A period each year during which
employees have an opportunity to change their employer-provided health
care coverage. They usually can choose among various plans from
different health insurance providers.
-
Outcomes Measurement
- A process of systematically tracking a
patient's clinical treatment and responses to that treatment, including
measures of morbidity and functional status following treatment.
-
Per Member Per Month (PMPM)
- A fixed amount paid to a provider on a
periodic basis.
-
Point of Service (POS)
- This health care product operates like a
conventional HMO, with a primary care physician who acts as the
patients' family doctor and refers them to specialist and ancillary
services. With a POS plan, however, employees who want to see a
specialist have the option of going directly to specialists and
ancillary care providers. In that case, a form of indemnity insurance
takes over the patient's health care coverage, usually at a less
favorable benefit schedule.
-
PPO (Preferred Provider Organization)
- A form of health insurance that provides
high coverage with low copayments for patients who use physicians within
the PPO network. Patients can choose to use other physicians, but their
copayments are typically higher. Physicians are chosen to become part of
the network as long as they meet certain standards set by the insurance
provider and agree to hold their prices below a set ceiling.
-
Precertification
- The process for reviewing non-emergency
inpatient hospitalizations (as well as selected outpatient procedures)
by comparison with established medical norms to determine appropriate
setting and intensity of service.
-
Primary Care
- Routine health care and well-visit
screening tests (such as pap smears, blood pressure checks) and the
first level of care for disease, illness, or injury.
-
Primary Care Physician
- Typically a family physician, internist,
or pediatrician who is the first doctor patients see before going to
specialists. Primary care physicians usually perform routine physical
examinations, well-baby care, and general diagnostic tests for
illnesses.
-
Providers
- A generic term used to characterize
those who provide health care services, instead of those who receive it,
pay for it, or regulate it. Physicians, hospitals, pharmacies, and
laboratories are examples of "providers."
-
Utilization Review (UR)
- Evaluation of the use of hospital
services, including admission, length of stay, and ancillary services,
using objective clinical criteria. It includes a review of outpatient
costs as well.
Contact a Cerebral
Palsy Lawyer
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