Click here to return to the NurseWeek.com Homepage  

Bad Request (Invalid Hostname)

 
 
Search Site
Select Year:
Search Term:
 
Job Search

Nursing Careers

Career Fairs

Facility & Agency Profiles

Resume Builder

Career Advice

Resources

Salary Wizard

Spotlight On

Career Assessment
Tool


 


Education/CE Marketplace

Unlimited CE

Event Guide

CE Direct

Nursing Schools

Resources

NCLEX Information

 


Weekly Features

Archives

In the News Today

Dear Donna

Nursing Shortage

Up Front

5 Minutes With

NurseWeek/AONE Survey

 
 
Video Health Library

Flu Report

Pollen Report

Nursing Calculators
 




E-Talk

   

 

Understanding Medicare, keeping tabs on practioners

 
Print this article E-Mail this article
 

The Medicare Rights Center is the largest independent source of Medicare information and assistance in the United States. It is designed to help older adults and those with disabilities obtain high-quality, affordable health care. The user-friendly website helps seniors navigate the Medicare maze and understand their benefits. A “Question of the Week” on the front page lists common questions such as “Will Medicare pay for a power-operated vehicle?” “Does Medicare cover mammograms?” “Will Medicare pay for glaucoma screenings?” The answers are straightforward and easy to understand. The site also features resources for discount prescriptions and a reference guide called “Let’s Learn Medicare!”

Musculoskeletal injuries

The American Nurses Association has developed a campaign called Handle with Care in an effort to prevent back and other musculoskeletal injuries through greater education and training and increased use of assistive equipment and patient-handling devices. The campaign also seeks to reshape nursing education and federal and state ergonomics policy.

Materials on the website include a position statement, fact sheet, tip sheet, and statements on ergonomic safety in the workplace. The tip sheet provides an outline for how facilities should begin to implement changes in the ergonomic policies of their facilities. An additional link to information on ergonomic guidelines specific to nursing homes is provided.

Stroke prevention

The National Stroke Association, founded in 1984, is the preeminent organization committed to fighting stroke in the United States. The association is aggressively taking steps to reduce the incidence and impact of stroke. The website provides information for patients about the risk factors, treatments, types of stroke, and prevention. Resource materials include a reducing risk fact sheet, stroke and high blood pressure fact sheet, and a transient ischemic attack brochure. The professional resource center offers continuing education, clinical trial programs, publications, announcements, and prevention guidelines.

HIPAA rules

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act Privacy Rule is the first comprehensive federal protection for the privacy of personal health information. HIPAA affects everyone who works in health care-related fields including those in research. Complete details of HIPAA can be downloaded at the National Institutes of Health HIPAA Privacy Rule website.

The site also provides a HIPAA dictionary in which terms and definitions are described and summarized; a page of frequently asked questions; links to related state, federal, and nongovernment resources; and a booklet that describes the specifics of clinical research and the HIPAA Privacy Rule.

Malpractice database

On occasion, reports surface about physicians and other health care practitioners who have slipped through the cracks and been allowed to practice at multiple facilities when known violations exist. The National Practitioner Data Bank was enacted when Congress determined that the increasing occurrence of medical malpractice litigation was becoming a problem too large to be managed by individual states.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and other government organizations now are responsible for managing the data bank, which is an alert—or flagging—system that identifies practitioners’ licensure, professional society memberships, medical malpractice payment history, and record of clinical privileges. This information is available only to entities that meet eligibility requirements so that only the appropriate sources have access to this confidential material.

 
 
 


Carol Lindsay works as an emergency room nurse at Lakeview Hosptial in Bountiful, Utah. Send e-mail to
carol@lindsay.net or visit www.nurseweek.com/etalk.