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Debunking regulatory myths

UPDATED . 3 MIN READ

AMA’s regulatory myths series provides physicians and their care teams with resources to reduce guesswork and administrative burdens so the focus can be on streamlining clinical workflow processes, improving patient outcomes and increasing physician satisfaction.

Submit your regulatory myth

AMA seeks to aid physicians and care teams by helping them understand medical regulatory requirements. Help us help you—submit a myth you'd like clarification on.

The AMA provides regulatory clarification to physicians and their care teams in an effort to aid physicians in their day-to-day practice environment. 

  1. Advance care planning at Medicare visits

    1. Must advance care planning be addressed at every Medicare visit?

  2. Adherence to Joint Commission standards

    1. Are organizations only held accountable to Joint Commission standards?

  3. Chronic care management consent

    1. Is consent for chronic care management required regularly?

  4. Impact of vital signs on level of service billed

    1. Does the number of vital signs recorded affect billing?

  5. Two-factor authentication for prescriptions

    1. Is two-factor authentication required for all prescriptions?

  6. Review of patient test results

    1. Must all test results be reviewed by patients’ primary care physician?

  7. Admission, discharge and transfer (ADT) messages

    1. Must hospitals send ADT notifications to physicians’ EHR inbox?

  8. EHR gag clauses

    1. Can physicians openly discuss EHR issues?

  9. Protected health information (PHI) disclosures

    1. Does HIPAA require that health care providers obtain patient authorization to disclose PHI for treatment purposes?

  10. Mental health

    1. Must licensing/credentialing bodies probe into clinicians’ past mental health?
  11. Home health agency plan of care (POC) certification

    1. How should physicians sign home care plan of care certifications and recertifications?

  12. Documenting time for each task during outpatient visits

    1. Are physicians and other qualified health professionals required to document the time spent on each specific task associated with an outpatient visit?

  13. Online patient reviews

    1. Are physicians prohibited from responding to online patient reviews?
  14. Preventive/wellness and evaluation and management (E/M) services

    1. Can physicians bill for both preventive and E/M services in the same visit?

  15. EHR documentation

    1. Are clinical support staff required to log out of EHR between documentation?

  16. Verbal orders

    1. Are there regulatory prohibitions on the use of verbal orders?

  17. Ancillary staff and/or patient documentation

    1. Who on the care team can document components of E/M services and what is the physician required to do? 
  18. Commercial health plans and E/M codes

    1. Are commercial health plans required to adopt revisions to the E/M codes?
  19. Computerized Provider Order Entry (CPOE)

    1. Can a nurse, certified medical assistant (MA) or non-credentialed staff enter orders in the EHR as requested by the physician?
  20. Extended prescription duration

    1. How does an extended prescription duration help your patients and your practice?
  21. Food and drink contamination in work spaces

    1. Who determines where physicians and other health care workers can eat or drink while at work?
  22. Medical student documentation

    1. Are teaching physicians required to re-document medical student entries in the patient record? 
  23. Pain assessments

    1. Are clinicians required to ask patients about pain during every consultation, regardless of the reason for the visit?

Stay up to speed on how state and federal law apply to health insurer-related issues.

Debunking Regulatory Myths CME

Interested in earning CME credit? Browse the learning series on AMA Ed Hub™. 

Contact us to share your regulatory myth.

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