For further reading
Old Drugs Can Learn New Tricks
Methotrexate and its mechanism of action
The Microbiome
A voyage to (our inner) Lilliput
Cuts to NIH Funding Affect Programs and Careers
Medical schools tap philanthropic organizatinos and the VA for research dollars
A Look Back with Pride and Appreciation
The many accomplishments of the past year set the stage for a bright, busy future
Your Career’s Election Day
Voting for your future
Dressing Down in Scrubs
Why rheumatologists should consider making this the uniform of choice
FDA Seeks Comments on Drug Shortages
As reported last month (“Rheumatologists Struggle with Drug Shortages,” October 2011, p. 51), a bill (S. 296) proposed in the U.S. Senate would require drug manufacturers to notify the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of factors that might lead to a drug shortage.
Pain Management and the Role of Sleep
Afton L. Hassett, PsyD
Dispelling the Mystery, Ensuring the Future
Bringing calm and organization to chaos: This is what led Greg Dennis, MD, to pursue a career in rheumatology. Dr. Dennis who, at the time, was an internal medicine resident at Fitzsimons Army Medical Center in Aurora, Colo., was seeking a subspecialty that would allow him to pursue immunology in a clinical or laboratory setting. What he realized during his residency was that rheumatology was a mystery to many physicians.
Rheumatology Professionals and Patient Advocates Take Their Stories to Capitol Hill
The ACR’s annual Advocates for Arthritis conference, September 19–20, brought more than 120 rheumatologists, rheumatology health professionals, and patient advocates to our nation’s capital. Attendees, representing 37 states, met with more than 175 congressional offices, sharing their stories of access to care, treatment, and the importance of research.
Winter Rheumatology Symposium Offers Collegial Expertise and Peer Interaction
Join the ACR as rheumatologists from across the country gather in Snowmass, Colo., for six days of exceptional educational content and opportunities to interact with peers and expert faculty at the ACR’s Winter Rheumatology Symposium. Continuing a tradition more than three decades long, the meeting will offer attendees upward of twenty sessions.
Skilled Nursing Facility Patients—Consolidated Billing
When treating a patient that lives in a skilled nursing facility (SNF), it is important to understand the coding and billing guidelines of consolidated billing. That is because certain services must be consolidated and submitted by the SNF using its Medicare provider number, and not submitted by you, the physician, unless they are one of the excluded services, which will be further discussed below.
Coding Corner Question
Skilled nursing facility patients
Coding Corner Answer
Skilled nursing facility patients
Practice Page: Protecting Your Practice through Compliance
Compliance programs are an effort by the government to maintain integrity in the healthcare system. These programs target activities causing improper payment to determine their root cause: Was it a mistake or error, was it inefficiency or waste of resources, is the provider bending the rules or abusing the system, or was it intentional deception or fraud? There are also laws dictating the compliance culture within practices and institutions; for example, red-flag rules, antikickback statute, and stark law, to name a few.
Clinical Trials Go Global
As medical research expands to the global population, will trial results sill apply to U.S. populations?
Two-Thirds of Rheumatologists Satisfied with Profession
A fair wage and choice of practice setting are areas of concern
Rheumatologists React to Looming Medicare Payment Reductions
MedPAC recommends deep cuts to physician payments
Drug Updates
Information on new approvals and medication safety
Rheum with a View
Why I sometimes read poetry instead of medicine—and why you should, too