The case of Cowell v. Good Samaritan Community Health Care, a state court case in Washington, provides guidance on two of the four elements of HCQIA immunity, i.e. that the action was reasonably taken in the furtherance of quality health care and the necessary substance to establish a reasonable investigation. 

Dr. Cowell raised an

The stalled healthcare reform initiative leaves the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule problem of the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) imposed 21.5% reduction as a stand alone separate issue. The physician fee schedule decrease was postponed for 2 months by an Obama addition to a defense approriation bill, with the expectation that a long term solution would

The Health Information Technology for Clinical Health Act (the "HITECH" Act) provides economic incentive for the adoption and meaningful use of health information technology and qualified Electronic Health Record systems ("EHR"s). A physician, other professional, or hospital shall be deemed to be a meaningful EHR user if:

1) Certified EHR technology is used in a

In Bansal vs. Mount Carmel Health Systems, Inc., an Ohio state appellate court ruled that the hospital had failed to prove that documents were protected by Ohio’s statutory peer review privilege (Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.25), and reversed a trial court summary judgment decision. Dr. Girraj K. Bansal was removed from the hospital’s call schedule, and

 Contributed by Piyush Seth, Esquire

pseth@tuckerlaw.com, 412.594.5640

The Department of Homeland Security, in coordination with the US Department of State, have announced a humanitarian parole policy allowing orphaned children from Haiti to enter the US temporarily.  Each case is reviewed separately (case by case basis) and depending upon the particular circumstances of the case, children are

Contributed by Lee Kim, Esquire

lkim@tuckerlaw.com or 412.594.3915

Connecticut Attorney General, Richard Blumenthal, as parens patriae for the State of Connecticut and on behalf of the State of Connecticut, sued Health Net of the Northeast, Inc. (“Health Net”) for multiple HIPAA violations. In a nutshell, Mr. Blumenthal stated in a press release, “The staggering scope of

Contributed by Lee Kim, Esquire

lkim@tuckerlaw.com, 412.594.3915

The HIPAA Security Rules require covered entities and (soon) business associates to implement and adopt administrative, physical, and technical safeguards to ensure that electronic protected health information (“ePHI”) is adequately protected from those without legitimate cause to access such information.  Only authorized personnel should be allowed to

Both the Senate and the House versions of the health care reform bills are 2,000 page unindexed monstrosities, making it extremely difficult to locate provisions of interest. The Sunday, January 10, 2010 edition of the Pittsburgh Post Gazette, reports that a retired business professor, Doug Lowry, has written a program allowing searches of the Senate

Tucker Arensberg’s Mike Cassidy will present at the American Health Lawyers Association (AHLA) Physician and Hospitals Law Institute in Miami, Florida in February 2010.

Sessions at the event will provide focused analysis of the legal challenges faced by hospitals, physicians and their counsel. Breakout sessions will cover hospital/physician relationships, electronic health records (EHRs) and the Health

 Contributed by Nawshin Ali, Esquire

(412) 594-5530, nali@tuckerlaw.com

Certified registered nurse practitioners (CRNPs) in Pennsylvania now have expanded authority in prescribing drugs due to amendments to the rules and regulations of the Pennsylvania State Board of Nursing (49 Pa.Code Ch. 21) effective as of December 12, 2009.

CRNPs can now prescribe Schedule II controlled substances