The Medical Group Management Association 2013 annual conference will offer a granular focus on the policy and technology issues that matter to physician practices, said Robert Tennant, MGMA’s senior policy advisor.
"We have a lot of folks who are already on the technology bandwagon," said Tennant in an interview with Healthcare Finance News, so "a lot of our folks have moved ahead of the (basics)."
The annual conference, held this year in San Diego, Oct. 6-9, has traditionally focused more on the "basics," Tennant suggested, such as how to pick out an electronic health record or how to get started with policy mandates.
Now, he says, it’s on to the more challenging side of practice management – how to meet the various mandates that are going to impact providers – ICD-10, HIPAA compliance, new payment models, the beat goes on. "Some of these things never seem to go away," said Tennant.
This year, the association has seen a big interest in policy and healthcare legislation.
ICD-10, with a switchover date of October 2014, will be the topic of several sessions, including one – "Implementing ICD-10 and the New Administrative Simplification Standards" on Monday, Oct. 7, from 2-3 p.m. – led by Tennant himself. These sessions include everything from "how do I make it happen in one year" to finding external trading partners, said Tennant.
Other technology-oriented sessions include topics such as physician portals, EHR optimization and compliance, and even one on the seven symptoms of a troubled EHR implementation, slated for Monday, Oct. 7, from 4-5 p.m.
Information technology, Tennant says, will continue to play an integral role at future MGMA conferences: "There's always something coming around the corner that's going to impact them in the area of HIT."
This year’s conference also may bring with it a buzz unique to 2013. The recent government shutdown in Washington – the first shutdown in 17 years – may very well be the talk of the conference among attendees and how it relates to them. "I'm very hopeful that Republicans and Democrats are going to come to some agreement," Tennant said. "All of these changes create uncertainty in the environment."