News
A long awaited clarification of the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System will impact the accounting on a wide range of routine expenses.
Here's a tangled web: It appears that some of the federal government's profit-loss payments to insurers are at once obligated and prohibited.
Since the recession began, credit rating agencies have generally held a negative outlook on not-for-profit healthcare providers in the U.S. The Affordable Care Act has not helped.
With an annual rate of 11,000 fatalities from falls in U.S. hospitals, falls are a persistent concern for healthcare facilities.
With 25 million Americans set to be insured through exchange plans over the next decade, some health systems are finding a competitive advantage in branding their own health networks, improving on the concept that entered the market with the name "narrow networks."
When a hospital system welcomes a new physician practice into the system, there are many concerns from staffing to office culture.
It wasn't all that long ago that most surgeries, and many medical and diagnostic procedures, required patients to plan for an inpatient hospital stay. But times have changed.
In its June report to Congress, MedPAC made recommendations that would change the way post-acute care providers are reimbursed. Reviews from providers are mixed.
Linda Burt, vice president and chief financial officer at Nebraska Methodist Health System in Omaha, Neb., sat down with Healthcare Finance News to discuss the primary ways in which hospital CFOs use analytics, and how data -- if assessed properly -- can reduce risk.
Attitudes toward healthcare financing have been fairly conservative ever since the general economy collapsed with the stock market in 2008.