
Health spending great 4.4 percent in the United States in 2008, the slowest growth rate since it was first tracked in 1960 according to the CMS.

Health spending great 4.4 percent in the United States in 2008, the slowest growth rate since it was first tracked in 1960 according to the CMS.

Field questions on ancillary services for cardiovascular disease here.

Do not purchase the wrong electronic medical record (EMR) system.

In January, Minnesota pharmacies were required to report data on addictive drugs to the Minnesota Prescription Monitoring Program.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology released the proposed definition of "meaningful use" of an electronic health record system.

Get your questions answered on how to create effective to-do lists.

Medical Economics magazine asked 10 practices to reveal the best lessons learned from electronic health record adoption experiences.

About 72 percent of Americans assign some blame to Congress for their own financial woes.

Get your questions answered on office space organization.

The once private consultation between doctor and patient no longer exists.

Recent and anticipated tax law changes provide new opportunities to avoid overpaying taxes.

Payment for work with Roth IRAs is addressed

The Great Recession is keeping doctors on the job longer, and they're not happy about it.

Field questions on Medicare claims limits

The Department of Health and Human Services will fund two additional grant programs totaling $38 million to support the training and development of the skilled workforce required to support broad adoption and use of health information technology.

The watchdog group Patient Privacy Rights has released its first personal health record privacy report card in an effort to educate and protect consumers.

The Department of Health and Human Services expects to award in March $60 million to universities and research centers to support the adoption and meaningful use of health information technology.

The Certification Commission for Health Information Technology is updating its electronic health record technology certification programs to conform to the interim final rule recently released by the Department of Health and Human Services.

Eighty-five percent of healthcare providers believe that their ambulatory electronic health record software will let them meet the 2011 meaningful use deadlines being considered by the federal government, according to a report from research firm KLAS.

Get your questions answered on secondary insurance billing.

This year may be active in terms of changes to the tax code.

Less than 10 years out of medical school, one primary care physician is living the dream-he does not accept insurance or Medicare, he won't file reimbursement paperwork for patients, and his practice is thriving.

Collaboration among medical professionals improves medication adherence for patients with hypertension, a study shows.

Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Maine launches a pilot program that offers online visits to patients of physicians at two medical centers.

A 21 percent reduction in physicians' Medicare fees was temporarily dismissed thanks to a defense spending bill signed by the President in December.

Brian Forrest, MD, explains how he arrived at a cash-only practice that does not accept insurance.

The subculture of boxing that includes trainers, promoters, and even the doctors is difficult to explain unless you're submerged in it.

HHS began seeking bids to create a national, all-payer, all-claims database to use for comparative effectiveness research.

Get your questions answered on discharge letters.

Get your questions answered on how to charge people for their appointments in light of a tough economy.