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Don’t forget about OSHA
Given the bewildering array of new bureaucracies that private practices have been forced to contend with in recent years, it’s easy to forget about the older ones – especially OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration).
Now would be a good time – before the new year begins, and you’re forced to take on the MACRA meshugas, which I’ll discuss next month – to get out your OSHA logs, walk through your office, and confirm that you remain in compliance with all the applicable regulations. Even if you hold regular safety meetings (which all too often is not the case), the occasional comprehensive review is always a good idea, and could save you a bundle in fines.
I’m always amazed at how many offices lack an official OSHA poster, enumerating employee rights and explaining how to file complaints; it’s the first thing an OSHA inspector looks for. You can download one from OSHA’s website, or order it at no charge by calling 800-321-OSHA.
Next, check out your building’s exits. Everyone must be able to evacuate your office quickly in case of fire or other emergencies. At minimum, you (or the owner of the building) are expected to establish exit routes to accommodate all employees and to post easily visible evacuation diagrams.
Examine all electrical devices and their power sources. All electrically powered equipment – medical, clerical, or anything else in the office – must operate safely. Pay particular attention to the way wall outlets are set up. Make sure each outlet has sufficient power to run the equipment plugged into it and that circuit breakers are present and functioning. And beware the common situation of too many gadgets running off a single circuit.
Now, review your list of hazardous chemicals, which all employees have a right to know about. Keep in mind that OSHA’s list contains many substances – alcohol, disinfectants, even hydrogen peroxide – that you might not consider particularly dangerous but must nevertheless be on your written list of hazardous chemicals. For each of these, your employees must also have access to the manufacturer-supplied Material Safety Data Sheet, which outlines the proper procedures for working with a specific substance and for handling and containing it in a spill or other emergency.
How old is your written exposure control plan for blood-borne pathogens? It should document your use of such protective equipment as gloves, face and eye protection, and gowns, and your implementation of universal precautions – and it’s supposed to be updated annually, to reflect changes in technology. You need not adopt every new safety device as it comes on the market, but you should document which ones you are using, and why.
For example, you and your employees may decide not to purchase a new safety needle because you don’t think it will improve safety, or that it will be more trouble than it’s worth; but you should document how you arrived at your decision and what you plan to use instead.
You must provide all at-risk employees with hepatitis B vaccine, at no cost to them. You also must provide and pay for appropriate medical treatment and follow-up after any exposure to a dangerous pathogen.
Other components of the rule include proper containment of regulated medical waste, identification of regulated waste containers, sharps disposal boxes, and periodic employee training regarding all of those things.
Federal OSHA regulations do not require medical and dental offices to keep an injury and illness log, as other businesses must; but your state may have such a requirement that supersedes the federal law. Check with your state, or with your local OSHA office, regarding any such requirements.
It is a mistake to take OSHA regulations lightly; failure to comply with them can result in stiff penalties running into many thousands of dollars.
How can you be certain you are complying with all the rules? The easiest and cheapest way is to call your local OSHA office and request an inspection. Why would you want to do that? Because in return for agreeing to have your office inspected, OSHA will agree not to cite you for any violations they find, as long as you fix them.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Given the bewildering array of new bureaucracies that private practices have been forced to contend with in recent years, it’s easy to forget about the older ones – especially OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration).
Now would be a good time – before the new year begins, and you’re forced to take on the MACRA meshugas, which I’ll discuss next month – to get out your OSHA logs, walk through your office, and confirm that you remain in compliance with all the applicable regulations. Even if you hold regular safety meetings (which all too often is not the case), the occasional comprehensive review is always a good idea, and could save you a bundle in fines.
I’m always amazed at how many offices lack an official OSHA poster, enumerating employee rights and explaining how to file complaints; it’s the first thing an OSHA inspector looks for. You can download one from OSHA’s website, or order it at no charge by calling 800-321-OSHA.
Next, check out your building’s exits. Everyone must be able to evacuate your office quickly in case of fire or other emergencies. At minimum, you (or the owner of the building) are expected to establish exit routes to accommodate all employees and to post easily visible evacuation diagrams.
Examine all electrical devices and their power sources. All electrically powered equipment – medical, clerical, or anything else in the office – must operate safely. Pay particular attention to the way wall outlets are set up. Make sure each outlet has sufficient power to run the equipment plugged into it and that circuit breakers are present and functioning. And beware the common situation of too many gadgets running off a single circuit.
Now, review your list of hazardous chemicals, which all employees have a right to know about. Keep in mind that OSHA’s list contains many substances – alcohol, disinfectants, even hydrogen peroxide – that you might not consider particularly dangerous but must nevertheless be on your written list of hazardous chemicals. For each of these, your employees must also have access to the manufacturer-supplied Material Safety Data Sheet, which outlines the proper procedures for working with a specific substance and for handling and containing it in a spill or other emergency.
How old is your written exposure control plan for blood-borne pathogens? It should document your use of such protective equipment as gloves, face and eye protection, and gowns, and your implementation of universal precautions – and it’s supposed to be updated annually, to reflect changes in technology. You need not adopt every new safety device as it comes on the market, but you should document which ones you are using, and why.
For example, you and your employees may decide not to purchase a new safety needle because you don’t think it will improve safety, or that it will be more trouble than it’s worth; but you should document how you arrived at your decision and what you plan to use instead.
You must provide all at-risk employees with hepatitis B vaccine, at no cost to them. You also must provide and pay for appropriate medical treatment and follow-up after any exposure to a dangerous pathogen.
Other components of the rule include proper containment of regulated medical waste, identification of regulated waste containers, sharps disposal boxes, and periodic employee training regarding all of those things.
Federal OSHA regulations do not require medical and dental offices to keep an injury and illness log, as other businesses must; but your state may have such a requirement that supersedes the federal law. Check with your state, or with your local OSHA office, regarding any such requirements.
It is a mistake to take OSHA regulations lightly; failure to comply with them can result in stiff penalties running into many thousands of dollars.
How can you be certain you are complying with all the rules? The easiest and cheapest way is to call your local OSHA office and request an inspection. Why would you want to do that? Because in return for agreeing to have your office inspected, OSHA will agree not to cite you for any violations they find, as long as you fix them.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Given the bewildering array of new bureaucracies that private practices have been forced to contend with in recent years, it’s easy to forget about the older ones – especially OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration).
Now would be a good time – before the new year begins, and you’re forced to take on the MACRA meshugas, which I’ll discuss next month – to get out your OSHA logs, walk through your office, and confirm that you remain in compliance with all the applicable regulations. Even if you hold regular safety meetings (which all too often is not the case), the occasional comprehensive review is always a good idea, and could save you a bundle in fines.
I’m always amazed at how many offices lack an official OSHA poster, enumerating employee rights and explaining how to file complaints; it’s the first thing an OSHA inspector looks for. You can download one from OSHA’s website, or order it at no charge by calling 800-321-OSHA.
Next, check out your building’s exits. Everyone must be able to evacuate your office quickly in case of fire or other emergencies. At minimum, you (or the owner of the building) are expected to establish exit routes to accommodate all employees and to post easily visible evacuation diagrams.
Examine all electrical devices and their power sources. All electrically powered equipment – medical, clerical, or anything else in the office – must operate safely. Pay particular attention to the way wall outlets are set up. Make sure each outlet has sufficient power to run the equipment plugged into it and that circuit breakers are present and functioning. And beware the common situation of too many gadgets running off a single circuit.
Now, review your list of hazardous chemicals, which all employees have a right to know about. Keep in mind that OSHA’s list contains many substances – alcohol, disinfectants, even hydrogen peroxide – that you might not consider particularly dangerous but must nevertheless be on your written list of hazardous chemicals. For each of these, your employees must also have access to the manufacturer-supplied Material Safety Data Sheet, which outlines the proper procedures for working with a specific substance and for handling and containing it in a spill or other emergency.
How old is your written exposure control plan for blood-borne pathogens? It should document your use of such protective equipment as gloves, face and eye protection, and gowns, and your implementation of universal precautions – and it’s supposed to be updated annually, to reflect changes in technology. You need not adopt every new safety device as it comes on the market, but you should document which ones you are using, and why.
For example, you and your employees may decide not to purchase a new safety needle because you don’t think it will improve safety, or that it will be more trouble than it’s worth; but you should document how you arrived at your decision and what you plan to use instead.
You must provide all at-risk employees with hepatitis B vaccine, at no cost to them. You also must provide and pay for appropriate medical treatment and follow-up after any exposure to a dangerous pathogen.
Other components of the rule include proper containment of regulated medical waste, identification of regulated waste containers, sharps disposal boxes, and periodic employee training regarding all of those things.
Federal OSHA regulations do not require medical and dental offices to keep an injury and illness log, as other businesses must; but your state may have such a requirement that supersedes the federal law. Check with your state, or with your local OSHA office, regarding any such requirements.
It is a mistake to take OSHA regulations lightly; failure to comply with them can result in stiff penalties running into many thousands of dollars.
How can you be certain you are complying with all the rules? The easiest and cheapest way is to call your local OSHA office and request an inspection. Why would you want to do that? Because in return for agreeing to have your office inspected, OSHA will agree not to cite you for any violations they find, as long as you fix them.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Don’t sell your practice short
I’ve written quite a lot over the past few years about the trend toward soloists and small groups selling their practices to hospitals, multispecialty groups, or larger practices. And I’ve made it fairly clear that I don’t think it’s a particularly good thing that the medical profession is going the way of the corner gas station and the mom-and-pop grocery store; it’s not good for physicians, patients, or private practice.
That said, if retirement looms with no individual buyers in sight, or your overhead is getting out of hand, selling to a larger entity is an option that you may need to consider. Too often, though, sellers are not receiving a fair return on the equity they have worked so hard to build over several decades, either because they have waited too long and must accept what is offered, or because they simply take the buyer’s word for their practice’s value. Don’t put yourself in either of those positions; and don’t entertain any offers until you obtain an objective appraisal from a neutral party.
Of course, a medical practice is trickier to value than is an ordinary business and usually requires the services of an experienced professional appraiser. Entire books have been written about the process, so I can’t hope to cover it completely in 850 words; but three basic yardsticks are essential for determining the equity, or book value, of a practice:
• Tangible Assets: equipment, cash, accounts receivable, and other property owned by the practice.
• Liabilities: accounts payable, outstanding loans, and anything else owed to others.
• Intangible Assets: sometimes called “good will” – the reputation of the physicians, the location and name recognition of the practice, the loyalty and volume of patients, and other, well, intangibles.
Valuing tangible assets is comparatively straightforward, but there are several ways to do it, and when reviewing a practice appraisal, you should ask which of them was used. Depreciated value is the book value of equipment and supplies as determined by their purchase price, less the amount their value has decreased since purchase. Remaining useful life value estimates how long the equipment can be expected to last. Market (or replacement) value is the amount it would cost on the open market to replace all equipment and supplies.
Intangible assets are more difficult to value. Many components are analyzed, including location, interior and exterior decor, accessibility to patients, age and functional status of equipment, systems in place to promote efficiency, reasons why patients come back (if in fact they do), and the overall reputation of the practice in the community. Other important factors include the “payer mix” (what percentage pays cash, how many third-party contracts are in place, and how well they pay, etc.), the extent and strength of the referral base, and the presence of supplemental income streams, such as clinical research.
It is also important to determine to what extent intangible assets are transferable. For example, unique skills with a laser, neurotoxins, or filler substances, or extraordinary personal charisma, may increase your practice’s value to you, but they are worthless to the next owner, and he or she will be unwilling to pay for them unless your services become part of the deal.
Once again, there are many ways to estimate intangible asset value, and once again, you should ask which were used. Cash Flow Analysis works on the assumption that cash flow is a measure of intangible value. Capitalization of Earnings puts a value, or capitalization, on the practice’s income streams using a variety of assumptions. Guideline Comparison uses various databases to compare your practice with other, similar ones that have changed hands in the past.
Two newer techniques that some consider a better estimate of intangible assets are the replacement method, which estimates the costs of starting the practice over again in the current market; and the excess earnings method, which measures how far above average your practice’s earnings (and thus its overall value) are.
Asset-based valuation is the most popular – but by no means the only – method available. Income-based valuation looks at the source and strength of a practice’s income stream as a creator of value, as well as whether or not its income stream under a different owner would mirror its present one. This in turn becomes the basis for an understanding of the fair market value of both tangible and intangible assets. Market valuation combines the asset-based and income-based approaches, along with an analysis of sales and mergers of comparable practices in the community, to determine the value of a practice in its local market.
Whatever methods are used, it is important that the appraisal be done by an experienced and independent financial consultant, that all techniques used in the valuation be divulged and explained, and that documentation is supplied to support the conclusions reached. This is especially important if the appraisal will be relied upon in the sale or merger of the practice.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a long-time monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
I’ve written quite a lot over the past few years about the trend toward soloists and small groups selling their practices to hospitals, multispecialty groups, or larger practices. And I’ve made it fairly clear that I don’t think it’s a particularly good thing that the medical profession is going the way of the corner gas station and the mom-and-pop grocery store; it’s not good for physicians, patients, or private practice.
That said, if retirement looms with no individual buyers in sight, or your overhead is getting out of hand, selling to a larger entity is an option that you may need to consider. Too often, though, sellers are not receiving a fair return on the equity they have worked so hard to build over several decades, either because they have waited too long and must accept what is offered, or because they simply take the buyer’s word for their practice’s value. Don’t put yourself in either of those positions; and don’t entertain any offers until you obtain an objective appraisal from a neutral party.
Of course, a medical practice is trickier to value than is an ordinary business and usually requires the services of an experienced professional appraiser. Entire books have been written about the process, so I can’t hope to cover it completely in 850 words; but three basic yardsticks are essential for determining the equity, or book value, of a practice:
• Tangible Assets: equipment, cash, accounts receivable, and other property owned by the practice.
• Liabilities: accounts payable, outstanding loans, and anything else owed to others.
• Intangible Assets: sometimes called “good will” – the reputation of the physicians, the location and name recognition of the practice, the loyalty and volume of patients, and other, well, intangibles.
Valuing tangible assets is comparatively straightforward, but there are several ways to do it, and when reviewing a practice appraisal, you should ask which of them was used. Depreciated value is the book value of equipment and supplies as determined by their purchase price, less the amount their value has decreased since purchase. Remaining useful life value estimates how long the equipment can be expected to last. Market (or replacement) value is the amount it would cost on the open market to replace all equipment and supplies.
Intangible assets are more difficult to value. Many components are analyzed, including location, interior and exterior decor, accessibility to patients, age and functional status of equipment, systems in place to promote efficiency, reasons why patients come back (if in fact they do), and the overall reputation of the practice in the community. Other important factors include the “payer mix” (what percentage pays cash, how many third-party contracts are in place, and how well they pay, etc.), the extent and strength of the referral base, and the presence of supplemental income streams, such as clinical research.
It is also important to determine to what extent intangible assets are transferable. For example, unique skills with a laser, neurotoxins, or filler substances, or extraordinary personal charisma, may increase your practice’s value to you, but they are worthless to the next owner, and he or she will be unwilling to pay for them unless your services become part of the deal.
Once again, there are many ways to estimate intangible asset value, and once again, you should ask which were used. Cash Flow Analysis works on the assumption that cash flow is a measure of intangible value. Capitalization of Earnings puts a value, or capitalization, on the practice’s income streams using a variety of assumptions. Guideline Comparison uses various databases to compare your practice with other, similar ones that have changed hands in the past.
Two newer techniques that some consider a better estimate of intangible assets are the replacement method, which estimates the costs of starting the practice over again in the current market; and the excess earnings method, which measures how far above average your practice’s earnings (and thus its overall value) are.
Asset-based valuation is the most popular – but by no means the only – method available. Income-based valuation looks at the source and strength of a practice’s income stream as a creator of value, as well as whether or not its income stream under a different owner would mirror its present one. This in turn becomes the basis for an understanding of the fair market value of both tangible and intangible assets. Market valuation combines the asset-based and income-based approaches, along with an analysis of sales and mergers of comparable practices in the community, to determine the value of a practice in its local market.
Whatever methods are used, it is important that the appraisal be done by an experienced and independent financial consultant, that all techniques used in the valuation be divulged and explained, and that documentation is supplied to support the conclusions reached. This is especially important if the appraisal will be relied upon in the sale or merger of the practice.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a long-time monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
I’ve written quite a lot over the past few years about the trend toward soloists and small groups selling their practices to hospitals, multispecialty groups, or larger practices. And I’ve made it fairly clear that I don’t think it’s a particularly good thing that the medical profession is going the way of the corner gas station and the mom-and-pop grocery store; it’s not good for physicians, patients, or private practice.
That said, if retirement looms with no individual buyers in sight, or your overhead is getting out of hand, selling to a larger entity is an option that you may need to consider. Too often, though, sellers are not receiving a fair return on the equity they have worked so hard to build over several decades, either because they have waited too long and must accept what is offered, or because they simply take the buyer’s word for their practice’s value. Don’t put yourself in either of those positions; and don’t entertain any offers until you obtain an objective appraisal from a neutral party.
Of course, a medical practice is trickier to value than is an ordinary business and usually requires the services of an experienced professional appraiser. Entire books have been written about the process, so I can’t hope to cover it completely in 850 words; but three basic yardsticks are essential for determining the equity, or book value, of a practice:
• Tangible Assets: equipment, cash, accounts receivable, and other property owned by the practice.
• Liabilities: accounts payable, outstanding loans, and anything else owed to others.
• Intangible Assets: sometimes called “good will” – the reputation of the physicians, the location and name recognition of the practice, the loyalty and volume of patients, and other, well, intangibles.
Valuing tangible assets is comparatively straightforward, but there are several ways to do it, and when reviewing a practice appraisal, you should ask which of them was used. Depreciated value is the book value of equipment and supplies as determined by their purchase price, less the amount their value has decreased since purchase. Remaining useful life value estimates how long the equipment can be expected to last. Market (or replacement) value is the amount it would cost on the open market to replace all equipment and supplies.
Intangible assets are more difficult to value. Many components are analyzed, including location, interior and exterior decor, accessibility to patients, age and functional status of equipment, systems in place to promote efficiency, reasons why patients come back (if in fact they do), and the overall reputation of the practice in the community. Other important factors include the “payer mix” (what percentage pays cash, how many third-party contracts are in place, and how well they pay, etc.), the extent and strength of the referral base, and the presence of supplemental income streams, such as clinical research.
It is also important to determine to what extent intangible assets are transferable. For example, unique skills with a laser, neurotoxins, or filler substances, or extraordinary personal charisma, may increase your practice’s value to you, but they are worthless to the next owner, and he or she will be unwilling to pay for them unless your services become part of the deal.
Once again, there are many ways to estimate intangible asset value, and once again, you should ask which were used. Cash Flow Analysis works on the assumption that cash flow is a measure of intangible value. Capitalization of Earnings puts a value, or capitalization, on the practice’s income streams using a variety of assumptions. Guideline Comparison uses various databases to compare your practice with other, similar ones that have changed hands in the past.
Two newer techniques that some consider a better estimate of intangible assets are the replacement method, which estimates the costs of starting the practice over again in the current market; and the excess earnings method, which measures how far above average your practice’s earnings (and thus its overall value) are.
Asset-based valuation is the most popular – but by no means the only – method available. Income-based valuation looks at the source and strength of a practice’s income stream as a creator of value, as well as whether or not its income stream under a different owner would mirror its present one. This in turn becomes the basis for an understanding of the fair market value of both tangible and intangible assets. Market valuation combines the asset-based and income-based approaches, along with an analysis of sales and mergers of comparable practices in the community, to determine the value of a practice in its local market.
Whatever methods are used, it is important that the appraisal be done by an experienced and independent financial consultant, that all techniques used in the valuation be divulged and explained, and that documentation is supplied to support the conclusions reached. This is especially important if the appraisal will be relied upon in the sale or merger of the practice.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a long-time monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Setting up your own RSS feed
Last month, I discussed RSS news feeds as a useful tool for keeping abreast of frequently updated information, such as blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video, without having to visit a multitude of different Web pages each day.
This month, I’ll explain how to set up your own feed, which is useful if you want to increase the readership on your website, or publicize a podcast, or keep your patients abreast of your practice’s latest treatments and procedures. It will also alert you immediately if your name pops up in news or gossip sites.
There are several options, depending on your budget, and how involved you personally want to be in the process: Many Web hosting services will automatically create and update your feed for a monthly fee; so if you already have a professionally hosted website, check to see if your host offers that service. If not, Web services such as Feedity and Rapidfeeds allow you to manage multiple feeds, with automatic updates, so that you will not need to manually update your feed each time you update your website content. Feedity’s software can even generate an RSS file without your having to input each item. Other popular hosting options include Web Hosting Hub, Arvixe, and MyHosting, among many others. (As always, I have no financial interest in any service I mention here.)
Another option, used by many organizations that publish their own articles and news stories, is a content management system (CMS), an application designed to organize, store, and publish content, including tools for adding RSS feeds. Examples include Drupal and Plone – both free, open-source programs.
Alternatively, you can download a stand-alone RSS creation program, then create and update your feed manually. Again, there are many options to choose from. One popular example is RSS Builder, a free, open source RSS creation program that allows you to create RSS files, upload them to your website, and automatically manage them to some extent. Disadvantages of free systems include advertisements (sometimes removable for a monthly fee), scarce or nonexistent technical support, and in many cases, no option to create more than one feed. You may also have to manually add new headlines, links, and descriptive text yourself. Your “free” feed can become quite expensive if you or staffers are forced to spend an inordinate amount of time maintaining it. Paid programs such as FeedForAll allow easier creation and maintenance, and less time commitment.
Once you have chosen your service, create your first feed. The process will differ from program to program, but the general idea is the same for almost all of them. All feeds will need some basic data: A title (which should be the same as your website or podcast); the URL for your website, to help viewers link back to your home page; and a description – a sentence or two describing the general content on the feed.
Once you’ve entered this information, you can start populating the feed with content. Enter in the title of each article, blog post, podcast episode, etc., the URL that links directly to that content, and the publishing date. Each entry should have its own short but sweet description; this is what your readers will see before they choose to click your entry in their RSS readers. You can add author information and further comments if needed. Add a new entry for each piece of content that you want to broadcast.
Most RSS apps suggest that you assign each item in your feed a global unique identifier (GUID), which RSS readers use to determine if an item has been changed or updated. Each feed item should have its own GUID, particularly if multiple items are located at the same URL.
Once you’re done entering in all of your content to your feed, you need to export it to an XML file, which will allow visitors to subscribe to your feed. Then upload the XML file to your website, place it on your homepage, and click the Publish Feed button.
Once your feed is live, consider submitting it to some of the many RSS feed directories (also called aggregate sites) that collect articles from similar interests and can significantly increase your viewership. Search for medically oriented directories, and others that match the interests that your feed addresses, and submit each directory’s URL to your feed’s XML file.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a long-time monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Last month, I discussed RSS news feeds as a useful tool for keeping abreast of frequently updated information, such as blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video, without having to visit a multitude of different Web pages each day.
This month, I’ll explain how to set up your own feed, which is useful if you want to increase the readership on your website, or publicize a podcast, or keep your patients abreast of your practice’s latest treatments and procedures. It will also alert you immediately if your name pops up in news or gossip sites.
There are several options, depending on your budget, and how involved you personally want to be in the process: Many Web hosting services will automatically create and update your feed for a monthly fee; so if you already have a professionally hosted website, check to see if your host offers that service. If not, Web services such as Feedity and Rapidfeeds allow you to manage multiple feeds, with automatic updates, so that you will not need to manually update your feed each time you update your website content. Feedity’s software can even generate an RSS file without your having to input each item. Other popular hosting options include Web Hosting Hub, Arvixe, and MyHosting, among many others. (As always, I have no financial interest in any service I mention here.)
Another option, used by many organizations that publish their own articles and news stories, is a content management system (CMS), an application designed to organize, store, and publish content, including tools for adding RSS feeds. Examples include Drupal and Plone – both free, open-source programs.
Alternatively, you can download a stand-alone RSS creation program, then create and update your feed manually. Again, there are many options to choose from. One popular example is RSS Builder, a free, open source RSS creation program that allows you to create RSS files, upload them to your website, and automatically manage them to some extent. Disadvantages of free systems include advertisements (sometimes removable for a monthly fee), scarce or nonexistent technical support, and in many cases, no option to create more than one feed. You may also have to manually add new headlines, links, and descriptive text yourself. Your “free” feed can become quite expensive if you or staffers are forced to spend an inordinate amount of time maintaining it. Paid programs such as FeedForAll allow easier creation and maintenance, and less time commitment.
Once you have chosen your service, create your first feed. The process will differ from program to program, but the general idea is the same for almost all of them. All feeds will need some basic data: A title (which should be the same as your website or podcast); the URL for your website, to help viewers link back to your home page; and a description – a sentence or two describing the general content on the feed.
Once you’ve entered this information, you can start populating the feed with content. Enter in the title of each article, blog post, podcast episode, etc., the URL that links directly to that content, and the publishing date. Each entry should have its own short but sweet description; this is what your readers will see before they choose to click your entry in their RSS readers. You can add author information and further comments if needed. Add a new entry for each piece of content that you want to broadcast.
Most RSS apps suggest that you assign each item in your feed a global unique identifier (GUID), which RSS readers use to determine if an item has been changed or updated. Each feed item should have its own GUID, particularly if multiple items are located at the same URL.
Once you’re done entering in all of your content to your feed, you need to export it to an XML file, which will allow visitors to subscribe to your feed. Then upload the XML file to your website, place it on your homepage, and click the Publish Feed button.
Once your feed is live, consider submitting it to some of the many RSS feed directories (also called aggregate sites) that collect articles from similar interests and can significantly increase your viewership. Search for medically oriented directories, and others that match the interests that your feed addresses, and submit each directory’s URL to your feed’s XML file.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a long-time monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Last month, I discussed RSS news feeds as a useful tool for keeping abreast of frequently updated information, such as blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video, without having to visit a multitude of different Web pages each day.
This month, I’ll explain how to set up your own feed, which is useful if you want to increase the readership on your website, or publicize a podcast, or keep your patients abreast of your practice’s latest treatments and procedures. It will also alert you immediately if your name pops up in news or gossip sites.
There are several options, depending on your budget, and how involved you personally want to be in the process: Many Web hosting services will automatically create and update your feed for a monthly fee; so if you already have a professionally hosted website, check to see if your host offers that service. If not, Web services such as Feedity and Rapidfeeds allow you to manage multiple feeds, with automatic updates, so that you will not need to manually update your feed each time you update your website content. Feedity’s software can even generate an RSS file without your having to input each item. Other popular hosting options include Web Hosting Hub, Arvixe, and MyHosting, among many others. (As always, I have no financial interest in any service I mention here.)
Another option, used by many organizations that publish their own articles and news stories, is a content management system (CMS), an application designed to organize, store, and publish content, including tools for adding RSS feeds. Examples include Drupal and Plone – both free, open-source programs.
Alternatively, you can download a stand-alone RSS creation program, then create and update your feed manually. Again, there are many options to choose from. One popular example is RSS Builder, a free, open source RSS creation program that allows you to create RSS files, upload them to your website, and automatically manage them to some extent. Disadvantages of free systems include advertisements (sometimes removable for a monthly fee), scarce or nonexistent technical support, and in many cases, no option to create more than one feed. You may also have to manually add new headlines, links, and descriptive text yourself. Your “free” feed can become quite expensive if you or staffers are forced to spend an inordinate amount of time maintaining it. Paid programs such as FeedForAll allow easier creation and maintenance, and less time commitment.
Once you have chosen your service, create your first feed. The process will differ from program to program, but the general idea is the same for almost all of them. All feeds will need some basic data: A title (which should be the same as your website or podcast); the URL for your website, to help viewers link back to your home page; and a description – a sentence or two describing the general content on the feed.
Once you’ve entered this information, you can start populating the feed with content. Enter in the title of each article, blog post, podcast episode, etc., the URL that links directly to that content, and the publishing date. Each entry should have its own short but sweet description; this is what your readers will see before they choose to click your entry in their RSS readers. You can add author information and further comments if needed. Add a new entry for each piece of content that you want to broadcast.
Most RSS apps suggest that you assign each item in your feed a global unique identifier (GUID), which RSS readers use to determine if an item has been changed or updated. Each feed item should have its own GUID, particularly if multiple items are located at the same URL.
Once you’re done entering in all of your content to your feed, you need to export it to an XML file, which will allow visitors to subscribe to your feed. Then upload the XML file to your website, place it on your homepage, and click the Publish Feed button.
Once your feed is live, consider submitting it to some of the many RSS feed directories (also called aggregate sites) that collect articles from similar interests and can significantly increase your viewership. Search for medically oriented directories, and others that match the interests that your feed addresses, and submit each directory’s URL to your feed’s XML file.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a long-time monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
RSS feeds
In my last column, I mentioned RSS news feeds as a useful, versatile online tool. As my editor later reminded me, however, it has been over a decade since I’ve discussed RSS feeds – so an update is certainly in order.
The sheer volume of information on the web makes quick and efficient searching an indispensable skill, but once you become quick and efficient at finding the information you need, a new problem arises: The information changes! All the good medical, news, and other information-based websites change and update their content on a regular but unpredictable basis. And checking each one for new information can be very tedious, if you can remember to do it at all.
Many sites offer an email service to notify you of new content, but multiple email subscriptions clutter your inbox and often can’t select out the information you’re really interested in. RSS feeds are a more efficient and increasingly popular method of staying current on all the subjects that interest you – medical and otherwise. RSS (which stands for Rich Site Summary or Really Simple Syndication, depending on whom you ask) is a file format that websites use (or a similar one called Atom) to produce a summary file, or “feed,” of new content, along with links to full versions of that content. When you subscribe to a given website’s feed, you’ll receive a summary of new content each time the website is updated.
Thousands of websites now offer RSS feeds, including most of the large medical information services, all the major news organizations, and many web logs.
To subscribe to feeds, you must download a program called a feed reader, which is basically just a browser specializing in RSS and Atom files. Dozens of readers (also known as aggregators) are available. Some can be accessed through browsers, others are integrated into email programs, and still others run as standalone applications. With the rise of cloud computing, some cloud-based services offer feed aggregation as part of their service.
Many readers are free, but those with the most advanced features usually come with a fee of some sort. (As always, I have no financial interest in any enterprise discussed in this column.) A comprehensive list of available readers can be found in the Wikipedia article “Comparison of Feed Aggregators.”
It’s not always easy to find out whether a particular website offers a feed, because there is no universally recognized method of indicating its existence. Look for a link to “RSS” or “Syndicate This,” or an orange rectangle with the letters “RSS” or “XML” (don’t ask). These links are not always on the home page. You may need to consult the site map to find a link to a page explaining available feeds and how to find them.
Some of the major sites have multiple feeds to choose from. For example, you can generate a feed of current stories related to the page that you are following on Google News by clicking the RSS link on any Google News page.
Once you know the URL of the RSS feed you want, you provide it to your reader program, which will monitor the feed for you. (Many RSS aggregators come preconfigured with a list of feed URLs for popular news websites.)
In addition to notifying you of important news headlines, changes to your favorite websites, and new developments in any medical (or other) field of interest to you, RSS feeds have many other uses. Some will notify you of new products in a store or catalog, new newsletter issues (including email newsletters), weather and other changing-condition alerts, and the addition of new items to a database – or new members to a group.
It can work the other way as well: If you want readers of your website, blog, or podcast to receive the latest news about your practice, such as new treatments and procedures you’re offering – or if you want to know immediately anytime your name pops up in news or gossip sites – you can create your own RSS feed. In my next column, I’ll explain exactly how to do that.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
In my last column, I mentioned RSS news feeds as a useful, versatile online tool. As my editor later reminded me, however, it has been over a decade since I’ve discussed RSS feeds – so an update is certainly in order.
The sheer volume of information on the web makes quick and efficient searching an indispensable skill, but once you become quick and efficient at finding the information you need, a new problem arises: The information changes! All the good medical, news, and other information-based websites change and update their content on a regular but unpredictable basis. And checking each one for new information can be very tedious, if you can remember to do it at all.
Many sites offer an email service to notify you of new content, but multiple email subscriptions clutter your inbox and often can’t select out the information you’re really interested in. RSS feeds are a more efficient and increasingly popular method of staying current on all the subjects that interest you – medical and otherwise. RSS (which stands for Rich Site Summary or Really Simple Syndication, depending on whom you ask) is a file format that websites use (or a similar one called Atom) to produce a summary file, or “feed,” of new content, along with links to full versions of that content. When you subscribe to a given website’s feed, you’ll receive a summary of new content each time the website is updated.
Thousands of websites now offer RSS feeds, including most of the large medical information services, all the major news organizations, and many web logs.
To subscribe to feeds, you must download a program called a feed reader, which is basically just a browser specializing in RSS and Atom files. Dozens of readers (also known as aggregators) are available. Some can be accessed through browsers, others are integrated into email programs, and still others run as standalone applications. With the rise of cloud computing, some cloud-based services offer feed aggregation as part of their service.
Many readers are free, but those with the most advanced features usually come with a fee of some sort. (As always, I have no financial interest in any enterprise discussed in this column.) A comprehensive list of available readers can be found in the Wikipedia article “Comparison of Feed Aggregators.”
It’s not always easy to find out whether a particular website offers a feed, because there is no universally recognized method of indicating its existence. Look for a link to “RSS” or “Syndicate This,” or an orange rectangle with the letters “RSS” or “XML” (don’t ask). These links are not always on the home page. You may need to consult the site map to find a link to a page explaining available feeds and how to find them.
Some of the major sites have multiple feeds to choose from. For example, you can generate a feed of current stories related to the page that you are following on Google News by clicking the RSS link on any Google News page.
Once you know the URL of the RSS feed you want, you provide it to your reader program, which will monitor the feed for you. (Many RSS aggregators come preconfigured with a list of feed URLs for popular news websites.)
In addition to notifying you of important news headlines, changes to your favorite websites, and new developments in any medical (or other) field of interest to you, RSS feeds have many other uses. Some will notify you of new products in a store or catalog, new newsletter issues (including email newsletters), weather and other changing-condition alerts, and the addition of new items to a database – or new members to a group.
It can work the other way as well: If you want readers of your website, blog, or podcast to receive the latest news about your practice, such as new treatments and procedures you’re offering – or if you want to know immediately anytime your name pops up in news or gossip sites – you can create your own RSS feed. In my next column, I’ll explain exactly how to do that.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
In my last column, I mentioned RSS news feeds as a useful, versatile online tool. As my editor later reminded me, however, it has been over a decade since I’ve discussed RSS feeds – so an update is certainly in order.
The sheer volume of information on the web makes quick and efficient searching an indispensable skill, but once you become quick and efficient at finding the information you need, a new problem arises: The information changes! All the good medical, news, and other information-based websites change and update their content on a regular but unpredictable basis. And checking each one for new information can be very tedious, if you can remember to do it at all.
Many sites offer an email service to notify you of new content, but multiple email subscriptions clutter your inbox and often can’t select out the information you’re really interested in. RSS feeds are a more efficient and increasingly popular method of staying current on all the subjects that interest you – medical and otherwise. RSS (which stands for Rich Site Summary or Really Simple Syndication, depending on whom you ask) is a file format that websites use (or a similar one called Atom) to produce a summary file, or “feed,” of new content, along with links to full versions of that content. When you subscribe to a given website’s feed, you’ll receive a summary of new content each time the website is updated.
Thousands of websites now offer RSS feeds, including most of the large medical information services, all the major news organizations, and many web logs.
To subscribe to feeds, you must download a program called a feed reader, which is basically just a browser specializing in RSS and Atom files. Dozens of readers (also known as aggregators) are available. Some can be accessed through browsers, others are integrated into email programs, and still others run as standalone applications. With the rise of cloud computing, some cloud-based services offer feed aggregation as part of their service.
Many readers are free, but those with the most advanced features usually come with a fee of some sort. (As always, I have no financial interest in any enterprise discussed in this column.) A comprehensive list of available readers can be found in the Wikipedia article “Comparison of Feed Aggregators.”
It’s not always easy to find out whether a particular website offers a feed, because there is no universally recognized method of indicating its existence. Look for a link to “RSS” or “Syndicate This,” or an orange rectangle with the letters “RSS” or “XML” (don’t ask). These links are not always on the home page. You may need to consult the site map to find a link to a page explaining available feeds and how to find them.
Some of the major sites have multiple feeds to choose from. For example, you can generate a feed of current stories related to the page that you are following on Google News by clicking the RSS link on any Google News page.
Once you know the URL of the RSS feed you want, you provide it to your reader program, which will monitor the feed for you. (Many RSS aggregators come preconfigured with a list of feed URLs for popular news websites.)
In addition to notifying you of important news headlines, changes to your favorite websites, and new developments in any medical (or other) field of interest to you, RSS feeds have many other uses. Some will notify you of new products in a store or catalog, new newsletter issues (including email newsletters), weather and other changing-condition alerts, and the addition of new items to a database – or new members to a group.
It can work the other way as well: If you want readers of your website, blog, or podcast to receive the latest news about your practice, such as new treatments and procedures you’re offering – or if you want to know immediately anytime your name pops up in news or gossip sites – you can create your own RSS feed. In my next column, I’ll explain exactly how to do that.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Your online reputation
Have you ever run across a negative or even malicious comment about you or your practice on the web, in full view of the world? You’re certainly not alone.
Chances are it was on one of those doctor rating sites, whose supposedly “objective” evaluations are anything but fair or accurate; one curmudgeon, angry about something that usually has nothing to do with your clinical skills, can use his First Amendment–protected right to trash you unfairly, as thousands of satisfied patients remain silent.
What to do? You could hire one of the many companies in the rapidly burgeoning field of online reputation management; but that can cost hundreds to thousands of dollars per month for monitoring and intervention, and there are no guarantees of success.
A better solution is to generate your own search results – positive ones – that will overwhelm any negative comments that search engines might find. Start with the social networking sites. However you feel about networking, there’s no getting around the fact that personal pages on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter rank very high on major search engines. (Some consultants say a favorable LinkedIn profile is particularly helpful because of that site’s reputation as a “professional” network.) Your community activities, charitable work, interesting hobbies – anything that casts you in a favorable light – need to be mentioned prominently in your network profiles.
You can also use Google’s profiling tool (https://plus.google.com/up/accounts/) to create a sterling bio, complete with links to URLs, photos, and anything else that shows you in the best possible light. And your Google profile will be at or near the top of any Google search.
Wikipedia articles also go to the top of most searches, so if you’re notable enough to merit mention in one – or to have one of your own – see that it is done, and updated regularly. You can’t do that yourself, however; Wikipedia’s conflict of interest rules forbid writing or editing content about yourself. Someone with a theoretically “neutral point of view” will have to do it.
If you don’t yet have a website, now would be a good time. As I’ve discussed many times, a professionally designed site will be far more attractive and polished than anything you could build yourself. Furthermore, an experienced designer will employ “search engine optimization” (SEO), meaning that content will be created in a way that is readily visible to search engine users.
Leave design and SEO to the pros, but don’t delegate the content itself; as captain of the ship you are responsible for all the facts and opinions on your site. And remember that once it’s online, it’s online forever; consider the ramifications of anything you post on any site (yours or others) before hitting the “send” button. “The most damaging item about you,” one consultant told me, “could well be something you posted yourself.” Just ask any of several prominent politicians who have famously sabotaged their own careers online.
That said, don’t be shy about creating content. Make your (noncontroversial) opinions known on Facebook and Twitter. If social networks are not your thing, add a blog to your web site and write about what you know, and what interests you. If you have expertise in a particular field, write about that.
Incidentally, if the URL for your web site is not your name, you should also register your name as a separate domain name – if only to be sure that a trickster, or someone with the same name and a bad reputation, doesn’t get it.
Set up an RSS news feed for yourself, so you’ll know immediately anytime your name pops up in news or gossip sites, or on blogs. If something untrue is posted about you, take action. Reputable news sites and blogs have their own reputations to protect, and so can usually be persuaded to correct anything that is demonstrably false. Try to get the error removed entirely, or corrected within the original article. An erratum on the last page of the next edition will be ignored, and will leave the false information online, intact.
Unfair comments on doctor rating sites are unlikely to be removed unless they are blatantly libelous; but there is nothing wrong with encouraging happy patients to write favorable reviews. Turnabout is fair play.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Have you ever run across a negative or even malicious comment about you or your practice on the web, in full view of the world? You’re certainly not alone.
Chances are it was on one of those doctor rating sites, whose supposedly “objective” evaluations are anything but fair or accurate; one curmudgeon, angry about something that usually has nothing to do with your clinical skills, can use his First Amendment–protected right to trash you unfairly, as thousands of satisfied patients remain silent.
What to do? You could hire one of the many companies in the rapidly burgeoning field of online reputation management; but that can cost hundreds to thousands of dollars per month for monitoring and intervention, and there are no guarantees of success.
A better solution is to generate your own search results – positive ones – that will overwhelm any negative comments that search engines might find. Start with the social networking sites. However you feel about networking, there’s no getting around the fact that personal pages on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter rank very high on major search engines. (Some consultants say a favorable LinkedIn profile is particularly helpful because of that site’s reputation as a “professional” network.) Your community activities, charitable work, interesting hobbies – anything that casts you in a favorable light – need to be mentioned prominently in your network profiles.
You can also use Google’s profiling tool (https://plus.google.com/up/accounts/) to create a sterling bio, complete with links to URLs, photos, and anything else that shows you in the best possible light. And your Google profile will be at or near the top of any Google search.
Wikipedia articles also go to the top of most searches, so if you’re notable enough to merit mention in one – or to have one of your own – see that it is done, and updated regularly. You can’t do that yourself, however; Wikipedia’s conflict of interest rules forbid writing or editing content about yourself. Someone with a theoretically “neutral point of view” will have to do it.
If you don’t yet have a website, now would be a good time. As I’ve discussed many times, a professionally designed site will be far more attractive and polished than anything you could build yourself. Furthermore, an experienced designer will employ “search engine optimization” (SEO), meaning that content will be created in a way that is readily visible to search engine users.
Leave design and SEO to the pros, but don’t delegate the content itself; as captain of the ship you are responsible for all the facts and opinions on your site. And remember that once it’s online, it’s online forever; consider the ramifications of anything you post on any site (yours or others) before hitting the “send” button. “The most damaging item about you,” one consultant told me, “could well be something you posted yourself.” Just ask any of several prominent politicians who have famously sabotaged their own careers online.
That said, don’t be shy about creating content. Make your (noncontroversial) opinions known on Facebook and Twitter. If social networks are not your thing, add a blog to your web site and write about what you know, and what interests you. If you have expertise in a particular field, write about that.
Incidentally, if the URL for your web site is not your name, you should also register your name as a separate domain name – if only to be sure that a trickster, or someone with the same name and a bad reputation, doesn’t get it.
Set up an RSS news feed for yourself, so you’ll know immediately anytime your name pops up in news or gossip sites, or on blogs. If something untrue is posted about you, take action. Reputable news sites and blogs have their own reputations to protect, and so can usually be persuaded to correct anything that is demonstrably false. Try to get the error removed entirely, or corrected within the original article. An erratum on the last page of the next edition will be ignored, and will leave the false information online, intact.
Unfair comments on doctor rating sites are unlikely to be removed unless they are blatantly libelous; but there is nothing wrong with encouraging happy patients to write favorable reviews. Turnabout is fair play.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Have you ever run across a negative or even malicious comment about you or your practice on the web, in full view of the world? You’re certainly not alone.
Chances are it was on one of those doctor rating sites, whose supposedly “objective” evaluations are anything but fair or accurate; one curmudgeon, angry about something that usually has nothing to do with your clinical skills, can use his First Amendment–protected right to trash you unfairly, as thousands of satisfied patients remain silent.
What to do? You could hire one of the many companies in the rapidly burgeoning field of online reputation management; but that can cost hundreds to thousands of dollars per month for monitoring and intervention, and there are no guarantees of success.
A better solution is to generate your own search results – positive ones – that will overwhelm any negative comments that search engines might find. Start with the social networking sites. However you feel about networking, there’s no getting around the fact that personal pages on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter rank very high on major search engines. (Some consultants say a favorable LinkedIn profile is particularly helpful because of that site’s reputation as a “professional” network.) Your community activities, charitable work, interesting hobbies – anything that casts you in a favorable light – need to be mentioned prominently in your network profiles.
You can also use Google’s profiling tool (https://plus.google.com/up/accounts/) to create a sterling bio, complete with links to URLs, photos, and anything else that shows you in the best possible light. And your Google profile will be at or near the top of any Google search.
Wikipedia articles also go to the top of most searches, so if you’re notable enough to merit mention in one – or to have one of your own – see that it is done, and updated regularly. You can’t do that yourself, however; Wikipedia’s conflict of interest rules forbid writing or editing content about yourself. Someone with a theoretically “neutral point of view” will have to do it.
If you don’t yet have a website, now would be a good time. As I’ve discussed many times, a professionally designed site will be far more attractive and polished than anything you could build yourself. Furthermore, an experienced designer will employ “search engine optimization” (SEO), meaning that content will be created in a way that is readily visible to search engine users.
Leave design and SEO to the pros, but don’t delegate the content itself; as captain of the ship you are responsible for all the facts and opinions on your site. And remember that once it’s online, it’s online forever; consider the ramifications of anything you post on any site (yours or others) before hitting the “send” button. “The most damaging item about you,” one consultant told me, “could well be something you posted yourself.” Just ask any of several prominent politicians who have famously sabotaged their own careers online.
That said, don’t be shy about creating content. Make your (noncontroversial) opinions known on Facebook and Twitter. If social networks are not your thing, add a blog to your web site and write about what you know, and what interests you. If you have expertise in a particular field, write about that.
Incidentally, if the URL for your web site is not your name, you should also register your name as a separate domain name – if only to be sure that a trickster, or someone with the same name and a bad reputation, doesn’t get it.
Set up an RSS news feed for yourself, so you’ll know immediately anytime your name pops up in news or gossip sites, or on blogs. If something untrue is posted about you, take action. Reputable news sites and blogs have their own reputations to protect, and so can usually be persuaded to correct anything that is demonstrably false. Try to get the error removed entirely, or corrected within the original article. An erratum on the last page of the next edition will be ignored, and will leave the false information online, intact.
Unfair comments on doctor rating sites are unlikely to be removed unless they are blatantly libelous; but there is nothing wrong with encouraging happy patients to write favorable reviews. Turnabout is fair play.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Sharpening the Saw
Few movies have universal appeal these days; but one that comes close is Bill Murray’s 1993 classic Groundhog Day in which Murray’s character is trapped in a time loop, living the same day over and over until he finally “gets it right.”
One reason that this film resonates with so many, I think, is that we are all, in essence, similarly trapped. Not in a same-day loop, of course; but each week seems eerily similar to the last, as does each month, each year – on and on, ad infinitum. That’s why it is so important, every so often, to step out of the “loop” and reassess the bigger picture.
I write this reminder every couple of years, because it’s so easy to lose sight of the overall landscape among the pressures of our daily routines. Sooner or later, no matter how dedicated we are, the grind gets to all of us, leading to fatigue, irritability, and a progressive decline in motivation. And we are too busy to sit down and think about what we might do to break that vicious cycle. This is detrimental to our own well-being, as well as that of our patients.
There are many ways to maintain your intellectual and emotional health, but here’s how I do it: I take individual days off (average of 1 a month) to catch up on journals or take a CME course; or to try something new – something I’ve been thinking about doing “someday, when there is time” – such as a guitar, bass, or sailing lesson; or get away a long weekend away with my wife. And we take longer vacations, without fail, each year.
I know how some of you feel about “wasting” a day – or, God forbid, a week. Patients might go elsewhere while you’re gone, and every day the office is idle, you “lose money.” That whole paradigm is wrong. You bring in a given amount of revenue per year – more on some days, less on other days, none on weekends and vacations; it all averages out in the end.
Besides, this is much more important than money. This is breaking the routine, clearing the cobwebs, living your life. And trust me, your practice will still be there when you return.
Six weeks ago, my wife and I packed our carry-ons, bought rail passes, and took off for Japan. As we whisked around the archipelago on those incredibly punctual Shinkansen bullet trains, I didn’t have the time – or the slightest inclination – to worry about the office. But I did accumulate some great ideas – practical, medical, and literary. Original thoughts are hard to chase down during the daily grind; but in a refreshing environment, they will seek you out.
When our whistle-stop trip was over, I returned ready to take on the world, and my practice, anew.
More than once I’ve recounted the story of K. Alexander Müller and J. Georg Bednorz, the Swiss Nobel Laureates whose superconductivity research ground to a halt in 1986. The harder they pressed, the more elusive progress became. So Müller decided to take a break to read a new book on ceramics – a subject that had always interested him.
Nothing could have been less relevant to his work, of course; ceramics are among the poorest conductors known. But, in that lower-pressure environment, Müller realized that a unique property of ceramics might apply to their project.
Back in the lab, the team created a ceramic compound that became the first successful “high-temperature” superconductor, which in turn triggered an explosion of research leading to breakthroughs in computing, electricity transmission, magnetically elevated trains, and many applications yet to be realized.
Sharpening your saw may not change the world, but it will change you; any nudge out of your comfort zone will give you fresh ideas and help you look at seemingly insoluble problems in completely new ways.
And to those who still can’t bear the thought of taking time off, remember the dying words that no one has spoken, ever: “I wish I had spent more time in my office!”
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Few movies have universal appeal these days; but one that comes close is Bill Murray’s 1993 classic Groundhog Day in which Murray’s character is trapped in a time loop, living the same day over and over until he finally “gets it right.”
One reason that this film resonates with so many, I think, is that we are all, in essence, similarly trapped. Not in a same-day loop, of course; but each week seems eerily similar to the last, as does each month, each year – on and on, ad infinitum. That’s why it is so important, every so often, to step out of the “loop” and reassess the bigger picture.
I write this reminder every couple of years, because it’s so easy to lose sight of the overall landscape among the pressures of our daily routines. Sooner or later, no matter how dedicated we are, the grind gets to all of us, leading to fatigue, irritability, and a progressive decline in motivation. And we are too busy to sit down and think about what we might do to break that vicious cycle. This is detrimental to our own well-being, as well as that of our patients.
There are many ways to maintain your intellectual and emotional health, but here’s how I do it: I take individual days off (average of 1 a month) to catch up on journals or take a CME course; or to try something new – something I’ve been thinking about doing “someday, when there is time” – such as a guitar, bass, or sailing lesson; or get away a long weekend away with my wife. And we take longer vacations, without fail, each year.
I know how some of you feel about “wasting” a day – or, God forbid, a week. Patients might go elsewhere while you’re gone, and every day the office is idle, you “lose money.” That whole paradigm is wrong. You bring in a given amount of revenue per year – more on some days, less on other days, none on weekends and vacations; it all averages out in the end.
Besides, this is much more important than money. This is breaking the routine, clearing the cobwebs, living your life. And trust me, your practice will still be there when you return.
Six weeks ago, my wife and I packed our carry-ons, bought rail passes, and took off for Japan. As we whisked around the archipelago on those incredibly punctual Shinkansen bullet trains, I didn’t have the time – or the slightest inclination – to worry about the office. But I did accumulate some great ideas – practical, medical, and literary. Original thoughts are hard to chase down during the daily grind; but in a refreshing environment, they will seek you out.
When our whistle-stop trip was over, I returned ready to take on the world, and my practice, anew.
More than once I’ve recounted the story of K. Alexander Müller and J. Georg Bednorz, the Swiss Nobel Laureates whose superconductivity research ground to a halt in 1986. The harder they pressed, the more elusive progress became. So Müller decided to take a break to read a new book on ceramics – a subject that had always interested him.
Nothing could have been less relevant to his work, of course; ceramics are among the poorest conductors known. But, in that lower-pressure environment, Müller realized that a unique property of ceramics might apply to their project.
Back in the lab, the team created a ceramic compound that became the first successful “high-temperature” superconductor, which in turn triggered an explosion of research leading to breakthroughs in computing, electricity transmission, magnetically elevated trains, and many applications yet to be realized.
Sharpening your saw may not change the world, but it will change you; any nudge out of your comfort zone will give you fresh ideas and help you look at seemingly insoluble problems in completely new ways.
And to those who still can’t bear the thought of taking time off, remember the dying words that no one has spoken, ever: “I wish I had spent more time in my office!”
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Few movies have universal appeal these days; but one that comes close is Bill Murray’s 1993 classic Groundhog Day in which Murray’s character is trapped in a time loop, living the same day over and over until he finally “gets it right.”
One reason that this film resonates with so many, I think, is that we are all, in essence, similarly trapped. Not in a same-day loop, of course; but each week seems eerily similar to the last, as does each month, each year – on and on, ad infinitum. That’s why it is so important, every so often, to step out of the “loop” and reassess the bigger picture.
I write this reminder every couple of years, because it’s so easy to lose sight of the overall landscape among the pressures of our daily routines. Sooner or later, no matter how dedicated we are, the grind gets to all of us, leading to fatigue, irritability, and a progressive decline in motivation. And we are too busy to sit down and think about what we might do to break that vicious cycle. This is detrimental to our own well-being, as well as that of our patients.
There are many ways to maintain your intellectual and emotional health, but here’s how I do it: I take individual days off (average of 1 a month) to catch up on journals or take a CME course; or to try something new – something I’ve been thinking about doing “someday, when there is time” – such as a guitar, bass, or sailing lesson; or get away a long weekend away with my wife. And we take longer vacations, without fail, each year.
I know how some of you feel about “wasting” a day – or, God forbid, a week. Patients might go elsewhere while you’re gone, and every day the office is idle, you “lose money.” That whole paradigm is wrong. You bring in a given amount of revenue per year – more on some days, less on other days, none on weekends and vacations; it all averages out in the end.
Besides, this is much more important than money. This is breaking the routine, clearing the cobwebs, living your life. And trust me, your practice will still be there when you return.
Six weeks ago, my wife and I packed our carry-ons, bought rail passes, and took off for Japan. As we whisked around the archipelago on those incredibly punctual Shinkansen bullet trains, I didn’t have the time – or the slightest inclination – to worry about the office. But I did accumulate some great ideas – practical, medical, and literary. Original thoughts are hard to chase down during the daily grind; but in a refreshing environment, they will seek you out.
When our whistle-stop trip was over, I returned ready to take on the world, and my practice, anew.
More than once I’ve recounted the story of K. Alexander Müller and J. Georg Bednorz, the Swiss Nobel Laureates whose superconductivity research ground to a halt in 1986. The harder they pressed, the more elusive progress became. So Müller decided to take a break to read a new book on ceramics – a subject that had always interested him.
Nothing could have been less relevant to his work, of course; ceramics are among the poorest conductors known. But, in that lower-pressure environment, Müller realized that a unique property of ceramics might apply to their project.
Back in the lab, the team created a ceramic compound that became the first successful “high-temperature” superconductor, which in turn triggered an explosion of research leading to breakthroughs in computing, electricity transmission, magnetically elevated trains, and many applications yet to be realized.
Sharpening your saw may not change the world, but it will change you; any nudge out of your comfort zone will give you fresh ideas and help you look at seemingly insoluble problems in completely new ways.
And to those who still can’t bear the thought of taking time off, remember the dying words that no one has spoken, ever: “I wish I had spent more time in my office!”
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
HIPAA Enforcement in 2016: Is Your Practice Ready?
Two reports from the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) have attracted a lot of attention in recent weeks: The Office for Civil Rights (OCR), OIG said, needs to improve and expand its enforcement of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). In response, the OCR announced that it plans to identify a pool of potential audit targets and launch a permanent audit program this year. That, combined with the substantial fine levied against a dermatology group last year for violating one of the new rules, signals the importance of reviewing your practice’s HIPAA compliance as soon as possible.
You can compare your office’s compliance status against the recommendations listed on the OCR website, but pay particular attention to your agreements with Business Associates (BAs). Those are the individuals or businesses, other than your employees, who perform “functions or activities” on behalf of your practice that involve “creating, receiving, maintaining, or transmitting” personal health information.
First, make sure that all individuals and enterprises fitting that definition have a signed agreement in place. Typical BAs include answering and billing services, independent transcriptionists, hardware and software companies, and any other vendors involved in creating or maintaining your medical records. Practice management consultants, attorneys, specialty pharmacies, and record storage, microfilming, and shredding services are BAs if they must have direct access to confidential information in order to do their job.
The revised rules place additional onus on physicians for confidentiality breaches committed by their BAs. It’s not enough to simply have a BA contract; you are expected to use “reasonable diligence” in monitoring their work. BAs and their subcontractors are directly responsible for their own actions, but the primary responsibility is yours. Furthermore, you must now assume the worst-case scenario: Previously, when protected health information (PHI) was compromised, you would have to notify only affected patients (and the government) if there was a “significant risk of financial or reputational harm,” but now, any incident involving patient records is assumed to be a breach, and must be reported.
Failure to do so could subject your practice, as well as the contractor, to significant fines. That is where the Massachusetts dermatology group ran into trouble: It lost a thumb drive containing unencrypted patient records, and was forced to pay a $150,000 fine, even though there was no evidence that the information was found or exploited.
Had the lost drive been encrypted, the incident would not have been considered a breach, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, because its contents would not have been viewable by the finder. The biggest vulnerability in most practices is probably mobile devices carrying patient data. There is no longer any excuse for not encrypting HIPAA-protected information; encryption software is cheap, readily available, and easy to use.
Patients have new rights under the new rules as well; they may now restrict any PHI shared with third-party insurers and health plans, if they pay for the services themselves. They also have the right to request copies of their electronic health records (EHRs). You can bill the costs of responding to such requests. If you have EHRs, work out a system for doing this, because the response time has been decreased from 90 days to 30 days – even shorter in some states.
If you haven’t yet revised your Notice of Privacy Practices (NPP) to explain your relationships with BAs, and their status under the new rules, do it now. (You should have done it last year.) You need to explain the breach notification process too, as well as the new patient rights mentioned above. You must post your revised NPP in your office, and make copies available there, but you need not mail a copy to every patient.
You also should examine every part of your office where patient information is handled to identify potential violations. Examples include computer screens in your reception area that are visible to patients; laptops not locked up after hours; unencrypted emails or texts that might reveal confidential information; and documents designated for shredding that sit, unshredded, in the “to shred” bin for days.
And make sure you correct any problems you find before the OCR auditors come calling.
To view the recommendations at the OCR website so you can check your office’s compliance status, go to: www.hhs.gov/hipaa/index.html.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News.
Two reports from the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) have attracted a lot of attention in recent weeks: The Office for Civil Rights (OCR), OIG said, needs to improve and expand its enforcement of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). In response, the OCR announced that it plans to identify a pool of potential audit targets and launch a permanent audit program this year. That, combined with the substantial fine levied against a dermatology group last year for violating one of the new rules, signals the importance of reviewing your practice’s HIPAA compliance as soon as possible.
You can compare your office’s compliance status against the recommendations listed on the OCR website, but pay particular attention to your agreements with Business Associates (BAs). Those are the individuals or businesses, other than your employees, who perform “functions or activities” on behalf of your practice that involve “creating, receiving, maintaining, or transmitting” personal health information.
First, make sure that all individuals and enterprises fitting that definition have a signed agreement in place. Typical BAs include answering and billing services, independent transcriptionists, hardware and software companies, and any other vendors involved in creating or maintaining your medical records. Practice management consultants, attorneys, specialty pharmacies, and record storage, microfilming, and shredding services are BAs if they must have direct access to confidential information in order to do their job.
The revised rules place additional onus on physicians for confidentiality breaches committed by their BAs. It’s not enough to simply have a BA contract; you are expected to use “reasonable diligence” in monitoring their work. BAs and their subcontractors are directly responsible for their own actions, but the primary responsibility is yours. Furthermore, you must now assume the worst-case scenario: Previously, when protected health information (PHI) was compromised, you would have to notify only affected patients (and the government) if there was a “significant risk of financial or reputational harm,” but now, any incident involving patient records is assumed to be a breach, and must be reported.
Failure to do so could subject your practice, as well as the contractor, to significant fines. That is where the Massachusetts dermatology group ran into trouble: It lost a thumb drive containing unencrypted patient records, and was forced to pay a $150,000 fine, even though there was no evidence that the information was found or exploited.
Had the lost drive been encrypted, the incident would not have been considered a breach, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, because its contents would not have been viewable by the finder. The biggest vulnerability in most practices is probably mobile devices carrying patient data. There is no longer any excuse for not encrypting HIPAA-protected information; encryption software is cheap, readily available, and easy to use.
Patients have new rights under the new rules as well; they may now restrict any PHI shared with third-party insurers and health plans, if they pay for the services themselves. They also have the right to request copies of their electronic health records (EHRs). You can bill the costs of responding to such requests. If you have EHRs, work out a system for doing this, because the response time has been decreased from 90 days to 30 days – even shorter in some states.
If you haven’t yet revised your Notice of Privacy Practices (NPP) to explain your relationships with BAs, and their status under the new rules, do it now. (You should have done it last year.) You need to explain the breach notification process too, as well as the new patient rights mentioned above. You must post your revised NPP in your office, and make copies available there, but you need not mail a copy to every patient.
You also should examine every part of your office where patient information is handled to identify potential violations. Examples include computer screens in your reception area that are visible to patients; laptops not locked up after hours; unencrypted emails or texts that might reveal confidential information; and documents designated for shredding that sit, unshredded, in the “to shred” bin for days.
And make sure you correct any problems you find before the OCR auditors come calling.
To view the recommendations at the OCR website so you can check your office’s compliance status, go to: www.hhs.gov/hipaa/index.html.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News.
Two reports from the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) have attracted a lot of attention in recent weeks: The Office for Civil Rights (OCR), OIG said, needs to improve and expand its enforcement of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). In response, the OCR announced that it plans to identify a pool of potential audit targets and launch a permanent audit program this year. That, combined with the substantial fine levied against a dermatology group last year for violating one of the new rules, signals the importance of reviewing your practice’s HIPAA compliance as soon as possible.
You can compare your office’s compliance status against the recommendations listed on the OCR website, but pay particular attention to your agreements with Business Associates (BAs). Those are the individuals or businesses, other than your employees, who perform “functions or activities” on behalf of your practice that involve “creating, receiving, maintaining, or transmitting” personal health information.
First, make sure that all individuals and enterprises fitting that definition have a signed agreement in place. Typical BAs include answering and billing services, independent transcriptionists, hardware and software companies, and any other vendors involved in creating or maintaining your medical records. Practice management consultants, attorneys, specialty pharmacies, and record storage, microfilming, and shredding services are BAs if they must have direct access to confidential information in order to do their job.
The revised rules place additional onus on physicians for confidentiality breaches committed by their BAs. It’s not enough to simply have a BA contract; you are expected to use “reasonable diligence” in monitoring their work. BAs and their subcontractors are directly responsible for their own actions, but the primary responsibility is yours. Furthermore, you must now assume the worst-case scenario: Previously, when protected health information (PHI) was compromised, you would have to notify only affected patients (and the government) if there was a “significant risk of financial or reputational harm,” but now, any incident involving patient records is assumed to be a breach, and must be reported.
Failure to do so could subject your practice, as well as the contractor, to significant fines. That is where the Massachusetts dermatology group ran into trouble: It lost a thumb drive containing unencrypted patient records, and was forced to pay a $150,000 fine, even though there was no evidence that the information was found or exploited.
Had the lost drive been encrypted, the incident would not have been considered a breach, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, because its contents would not have been viewable by the finder. The biggest vulnerability in most practices is probably mobile devices carrying patient data. There is no longer any excuse for not encrypting HIPAA-protected information; encryption software is cheap, readily available, and easy to use.
Patients have new rights under the new rules as well; they may now restrict any PHI shared with third-party insurers and health plans, if they pay for the services themselves. They also have the right to request copies of their electronic health records (EHRs). You can bill the costs of responding to such requests. If you have EHRs, work out a system for doing this, because the response time has been decreased from 90 days to 30 days – even shorter in some states.
If you haven’t yet revised your Notice of Privacy Practices (NPP) to explain your relationships with BAs, and their status under the new rules, do it now. (You should have done it last year.) You need to explain the breach notification process too, as well as the new patient rights mentioned above. You must post your revised NPP in your office, and make copies available there, but you need not mail a copy to every patient.
You also should examine every part of your office where patient information is handled to identify potential violations. Examples include computer screens in your reception area that are visible to patients; laptops not locked up after hours; unencrypted emails or texts that might reveal confidential information; and documents designated for shredding that sit, unshredded, in the “to shred” bin for days.
And make sure you correct any problems you find before the OCR auditors come calling.
To view the recommendations at the OCR website so you can check your office’s compliance status, go to: www.hhs.gov/hipaa/index.html.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News.
HIPAA enforcement in 2016: Is your practice ready?
Two reports from the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) have attracted a lot of attention in recent weeks: The Office for Civil Rights (OCR), OIG said, needs to improve and expand its enforcement of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). In response, the OCR announced that it plans to identify a pool of potential audit targets and launch a permanent audit program this year. That, combined with the substantial fine levied against a dermatology group last year for violating one of the new rules, signals the importance of reviewing your practice’s HIPAA compliance as soon as possible.
You can compare your office’s compliance status against the recommendations listed on the OCR website, but pay particular attention to your agreements with Business Associates (BAs). Those are the individuals or businesses, other than your employees, who perform “functions or activities” on behalf of your practice that involve “creating, receiving, maintaining, or transmitting” personal health information.
First, make sure that all individuals and enterprises fitting that definition have a signed agreement in place. Typical BAs include answering and billing services, independent transcriptionists, hardware and software companies, and any other vendors involved in creating or maintaining your medical records. Practice management consultants, attorneys, specialty pharmacies, and record storage, microfilming, and shredding services are BAs if they must have direct access to confidential information in order to do their job.
The revised rules place additional onus on physicians for confidentiality breaches committed by their BAs. It’s not enough to simply have a BA contract; you are expected to use “reasonable diligence” in monitoring their work. BAs and their subcontractors are directly responsible for their own actions, but the primary responsibility is yours. Furthermore, you must now assume the worst-case scenario: Previously, when protected health information (PHI) was compromised, you would have to notify only affected patients (and the government) if there was a “significant risk of financial or reputational harm,” but now, any incident involving patient records is assumed to be a breach, and must be reported.
Failure to do so could subject your practice, as well as the contractor, to significant fines. That is where the Massachusetts dermatology group ran into trouble: It lost a thumb drive containing unencrypted patient records, and was forced to pay a $150,000 fine, even though there was no evidence that the information was found or exploited.
Had the lost drive been encrypted, the incident would not have been considered a breach, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, because its contents would not have been viewable by the finder. The biggest vulnerability in most practices is probably mobile devices carrying patient data. There is no longer any excuse for not encrypting HIPAA-protected information; encryption software is cheap, readily available, and easy to use.
Patients have new rights under the new rules as well; they may now restrict any PHI shared with third-party insurers and health plans, if they pay for the services themselves. They also have the right to request copies of their electronic health records (EHRs). You can bill the costs of responding to such requests. If you have EHRs, work out a system for doing this, because the response time has been decreased from 90 days to 30 days – even shorter in some states.
If you haven’t yet revised your Notice of Privacy Practices (NPP) to explain your relationships with BAs, and their status under the new rules, do it now. (You should have done it last year.) You need to explain the breach notification process too, as well as the new patient rights mentioned above. You must post your revised NPP in your office, and make copies available there, but you need not mail a copy to every patient.
You also should examine every part of your office where patient information is handled to identify potential violations. Examples include computer screens in your reception area that are visible to patients; laptops not locked up after hours; unencrypted emails or texts that might reveal confidential information; and documents designated for shredding that sit, unshredded, in the “to shred” bin for days.
And make sure you correct any problems you find before the OCR auditors come calling.
To view the recommendations at the OCR website so you can check your office’s compliance status, go to: www.hhs.gov/hipaa/index.html.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News.
Two reports from the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) have attracted a lot of attention in recent weeks: The Office for Civil Rights (OCR), OIG said, needs to improve and expand its enforcement of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). In response, the OCR announced that it plans to identify a pool of potential audit targets and launch a permanent audit program this year. That, combined with the substantial fine levied against a dermatology group last year for violating one of the new rules, signals the importance of reviewing your practice’s HIPAA compliance as soon as possible.
You can compare your office’s compliance status against the recommendations listed on the OCR website, but pay particular attention to your agreements with Business Associates (BAs). Those are the individuals or businesses, other than your employees, who perform “functions or activities” on behalf of your practice that involve “creating, receiving, maintaining, or transmitting” personal health information.
First, make sure that all individuals and enterprises fitting that definition have a signed agreement in place. Typical BAs include answering and billing services, independent transcriptionists, hardware and software companies, and any other vendors involved in creating or maintaining your medical records. Practice management consultants, attorneys, specialty pharmacies, and record storage, microfilming, and shredding services are BAs if they must have direct access to confidential information in order to do their job.
The revised rules place additional onus on physicians for confidentiality breaches committed by their BAs. It’s not enough to simply have a BA contract; you are expected to use “reasonable diligence” in monitoring their work. BAs and their subcontractors are directly responsible for their own actions, but the primary responsibility is yours. Furthermore, you must now assume the worst-case scenario: Previously, when protected health information (PHI) was compromised, you would have to notify only affected patients (and the government) if there was a “significant risk of financial or reputational harm,” but now, any incident involving patient records is assumed to be a breach, and must be reported.
Failure to do so could subject your practice, as well as the contractor, to significant fines. That is where the Massachusetts dermatology group ran into trouble: It lost a thumb drive containing unencrypted patient records, and was forced to pay a $150,000 fine, even though there was no evidence that the information was found or exploited.
Had the lost drive been encrypted, the incident would not have been considered a breach, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, because its contents would not have been viewable by the finder. The biggest vulnerability in most practices is probably mobile devices carrying patient data. There is no longer any excuse for not encrypting HIPAA-protected information; encryption software is cheap, readily available, and easy to use.
Patients have new rights under the new rules as well; they may now restrict any PHI shared with third-party insurers and health plans, if they pay for the services themselves. They also have the right to request copies of their electronic health records (EHRs). You can bill the costs of responding to such requests. If you have EHRs, work out a system for doing this, because the response time has been decreased from 90 days to 30 days – even shorter in some states.
If you haven’t yet revised your Notice of Privacy Practices (NPP) to explain your relationships with BAs, and their status under the new rules, do it now. (You should have done it last year.) You need to explain the breach notification process too, as well as the new patient rights mentioned above. You must post your revised NPP in your office, and make copies available there, but you need not mail a copy to every patient.
You also should examine every part of your office where patient information is handled to identify potential violations. Examples include computer screens in your reception area that are visible to patients; laptops not locked up after hours; unencrypted emails or texts that might reveal confidential information; and documents designated for shredding that sit, unshredded, in the “to shred” bin for days.
And make sure you correct any problems you find before the OCR auditors come calling.
To view the recommendations at the OCR website so you can check your office’s compliance status, go to: www.hhs.gov/hipaa/index.html.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News.
Two reports from the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) have attracted a lot of attention in recent weeks: The Office for Civil Rights (OCR), OIG said, needs to improve and expand its enforcement of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). In response, the OCR announced that it plans to identify a pool of potential audit targets and launch a permanent audit program this year. That, combined with the substantial fine levied against a dermatology group last year for violating one of the new rules, signals the importance of reviewing your practice’s HIPAA compliance as soon as possible.
You can compare your office’s compliance status against the recommendations listed on the OCR website, but pay particular attention to your agreements with Business Associates (BAs). Those are the individuals or businesses, other than your employees, who perform “functions or activities” on behalf of your practice that involve “creating, receiving, maintaining, or transmitting” personal health information.
First, make sure that all individuals and enterprises fitting that definition have a signed agreement in place. Typical BAs include answering and billing services, independent transcriptionists, hardware and software companies, and any other vendors involved in creating or maintaining your medical records. Practice management consultants, attorneys, specialty pharmacies, and record storage, microfilming, and shredding services are BAs if they must have direct access to confidential information in order to do their job.
The revised rules place additional onus on physicians for confidentiality breaches committed by their BAs. It’s not enough to simply have a BA contract; you are expected to use “reasonable diligence” in monitoring their work. BAs and their subcontractors are directly responsible for their own actions, but the primary responsibility is yours. Furthermore, you must now assume the worst-case scenario: Previously, when protected health information (PHI) was compromised, you would have to notify only affected patients (and the government) if there was a “significant risk of financial or reputational harm,” but now, any incident involving patient records is assumed to be a breach, and must be reported.
Failure to do so could subject your practice, as well as the contractor, to significant fines. That is where the Massachusetts dermatology group ran into trouble: It lost a thumb drive containing unencrypted patient records, and was forced to pay a $150,000 fine, even though there was no evidence that the information was found or exploited.
Had the lost drive been encrypted, the incident would not have been considered a breach, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, because its contents would not have been viewable by the finder. The biggest vulnerability in most practices is probably mobile devices carrying patient data. There is no longer any excuse for not encrypting HIPAA-protected information; encryption software is cheap, readily available, and easy to use.
Patients have new rights under the new rules as well; they may now restrict any PHI shared with third-party insurers and health plans, if they pay for the services themselves. They also have the right to request copies of their electronic health records (EHRs). You can bill the costs of responding to such requests. If you have EHRs, work out a system for doing this, because the response time has been decreased from 90 days to 30 days – even shorter in some states.
If you haven’t yet revised your Notice of Privacy Practices (NPP) to explain your relationships with BAs, and their status under the new rules, do it now. (You should have done it last year.) You need to explain the breach notification process too, as well as the new patient rights mentioned above. You must post your revised NPP in your office, and make copies available there, but you need not mail a copy to every patient.
You also should examine every part of your office where patient information is handled to identify potential violations. Examples include computer screens in your reception area that are visible to patients; laptops not locked up after hours; unencrypted emails or texts that might reveal confidential information; and documents designated for shredding that sit, unshredded, in the “to shred” bin for days.
And make sure you correct any problems you find before the OCR auditors come calling.
To view the recommendations at the OCR website so you can check your office’s compliance status, go to: www.hhs.gov/hipaa/index.html.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News.
EPLI
No matter how complete your insurance portfolio, there is one policy – one you probably never heard of – that you should definitely consider adding to it.
A few years ago, I spoke with a dermatologist in California who experienced every employer’s nightmare: He fired an incompetent employee who promptly sued him for wrongful termination and accused him of sexual harassment to boot. The charges were completely false, and the employee’s transgressions were well documented, but defending the lawsuit, successfully or not, would have been expensive. So the dermatologist’s lawyer persuaded him to settle it for a significant sum of money.
Disasters like that are becoming more common. Plaintiffs’ attorneys know all too well that most small businesses, including medical practices, are not insured against employees’ legal actions, and usually cannot afford to defend them in court.
Fortunately, there is a relatively inexpensive way to protect yourself: Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) provides protection against many kinds of employee lawsuits not covered by conventional liability insurance. These include wrongful termination, sexual harassment, discrimination, breach of employment contract, negligent hiring or evaluation, failure to promote, wrongful discipline, mismanagement of benefits, and the ever-popular “emotional distress.”
EPLI would have covered the California dermatologist, had he carried it, against his employee’s charges. In fact, there is a better-than-even chance that the plaintiff’s attorney would have dropped the lawsuit entirely once informed that it would be aggressively defended.
Some liability carriers are beginning to cover some employee-related issues in “umbrella” policies, so check your current insurance coverage first. Then, as with all insurance, you should shop around for the best price, and carefully read the policies on your short list. All EPLI policies cover claims against your practice and its owners and employees, but some cover claims against full-time employees only. Try to obtain the broadest coverage possible so that part-time, temporary, and seasonal employees, and if possible, even applicants for employment and former employees, also are covered.
Look for the most comprehensive policy in terms of coverage. Almost every EPLI policy covers the allegations mentioned above, but some offer a more comprehensive list of covered acts, such as invasion of privacy and defamation of character.
Also be aware of precisely what each policy does not cover. Most contain exclusions for punitive damages and court-imposed fines, as well as for criminal acts, fraud, and other clearly illegal conduct. For example, if it can be proved that you fired an employee because he or she refused to falsify insurance claims, any resulting civil suit against you will not be covered by any type of insurance.
Depending on where you practice, it may be necessary to ask an employment lawyer to evaluate your individual EPLI needs. An underwriter cannot anticipate every eventuality for you, particularly if he or she does not live in your area and is not familiar with employment conditions in your community.
Try to get a clause added that permits you to choose your own defense attorney. Better still, pick a specific attorney or firm that you trust, and have that counsel named in an endorsement to the policy. Otherwise, the insurance carrier will select an attorney from its own panel who may not consider your interests a higher priority than those of the insurer itself.
If you must accept the insurer’s choice of counsel, you should find out whether that attorney is experienced in employment law, which is a very specialized area. And, just as with your malpractice policy, you will want to maintain as much control as possible over the settlement of claims. Ideally, no claim should be settled without your expressed permission.
As with any insurance policy you buy, be sure to choose an established carrier with ample experience in the field and solid financial strength. A low premium is no bargain if the carrier is new to EPLI, or goes broke, or decides to cease covering employment practices liability.
Above all, make sure that you can live with the claims definition and exclusions in the policy you choose, and seek advice if you are unsure what your specific needs are before you sign on the dotted line.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
No matter how complete your insurance portfolio, there is one policy – one you probably never heard of – that you should definitely consider adding to it.
A few years ago, I spoke with a dermatologist in California who experienced every employer’s nightmare: He fired an incompetent employee who promptly sued him for wrongful termination and accused him of sexual harassment to boot. The charges were completely false, and the employee’s transgressions were well documented, but defending the lawsuit, successfully or not, would have been expensive. So the dermatologist’s lawyer persuaded him to settle it for a significant sum of money.
Disasters like that are becoming more common. Plaintiffs’ attorneys know all too well that most small businesses, including medical practices, are not insured against employees’ legal actions, and usually cannot afford to defend them in court.
Fortunately, there is a relatively inexpensive way to protect yourself: Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) provides protection against many kinds of employee lawsuits not covered by conventional liability insurance. These include wrongful termination, sexual harassment, discrimination, breach of employment contract, negligent hiring or evaluation, failure to promote, wrongful discipline, mismanagement of benefits, and the ever-popular “emotional distress.”
EPLI would have covered the California dermatologist, had he carried it, against his employee’s charges. In fact, there is a better-than-even chance that the plaintiff’s attorney would have dropped the lawsuit entirely once informed that it would be aggressively defended.
Some liability carriers are beginning to cover some employee-related issues in “umbrella” policies, so check your current insurance coverage first. Then, as with all insurance, you should shop around for the best price, and carefully read the policies on your short list. All EPLI policies cover claims against your practice and its owners and employees, but some cover claims against full-time employees only. Try to obtain the broadest coverage possible so that part-time, temporary, and seasonal employees, and if possible, even applicants for employment and former employees, also are covered.
Look for the most comprehensive policy in terms of coverage. Almost every EPLI policy covers the allegations mentioned above, but some offer a more comprehensive list of covered acts, such as invasion of privacy and defamation of character.
Also be aware of precisely what each policy does not cover. Most contain exclusions for punitive damages and court-imposed fines, as well as for criminal acts, fraud, and other clearly illegal conduct. For example, if it can be proved that you fired an employee because he or she refused to falsify insurance claims, any resulting civil suit against you will not be covered by any type of insurance.
Depending on where you practice, it may be necessary to ask an employment lawyer to evaluate your individual EPLI needs. An underwriter cannot anticipate every eventuality for you, particularly if he or she does not live in your area and is not familiar with employment conditions in your community.
Try to get a clause added that permits you to choose your own defense attorney. Better still, pick a specific attorney or firm that you trust, and have that counsel named in an endorsement to the policy. Otherwise, the insurance carrier will select an attorney from its own panel who may not consider your interests a higher priority than those of the insurer itself.
If you must accept the insurer’s choice of counsel, you should find out whether that attorney is experienced in employment law, which is a very specialized area. And, just as with your malpractice policy, you will want to maintain as much control as possible over the settlement of claims. Ideally, no claim should be settled without your expressed permission.
As with any insurance policy you buy, be sure to choose an established carrier with ample experience in the field and solid financial strength. A low premium is no bargain if the carrier is new to EPLI, or goes broke, or decides to cease covering employment practices liability.
Above all, make sure that you can live with the claims definition and exclusions in the policy you choose, and seek advice if you are unsure what your specific needs are before you sign on the dotted line.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
No matter how complete your insurance portfolio, there is one policy – one you probably never heard of – that you should definitely consider adding to it.
A few years ago, I spoke with a dermatologist in California who experienced every employer’s nightmare: He fired an incompetent employee who promptly sued him for wrongful termination and accused him of sexual harassment to boot. The charges were completely false, and the employee’s transgressions were well documented, but defending the lawsuit, successfully or not, would have been expensive. So the dermatologist’s lawyer persuaded him to settle it for a significant sum of money.
Disasters like that are becoming more common. Plaintiffs’ attorneys know all too well that most small businesses, including medical practices, are not insured against employees’ legal actions, and usually cannot afford to defend them in court.
Fortunately, there is a relatively inexpensive way to protect yourself: Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) provides protection against many kinds of employee lawsuits not covered by conventional liability insurance. These include wrongful termination, sexual harassment, discrimination, breach of employment contract, negligent hiring or evaluation, failure to promote, wrongful discipline, mismanagement of benefits, and the ever-popular “emotional distress.”
EPLI would have covered the California dermatologist, had he carried it, against his employee’s charges. In fact, there is a better-than-even chance that the plaintiff’s attorney would have dropped the lawsuit entirely once informed that it would be aggressively defended.
Some liability carriers are beginning to cover some employee-related issues in “umbrella” policies, so check your current insurance coverage first. Then, as with all insurance, you should shop around for the best price, and carefully read the policies on your short list. All EPLI policies cover claims against your practice and its owners and employees, but some cover claims against full-time employees only. Try to obtain the broadest coverage possible so that part-time, temporary, and seasonal employees, and if possible, even applicants for employment and former employees, also are covered.
Look for the most comprehensive policy in terms of coverage. Almost every EPLI policy covers the allegations mentioned above, but some offer a more comprehensive list of covered acts, such as invasion of privacy and defamation of character.
Also be aware of precisely what each policy does not cover. Most contain exclusions for punitive damages and court-imposed fines, as well as for criminal acts, fraud, and other clearly illegal conduct. For example, if it can be proved that you fired an employee because he or she refused to falsify insurance claims, any resulting civil suit against you will not be covered by any type of insurance.
Depending on where you practice, it may be necessary to ask an employment lawyer to evaluate your individual EPLI needs. An underwriter cannot anticipate every eventuality for you, particularly if he or she does not live in your area and is not familiar with employment conditions in your community.
Try to get a clause added that permits you to choose your own defense attorney. Better still, pick a specific attorney or firm that you trust, and have that counsel named in an endorsement to the policy. Otherwise, the insurance carrier will select an attorney from its own panel who may not consider your interests a higher priority than those of the insurer itself.
If you must accept the insurer’s choice of counsel, you should find out whether that attorney is experienced in employment law, which is a very specialized area. And, just as with your malpractice policy, you will want to maintain as much control as possible over the settlement of claims. Ideally, no claim should be settled without your expressed permission.
As with any insurance policy you buy, be sure to choose an established carrier with ample experience in the field and solid financial strength. A low premium is no bargain if the carrier is new to EPLI, or goes broke, or decides to cease covering employment practices liability.
Above all, make sure that you can live with the claims definition and exclusions in the policy you choose, and seek advice if you are unsure what your specific needs are before you sign on the dotted line.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Resolutions
For many, the making and breaking of New Year’s resolutions has become a humorless cliché. Still, the beginning of a new year is as good a time as any for reflection and inspiration; and if you restrict your fix-it list to a few realistic promises that can actually be kept, resolution time does not have to be such an exercise in futility.
I can’t presume to know what needs improving in your practice, much less your life; but I do know the office issues I get the most questions about. Perhaps the following examples will provide inspiration for assembling a realistic list of your own:
1. Review your October, November, and December claim payments. That is, all payments since ICD-10 launched. Overall, the transition has been surprisingly smooth; the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services says the claim denial rate has not increased significantly, and very few rejections are due to incorrect diagnosis coding. But each private payer has its own procedure, so make sure that none of your payers has dropped the ball. The most common problem so far seems to be inconsistent handling of “Z” codes, such as skin cancer screening (Z12.83), so pay particular attention to those.
2. Do a HIPAA risk assessment. The new HIPAA rules have been in effect for more than a year. Is your office up to speed? Review every procedure that involves confidential information; make sure there are no violations. Penalties for carelessness are a lot stiffer now.
3. Encrypt your mobile devices. This is really a subset of No. 2. The biggest HIPAA vulnerability in many practices is laptops and tablets carrying confidential patient information; losing one could be a disaster. Encryption software is cheap and readily available, and a lost or stolen mobile device will probably not be treated as a HIPAA breach if it is properly encrypted.
4. Reduce your accounts receivable by keeping a credit card number on file for each patient, and charging patient-owed balances as they come in. A series of my past columns in the archive at www.edermatologynews.com explains exactly how to do this. Every hotel in the world does it; you should too.
5. Clear your “horizontal file cabinet.” That’s the mess on your desk, all the paperwork you never seem to get to (probably because you’re tweeting or answering e-mail). Set aside an hour or two and get it all done. You’ll find some interesting stuff in there. Then, for every piece of paper that arrives on your desk from now on, follow the DDD Rule: Do it, Delegate it, or Destroy it. Don’t start a new mess.
6. Keep a closer eye on your office finances. Most physicians delegate the bookkeeping, and that’s fine. But ignoring the financial side creates an atmosphere that facilitates embezzlement. Set aside a couple of hours each month to review the books personally. And make sure your employees know you’re doing it.
7. Make sure your long range financial planning is on track. This is another task physicians tend to “set and forget,” but the Great Recession was an eye opener for many of us. Once a year, sit down with your accountant and planner and make sure your investments are well diversified and all other aspects of your finances – budgets, credit ratings, insurance coverage, tax situations, college savings, estate plans, retirement accounts – are in the best shape possible. January is a good time.
8. Back up your data. Now is also an excellent time to verify that the information on your office and personal computers is being backed up – locally and online – on a regular schedule. Don’t wait until something crashes.
9. Take more vacations. Remember Eastern’s First Law: Your last words will NOT be, “I wish I had spent more time in the office.” This is the year to start spending more time enjoying your life, your friends and family, and the world. As John Lennon said, “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.”
10. Look at yourself. A private practice lives or dies on the personalities of its physicians, and your staff copies your personality and style. Take a hard, honest look at yourself. Identify your negative personality traits and work to eliminate them. If you have any difficulty finding habits that need changing … ask your spouse. He or she will be happy to explain them in excruciating detail.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
For many, the making and breaking of New Year’s resolutions has become a humorless cliché. Still, the beginning of a new year is as good a time as any for reflection and inspiration; and if you restrict your fix-it list to a few realistic promises that can actually be kept, resolution time does not have to be such an exercise in futility.
I can’t presume to know what needs improving in your practice, much less your life; but I do know the office issues I get the most questions about. Perhaps the following examples will provide inspiration for assembling a realistic list of your own:
1. Review your October, November, and December claim payments. That is, all payments since ICD-10 launched. Overall, the transition has been surprisingly smooth; the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services says the claim denial rate has not increased significantly, and very few rejections are due to incorrect diagnosis coding. But each private payer has its own procedure, so make sure that none of your payers has dropped the ball. The most common problem so far seems to be inconsistent handling of “Z” codes, such as skin cancer screening (Z12.83), so pay particular attention to those.
2. Do a HIPAA risk assessment. The new HIPAA rules have been in effect for more than a year. Is your office up to speed? Review every procedure that involves confidential information; make sure there are no violations. Penalties for carelessness are a lot stiffer now.
3. Encrypt your mobile devices. This is really a subset of No. 2. The biggest HIPAA vulnerability in many practices is laptops and tablets carrying confidential patient information; losing one could be a disaster. Encryption software is cheap and readily available, and a lost or stolen mobile device will probably not be treated as a HIPAA breach if it is properly encrypted.
4. Reduce your accounts receivable by keeping a credit card number on file for each patient, and charging patient-owed balances as they come in. A series of my past columns in the archive at www.edermatologynews.com explains exactly how to do this. Every hotel in the world does it; you should too.
5. Clear your “horizontal file cabinet.” That’s the mess on your desk, all the paperwork you never seem to get to (probably because you’re tweeting or answering e-mail). Set aside an hour or two and get it all done. You’ll find some interesting stuff in there. Then, for every piece of paper that arrives on your desk from now on, follow the DDD Rule: Do it, Delegate it, or Destroy it. Don’t start a new mess.
6. Keep a closer eye on your office finances. Most physicians delegate the bookkeeping, and that’s fine. But ignoring the financial side creates an atmosphere that facilitates embezzlement. Set aside a couple of hours each month to review the books personally. And make sure your employees know you’re doing it.
7. Make sure your long range financial planning is on track. This is another task physicians tend to “set and forget,” but the Great Recession was an eye opener for many of us. Once a year, sit down with your accountant and planner and make sure your investments are well diversified and all other aspects of your finances – budgets, credit ratings, insurance coverage, tax situations, college savings, estate plans, retirement accounts – are in the best shape possible. January is a good time.
8. Back up your data. Now is also an excellent time to verify that the information on your office and personal computers is being backed up – locally and online – on a regular schedule. Don’t wait until something crashes.
9. Take more vacations. Remember Eastern’s First Law: Your last words will NOT be, “I wish I had spent more time in the office.” This is the year to start spending more time enjoying your life, your friends and family, and the world. As John Lennon said, “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.”
10. Look at yourself. A private practice lives or dies on the personalities of its physicians, and your staff copies your personality and style. Take a hard, honest look at yourself. Identify your negative personality traits and work to eliminate them. If you have any difficulty finding habits that need changing … ask your spouse. He or she will be happy to explain them in excruciating detail.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
For many, the making and breaking of New Year’s resolutions has become a humorless cliché. Still, the beginning of a new year is as good a time as any for reflection and inspiration; and if you restrict your fix-it list to a few realistic promises that can actually be kept, resolution time does not have to be such an exercise in futility.
I can’t presume to know what needs improving in your practice, much less your life; but I do know the office issues I get the most questions about. Perhaps the following examples will provide inspiration for assembling a realistic list of your own:
1. Review your October, November, and December claim payments. That is, all payments since ICD-10 launched. Overall, the transition has been surprisingly smooth; the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services says the claim denial rate has not increased significantly, and very few rejections are due to incorrect diagnosis coding. But each private payer has its own procedure, so make sure that none of your payers has dropped the ball. The most common problem so far seems to be inconsistent handling of “Z” codes, such as skin cancer screening (Z12.83), so pay particular attention to those.
2. Do a HIPAA risk assessment. The new HIPAA rules have been in effect for more than a year. Is your office up to speed? Review every procedure that involves confidential information; make sure there are no violations. Penalties for carelessness are a lot stiffer now.
3. Encrypt your mobile devices. This is really a subset of No. 2. The biggest HIPAA vulnerability in many practices is laptops and tablets carrying confidential patient information; losing one could be a disaster. Encryption software is cheap and readily available, and a lost or stolen mobile device will probably not be treated as a HIPAA breach if it is properly encrypted.
4. Reduce your accounts receivable by keeping a credit card number on file for each patient, and charging patient-owed balances as they come in. A series of my past columns in the archive at www.edermatologynews.com explains exactly how to do this. Every hotel in the world does it; you should too.
5. Clear your “horizontal file cabinet.” That’s the mess on your desk, all the paperwork you never seem to get to (probably because you’re tweeting or answering e-mail). Set aside an hour or two and get it all done. You’ll find some interesting stuff in there. Then, for every piece of paper that arrives on your desk from now on, follow the DDD Rule: Do it, Delegate it, or Destroy it. Don’t start a new mess.
6. Keep a closer eye on your office finances. Most physicians delegate the bookkeeping, and that’s fine. But ignoring the financial side creates an atmosphere that facilitates embezzlement. Set aside a couple of hours each month to review the books personally. And make sure your employees know you’re doing it.
7. Make sure your long range financial planning is on track. This is another task physicians tend to “set and forget,” but the Great Recession was an eye opener for many of us. Once a year, sit down with your accountant and planner and make sure your investments are well diversified and all other aspects of your finances – budgets, credit ratings, insurance coverage, tax situations, college savings, estate plans, retirement accounts – are in the best shape possible. January is a good time.
8. Back up your data. Now is also an excellent time to verify that the information on your office and personal computers is being backed up – locally and online – on a regular schedule. Don’t wait until something crashes.
9. Take more vacations. Remember Eastern’s First Law: Your last words will NOT be, “I wish I had spent more time in the office.” This is the year to start spending more time enjoying your life, your friends and family, and the world. As John Lennon said, “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.”
10. Look at yourself. A private practice lives or dies on the personalities of its physicians, and your staff copies your personality and style. Take a hard, honest look at yourself. Identify your negative personality traits and work to eliminate them. If you have any difficulty finding habits that need changing … ask your spouse. He or she will be happy to explain them in excruciating detail.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].