The full test of significant cases concerning Medicare and Medicaid law from the U.S. Supreme Court, the U.S. Courts of Appeal, U.S. district courts, and state supreme courts are included. Also, administrative decisions from the CMS Administrator, Departmental Appeals Board, and the Provider Reimbursement Review Board are included. Select from the list of Cases / Decisions products below:
Your exclusive source for all Medicare and Medicaid information, with emphasis on the critical issue of payment.
Provides access to the full text of all compliance-related laws, regulations, cases and advisory opinions, both on the federal and 50 states levels.
Expert explanations + analysis work in tandem with full text primary source documents for comprehensive coverage.
Provides the full text of state Medicaid laws and regulations and acts as passed by state legislatures. Also includes finding tools such as schedule of changes and What's New section.
Expert explanations + analysis work in tandem with full text primary source documents for comprehensive coverage.
All court decisions, opinions, rulings and other documents published in the Medicare and Medicaid Guide since its initial report.
Offers a portable historical archive of comprehensive, full text Federal Medicare and Medicaid laws, regulations and manuals, and summary reporting of state Medicaid programs as they existed in December 2003.
The full text of the laws and regulations governing the health care program for active duty and retired members of the uniformed services, their families, and survivors.
News Headlines
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What's NewWolters Kluwer Law & Business acquires Mediregs, advancing CCH as leader in health care compliance integrated solutions. Learn More » |
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Topic SpotlightHouse passes Medicaid rules moratorium By a veto-proof margin, the House voted April 23, 2008 in favor of delaying seven Medicaid regulations that would reduce federal payments to states for low-income health care services and save about $13 billion over five years. By a 349 to 62 vote, the chamber passed the bill without amendments. The Senate is expected to consider the bill next and a tougher debate is expected. Learn More » |
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