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Gatekeeper
A primary care physician
or managed care entity responsible for determining when and what services a patient
can access and receive reimbursement for. A PCP is involved in overseeing and coordinating
all aspects of a patient's medical care. In order for a patient to receive a specialty
care referral or hospital admission, the PCP must preauthorize the visit, unless
there is an emergency. The term gatekeeper is also used in health care business
to describe anyone (EAP, employer based casemanager,
UR
entity, etc.) which makes the decision of where a patient will recieve services.
Global fee
A total charge for
a specific set of services, such as obstetrical services that encompass prenatal,
delivery and post-natal care. Managed care organizations will often seek contracts
with hospitals which contain set global fees for certain sets of services. Outliers
and carve-outs will be those services not included in the global negotiated rates.
Guaranteed issue
Requirement that health
plans offer coverage to all businesses during some period each year.
Grace Period
Period past the due
date of a premium during which coverage may not be cancelled.
Grievance Procedures
The process by which
an insured can air complaints and seek remedies.
Group Insurance
Any insurance policy
or health services contract by which groups of employees (and often their dependents)
are covered under a single policy or contract, issued by their employer or other
group entity.
Group Model HMO
Health care plan involving
contracts with physicians organized as a partnership, professional corporation,
or other legal association. It can also refer to an HMO model in which the HMO contracts
with one or more medical groups to provide services to members. In either case,
the payer or health plan pays the medical group, which is, in turn, is responsible
for compensating physicians. The medical group may also be responsible for paying
or contracting with hospitals and other providers.
Group Practice
A group of persons
licensed to practice medicine in the State, who, as their principal professional
activity, and as a group responsibility, engage or undertake to engage in the coordinated
practice of their profession primarily in one or more group practice facilities,
and who in their connection share common overhead expenses if and to the extent
such expenses are paid by members of the group, medical and other records, and substantial
portions of the equipment and the professional, technical, and administrative staffs.
Group practices use the acronyms PA, IPA, MSO and others. Group practices are far
more common now than a decade ago because physicians seek to lower costs, increase
contracting power and share payer contracts.
Group Practice
without Walls
(GPWW)
Similar to an independent
practice association, this type of physician group represents a legal and formal
entity where certain services are provided to each physician by the entity, and
the physician continues to practice in his/her own facility. It can include marketing,
billing and collection, staffing, management, and the like. Also called clinic without
walls.
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