It is readily apparent that electronic media and the internet are making it much easier to collect, organize and maintain data regarding individuals in our society. This is as true with respect to health care employees, and physicians in particular, as it is of anyone else. Information about physicians’ conduct, publications, and interactions with industry, as well as their regulatory, investigatory, and disciplinary history, is increasingly available through public sources. Information about practice patterns and quality of clinical performance can be readily analyzed ...
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- Exemptions from the Drug Supply Chain Security Act Enhanced Drug Distribution Security Requirements
- Investors, Researchers, and Business Leaders Take Note: $110M Awarded to Advance Women’s Health
- States Fill Gaps in Hospital Workplace Violence Laws—Requiring Law Enforcement Officers, Weapons Detection Screening Policies in Hospitals, and More
- Georgia & North Dakota: More State Judges Question the Constitutionality of Abortion Bans
- OCR Withdraws Appeal of District Court Order Declaring Unlawful and Vacating the “Proscribed Combination” Portion of Its HIPAA Online Tracking Technologies Guidance