By - Hillary Stemple, JD
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Healthcare fraud audits are becoming more aggressive, more data-driven, and far more expensive for medical practices that are unprepared. Federal agencies, Medicare contractors, Medicaid Integrity Programs, and commercial payers are dramatically increasing their oversight efforts — and even minor billing, coding, documentation, or compliance mistakes can trigger devastating financial consequences.
Today’s healthcare audits go far beyond random claim reviews. Auditors are increasingly using advanced analytics and AI-driven monitoring tools to identify billing irregularities, documentation inconsistencies, utilization trends, and reimbursement patterns that may suggest fraud, waste, or abuse concerns.
Unfortunately, many practices unknowingly expose themselves to risk through:
Even small issues can quickly escalate into:
In this practical, real-world training, healthcare attorney Amanda Waesch, Esq., will provide actionable strategies to help your organization reduce audit triggers, strengthen compliance safeguards, respond effectively to audit requests, and better protect your reimbursement.
You’ll learn how auditors identify targets, which compliance weaknesses most often attract scrutiny, and what proactive steps your practice should take now to minimize exposure before an audit occurs.
Government agencies and commercial payers are aggressively expanding audit and enforcement efforts across the healthcare industry. Recent federal initiatives have increased the use of advanced technology and AI to detect suspicious billing activity and identify organizations for deeper investigation.
At the same time, healthcare organizations are facing growing pressure to demonstrate strong internal compliance programs, effective Fraud, Waste, and Abuse oversight, and proactive audit readiness.
Practices that fail to prepare may face:
This training provides practical, plain-English guidance to help you reduce risk, strengthen compliance defenses, and confidently navigate today’s increasingly aggressive audit environment.
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Hillary Stemple, JD
Hillary focuses her practice on advising a wide range of health care and life sciences companies on complex health care regulatory matters. She regularly advises clients on legal issues related to compliance with health care fraud and abuse laws, with an emphasis on the Anti-Kickback Statute, Stark Law, and the False Claims Act. Hillary also counsels clients on all aspects of overpayment issues and making voluntary self-disclosures, including the drafting and submission of self-disclosures to the OIG Self-Disclosure Protocol and the CMS Self-Referral Disclosure Protocol. Hillary frequently partners with clients to assess, develop, and implement compliance programs designed to ensure compliance with HHS-OIG and DOJ compliance program requirements. She also routinely advises clients on compliance matters related to developing and utilizing emerging technologies, including the implementation of telehealth programs and the integration of AI technologies into clients’ systems and workflows. Hillary’s clients include pharmaceutical and device manufacturers, charitable patient assistance organizations, hospitals and health care systems, physician group practices, and companies involved in emerging health care technologies, including telehealth companies. She also regularly coordinates with the firm’s Government Relations group on federal advocacy efforts before Congress and the US Department of Health and Human Services on behalf of health care and life sciences clients.




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