EHR company eClinicalWorks, which recently paid $155 million to resolve allegations it falsely certified its EHR software, isn't the only vendor that has taken liberties with certification criteria, ...
Electronic health records vendor eClinicalWorks has agreed to pay $155 million to resolve a False Claims Act lawsuit that alleged it gave customers kickbacks for publicly promoting its products. “This ...
Less than 6 months after paying $155 million to settle claims it falsely obtained certification for its EHR software, eClinicalWorks has been hit with a class-action lawsuit that claims deficiencies ...
EHR vendor eClinicalWorks and certain employees will pay $155 million to settle False Claims Act (FCA) allegations around misrepresentation of software capabilities and $392,000 in kickbacks to ...
Legal experts believe the recent $155 million settlement with EHR vendor eClinicalWorks in a False Claims Act case may be the start of greater Department of Justice (DOJ) activity in the EHR field.
Embattled EHR vendor eClinicalWorks has circulated a letter to its customers outlining seven known parts of its software that it said could present an EHR certification issue. Healthcare IT News ...
There are inherent risks in any vendor relationship. In the healthcare industry, with myriad regulatory pitfalls, the stakes can be even higher. Several customers of the cloud-based electronic health ...
When eClinicalWorks settled with the U.S. government for allegedly misleading users about its capabilities, in part by cheating on certification tests, it raised questions of how electronic health ...
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