Upcoming events
MSCA Spring Seminar
Saturday, April 25th - Sunday, April 26th 2026 12:00 am - 12:00 am The Hollywood Casino, Bay St Louis, MS RSVP Save to CalendarCompliant and Consistent Cash Flow is Everyone's Job
Presented By Rebecca Scott, CPC, CPCO, CPB, CPPM
Through interactive workbook exercises and practical strategies, you’ll gain valuable insights into achieving successful reimbursement from both patients and insurance companies.
2026 NMCA ANNUAL CONVENTION
Friday, May 1st - Sunday, May 3rd 2026 12:00 am - 12:00 am Albuquerque Marriott Pyramid, 5151 San Francisco Rd NE, Albuquerque NM RSVP Save to CalendarMaking Your Documentation Work for You: From Basics to Self-Auditing
Presented by Kathy (KMC) Weidner MCS-P, CPCO, CCPC, CCCA
MCPA District 5 Springfield January 2026 Seminar
Friday, January 16th - Friday, January 16th 2026 8:00 am - 5:00 pm Oasis Hotel in Springfield, MO RSVP Save to CalendarDocumentation and Risk Management: From Medical Necessity to Clinical Appropriateness
Presented By Rebecca Scott, CPC, CPCO, CPB, CPPM
Hold on to your seat as we dive into a provider’s experience with an Office of Inspector General (OIG) audit. We’ll share the story of actual events that happened and what was learned that you must know. Compliance is a necessary part of doing business in healthcare. Providers must respect the boundaries of fraud, waste, and abuse while serving patients and thriving in business. In this presentation, we’ll establish what it means to have an effective OIG Compliance program and share what you may experience when you do not take the time to implement one.
Principles of Excellent Recordkeeping and Medical Necessity Mastery
Presented By Rebecca Scott, CPC, CPCO, CPB, CPPM
The documentation training will blend documentation instruction, regulatory compliance, provider self-auditing, diagnosis, and case management to promote maximum documentation compliance and risk management. Providers will get a chance to review actual documentation examples, perform a visual audit, and find out where the most common documentation errors exist. Legislation is constantly changing and compliance with the rules has never been more important to understand the necessity to move from the regulatory effects of “old standards” into the new world of quality measurement.