“If your mother needed an electromyography (EMG), wouldn’t you want someone who knew what they were doing to perform the test?,” Ronald C. Bingham, MD, asked his audience during a presentation at one of the National Healthcare Antifraud Association’s (NHCAA) National Education & Training Series (NETS) meetings held in Louisville, KY, on Wednesday, May 14. The program was on Detecting Fraud in Laboratory and Diagnostics Services. Dr. Bingham, a physiatrist from Tennessee and AANEM member, routinely speaks to insurance groups about the importance of accurate electrodiagnostic (EDX) studies in an attempt to build awareness and combat fraud and abuse in EDX medicine.
Dr. Bingham featured on AANEM website
“If your mother needed an electromyography (EMG), wouldn’t you want someone who knew what they were doing to perform the test?,” Ronald C. Bingham, MD, asked his audience during a presentation at one of the National Healthcare Antifraud Association’s (NHCAA) National Education & Training Series (NETS) meetings held in Louisville, KY, on Wednesday, May 14. The program was on Detecting Fraud in Laboratory and Diagnostics Services. Dr. Bingham, a physiatrist from Tennessee and AANEM member, routinely speaks to insurance groups about the importance of accurate electrodiagnostic (EDX) studies in an attempt to build awareness and combat fraud and abuse in EDX medicine.