Healthcare in Arkansas

Arkansas Healthcare Intel

Monday, May 18, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on healthcare developments in Arkansas. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on arkansas healthcare headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Arkansas Healthcare Headlines

1 story

1.1

Arkansas.gov Launches Online Physician License Verification Tool.

Medical practitioners and the public can now verify a physician's license status on Arkansas.gov by searching license number or last name.

Why It Matters

Healthcare professionals in AR can quickly confirm colleague credentials, support compliance, and protect patient safety.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

The credentialing-application gap that delays revenue 60-90 days.

Three application defects routinely delay payor enrollment: incomplete work-history explanations for any gap over 30 days, a malpractice carrier-history that does not reconcile with the explanation, and CAQH attestation that has lapsed. Each forces a back-and-forth with the credentialing committee.

Why It Matters

A new clinician without active payor enrollment cannot bill for covered services for most plans. Each month of delay is foregone revenue that does not retroactively recover.

2.2

The bloodborne-pathogens plan that fails on inspection.

OSHA inspections of healthcare facilities most commonly find three violations: an Exposure Control Plan that has not been reviewed annually (date-stamped review required), engineering controls that have not been re-evaluated when new devices are introduced, and post-exposure protocols that do not match the actual reporting workflow.

Why It Matters

Each citation carries per-violation penalties, and willful or repeat designations multiply them. Re-evaluation paperwork is the cheapest control to maintain.

2.3

How MIPS cost-category math actually works.

The MIPS cost performance category is calculated retrospectively by CMS using attributed Medicare claims; clinicians cannot directly affect what is attributed. The two attribution methods (TPCC and MSPB) capture different beneficiary cohorts. Practices that try to "manage" cost without understanding which patients are attributed to which clinician typically waste effort.

Why It Matters

Cost is now 30% of the MIPS final score — the largest single category. Misunderstanding attribution is the leading cause of unfavorable payment adjustments in the next cycle.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 18, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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