Category Archives: Update

New HCAI Guideline

fsco

On November 24, 2014, the Financial Services Commission of Ontario (FSCO) published Property & Casualty – Auto Bulletin No. A-12/14, which introduces the HCAI December 2014 Guideline. FSCO has revised the HCAI Guideline to include new processes to address the implementation of Service Provider Licensing. The processes discussed in FSCO’s new Guideline were previously communicated in the Service Provider Licensing Process Change eLearning video and related process change guide. FSCO HCAI December 2014 Guideline Please refer to FSCO’s website via the links below to review the bulletin and new HCAI Guideline:

Some key items covered in FSCO’s new Guideline include:

  • OCF document submission rules for licensed and unlicensed health care facilities
  • OCF document adjudication rules OCFs submitted by licensed and unlicensed facilities
  • Facility Registry and Service Provider Licensing rules

Please share FSCO’s HCAI December 2014 Guideline and related process change learning resources (video and text) with all personnel at your health care facility that use the HCAI system.      

 Communications   HCAI

Individual Health Plans for CMAAC Now Available

 

individual-insurance


Individual Health Benefit for CMAAC NOW AVAILABLE!

The CMAAC is pleased to have partnership with Investors Group. We have seen the benefits and cost savings first hand with TCMA practitioners in British Columbia and CMAAC wants to extend these same benefits to our members across Canada as well. Investors Group have recognized the need to provide a product and service that is as unique and diverse as our industry.

 

  • CLICK HERE FOR GROUP HEALTH PLANS (EMPLOYEES AND/OR FAMILIES)
  • ** NOW AVAILABLE** CLCK HERE FOR INDIVIDUAL HEALTH PLANS

Benjamin Bondar
E: Benjamin.Bondar@InvestorsGroup.com
T: 778.239.8996

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Group Health Plan for CMAAC Now Available

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Group Health Plan for CMAAC Now Available
Enrolment period ends on Sept. 30, 2014.

Apply now to get the best quote!

We have compared group health benefits from several companies and we believe this plan will offer the most flexible with further customizable options for our members across Canada.

The plan will first be offered to clinics with employees and families. Then, as a next step, a different plan for individual contractors would be introduced.

Members will be able to apply for an appropriate plan at anytime; however, we want to use the enrolment period as a way to assess the number of interests and apply appropriate rates at this beginning stage. Rates will then be determined on an annual basis as new participation is likely to fluctuate. Members who already applied would be able to keep their preferred rate.

If this proceed, other options that we may want to consider as an Association is group savings account, where you would get a group discounted rate on investment services, and professional financial and tax planning services at no cost.

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Group Health Plan for CMAAC
CLICK HERE.

Contact: Benjamin Bondar
E: Ben@easygroupbenefits.ca
T: 778.239.8996

 

Update on the Status of TCM Herbal Medicine

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Submitted by Association of Traditional Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture of British Columbia (ATCMA) member Dr. John Stan | May 01, 2014

On March 21, the Advisory Council on TCM (AC-TCM) met with Minister Rona Ambrose, Parliamentary Secretary Colin Carrie, Director General of the NHPD Adam Gibson and other Health Canada staff to further discuss issues relating to the regulatory process of Natural Health Products (NHPs) in Canada.

In December 2011, the then Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq established a special committee of TCM stakeholders to provide direct input to Health Canada. I had the privilege of being invited to be on this committee, and thus I am able to provide input as both a practitioner of TCM and an importer of TCM products into Canada.

This was our third meeting as a group and our first time to meet the current Health Minister Rona Ambrose. In the early days as a member of this committee, I often wondered about the sincerity and commitment of the Government to listen to the concerns of TCM practitioners in the new regulatory environment of the Natural Health Product Directorate (NHPD).

My concern was especially elevated as I witnessed TCM-prepared product after product being rejected for licensing. It felt to me, and many other stakeholders in the industry, that we were being shut down by an over-controlling bureaucracy. That was three years ago, and I am pleased to say that since the inception of the AC-TCM a respectful and responsive working relationship has evolved that has resulted in most of our TCM botanical medicines being licensed.

On our end, we have had to demonstrate that we as an importer have an ongoing monitoring process that checks the Certificate of Analysis (COA) for each lot of botanical products against the requirements set out by Health Canada. These include heavy metals, pesticides, yeasts, molds and fungi minimums. In addition to the COA screening and approval, we also perform our own third-party analysis of the imported products here in Canada to validate the safety of the botanicals. As a result of all these procedural additions, you can be sure that the medicines you prescribe to your patients have been doubly vetted for quality of herbs and contaminants.

On Health Canada’s end, the regulatory team established a TCM monograph database that we can reference in our product submissions. The database categorizes TCM botanicals into three categories based on degrees of risk. Using these monographs, manufacturers are able to combine ingredients based on TCM principles from these categories. As a result, all of our “novel” TCM patents have now been approved and your favorite products are now available. Products like Margarita Complexion Formula and Children’s Ear Formula are back in stock!

At this third meeting of the AC-TCM, I was very much impressed with the HC’s sincere interest in TCM and its potential for integration into mainstream healthcare. Both Minister Ambrose and Parliamentary Secretary Colin Carey expressed deep respect for TCM, and both look forward to future meetings and input from the TCM community at future meetings.

I feel we have a very special opportunity here to offer some high-level input into the Health Ministry. If you have any ideas or concerns that you would like me to bring forward at these meetings, please feel free to contact me and I will be happy to bring your thoughts and ideas to our next meeting. Our healthcare landscape is changing because the government has recognized that good things are happening because of practitioners like you. So keep up the great grassroots work, those from above are indeed noticing. As I have often said, we are changing the world, one happy patient at a time!

John Stan, DrTCM
Eastern Currents President and Founder
ATCMA Member
jstan@easterncurrents.ca

P.S. By August 31, 2014 all products on shelves should have an NHP number and the label should be compliant with the NHP number in place. Health Canada will start enforcing these label requirements. By September 1, 2014 all NHPs should have labels that will clearly list dosage, usage and cautions and contraindications.

WFAS Houston 2014- Calling for Abstracts

Latest News: Calling for Abstracts World Federation of Acupuncture-Moxibustion Societies (WFAS) Houston 2014 Acupuncture and Integrative Medicine Conference

Abstract submission deadline extended to July 25th, 2014 Register today at early bird rates Oct.31-Nov.2, 2014 Extended Abstract Submission Deadline: July 25 2014 Early Bird Registration Deadline: July 25, 2014 chart
22 Continuing Acupuncture Education Credits Approval (pending)

  • NCCAOM
  • Texas State Board of Acupuncture Examiners
  • California Acupuncture Board

HCAI Update – Health Claims for Auto Insurance

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Date: February 27, 2014

To: Health Care Facilities

Sunset Date Announced for Three Health Professions

As previously communicated, the unregulated versions of health professions that became regulated in 2013 would receive a ‘Sunset Date’ in HCAI.

On May 1, 2014, the ‘Sunset Date’ will take effect in HCAI for the unregulated versions of the following professions:

• Kinesiologist
• Acupuncturist
• Traditional Chinese Medicine Practitioner

How does the “Sunset Date” affect me and my business?

Once the ‘Sunset Date’ takes effect, only Providers using the ‘Regulated’ version of the above professions or another valid profession will appear on Ontario Claims Form (OCF) dropdowns within HCAI.

  • Providers must update their details with the ‘Regulated’ version of the professions by May 1, 2014.
  • Saved drafts of OCFs that use the unregulated version of the profession will still show the Provider, but these OCFs cannot be submitted.

Next Steps

  • Review HCAI’s September 2013 Bulletin and October 2013 Newsletter for information about the above-noted Regulated Health Professions in HCAI.
  • Ensure individuals at your health care facility that are affected by this change have received a registration number from their Health Regulatory College.
  • Review the instructions on how to update a Provider’s information in HCAI. HCAI Operations