Ben Runkle & Mel Soliz Present State Bar Health Care Law Update to Arizona Attorneys

Ben Runkle and Mel Soliz recently presented “Recent Updates in Health Care Law: What Arizona Lawyers Need to Know” to the State Bar of Arizona. They discussed several fast-moving legal and regulatory developments affecting health care providers, payers, technology companies, and the attorneys who advise them. Topics included public health policy shifts, Medicaid and AHCCCS developments, health data privacy and interoperability, artificial intelligence in health care, fraud and abuse enforcement, and nondiscrimination requirements. The program highlighted how these developments are creating new compliance, contracting, governance, operational, and litigation risks for health care organizations. Ben addressed key developments in Medicaid, fraud and abuse, the False Claims Act, and other health care regulatory issues, while Mel focused on health data privacy, interoperability, artificial intelligence, and nondiscrimination in digital...

Read MoreRead More

Mel Soliz Examines Legal and Policy Implications of CMS’ Health Technology Ecosystem on AHLA Podcast

Partner Mel Soliz recently joined an AHLA podcast exploring the CMS Health Technology Ecosystem — a new federal effort to modernize digital infrastructure and expand health data exchange beyond clinical settings. Alongside David Lee of Leavitt Partners, Mel discussed the initiative’s potential impact on privacy, governance, enforcement, and liability as interoperability standards evolve.  In the podcast, Mel assessed the legal significance of a more standardized FHIR-based exchange environment, noting that organizations may face greater scrutiny as data becomes more structured and exchangeable. She also spoke on potential interoperability challenges in an increasingly complex data privacy landscape, where HIPAA is only one part of an equation that also includes Part 2, Medicaid confidentiality requirements, federal privacy rules, and state-based laws.  Additionally, Mel addressed how these risks play out for providers, EHRs, payers, and patient-facing apps, with a focus on breach exposure in multi-party environments; downstream reliance on exchanged data; sensitivity around claims and clinical data; and gaps between consumer expectations and legal protections outside HIPAA-regulated settings. She encouraged organizations to align agreements and governance models with broader exchange goals...

Read MoreRead More