



Suspect has all white fur and was said to have mauled said nippy bush so bad local voids could not identify the plant.
Guys I am going to cover all my walls with my puzzles including my ceilings. I have 4 1500-4000 piece puzzles I am building wooden frames for that still need to be hung up. I also just bought 4 more puzzles lol.
Please disregard the horrible mounting of this masterpiece, lol. I am just getting a feel of where I want to hang it.
Definitely in my top 5 favorites!
You can’t see them all, but I had 8 kittens all over me because I brought 10 delectables treats. I felt exhilarated! I am so going to be a crazy cat lady in my old age.
I had one void of my own (Hissy) before taking this trip to my cousins house last year. We added two more (Sissy and Missy) since then so I am well on my way!!!!!!!!
I am 47 and have had crazy, vivid nightmares almost every night of my life. Anyone who grew up the way I did would also have nightmares so it always made sense.
I have been fully medicated for over a week a now, and I have not had one single nightmare. My dreams are ridiculous and funny now which is a very strange sensation.
Just curious if anyone else has experienced this.
Definitely one of my top 5 favorites.
This girl is obsessed with tags on clothes, electric cords, beds you name it!
I had to save a tiny frog from these two giants. Luckily they just like watching them hop around and don’t eat them. Lil frogs are everywhere here.
Hi everyone, I have a compliance and billing question regarding a Change of Ownership (CHOW) that happened a few years ago.
The Scenario:
Company A sold its entire healthcare business to Company B.
After the sale, Company B continued to bill Medicare using Company A’s NPI number.
This billing arrangement continued for a full 5 years until Company B went out of business.
My Questions:
Is there any legitimate regulatory mechanism (like a prolonged transition period or specific CHOW rule) that allows an acquiring company to use the seller's NPI for 5 years?
If this is a violation, what specific Medicare billing regulations or HIPAA rules did this break?
Does this constitute billing fraud, or is it considered an administrative/credentialing error?
I am trying to understand the legal and compliance implications of this situation. Any insights or citations to CMS guidelines would be greatly appreciated!