Asset Protection Issues For [Physician] Crypto Investors

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Ike Z. Devji J.D. - Tempe, Arizona - Lawyer | Lawyer Directory

By Ike Devji, J.D.

Crypto currency is all the rage and continues to make some coin investors small fortunes even as prices swing widely and scams emerge. These are some basic defensive measures to keep your digital wallet safe.

READ MORE: https://www.proassetprotection.com/asset-protection-for-crypto-investors/

EDITOR’S NOTE: Ike Devji contributed to our textbook on Risk Management for Doctors and Advisors. We appreciated his important chapter contribution.

Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

ORDER TEXTBOOK: https://www.routledge.com/Risk-Management-Liability-Insurance-and-Asset-Protection-Strategies-for/Marcinko-Hetico/p/book/9781498725989

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THANK YOU

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Managing Risks as [Doctor] Parent

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Kids Create Substantial Risks for 

[Physician] Parents!

IKE

A Special ME-P Report

[By Ike Devji JD]

The number of ways that children are creating substantial risks for their [physician] parents is at an all-time high as many parents are unfortunately aware; as we begin 2016. Increased defensive planning or education by most parents despite increasingly common litigation for this vicarious liability has not increased commensurately with this risk.

Some of you believe that your kids are better behaved, smarter, and more sensible than those we hear about in the news. Such exposures are unpredictable and often arise from mundane activities you never imagined could be so serious.

Part of the discussion we encourage [physician] parents to have with their children includes a detailed explanation of the fact that you as a parents are personally financially and legally responsible (up to the level of criminal liability) for any harm, damage, or loss cause by their minor children.

Example:

In one example; a successful physician left town for the weekend with his wife, and his 17-year-old daughter threw a party at their home in a pattern repeated in nearly city in the country every weekend. Tragically, a teenager whom she had never met before crashed the party and died after he overdosed on drugs he brought with him resulting is a lawsuit against the young lady’s parents that sought damages in excess of three million dollars. Neither the young lady, nor her parents, nor anyone else in the tony private-school community of gated homes imagined that something like could happen in their nice neighborhood and the resulting claim was in excess of the limits of the homeowner’s liability policy the family had in place. Dozens of other parentally liability exposures seen over the years have come from much more mundane issues.

Negligent Supervision and Negligent Entrustment

Two ways liability is linked back to parents include negligent entrustment (providing the means or access to things or situations where some reasonably anticipatable harm occurs) and negligent supervision (basically infers that the harm would not have occurred if the minor had been properly supervised). This liability extends to others that have custody or are entrusted with supervision, so any guardian is at risk if the harm would have been prevented absent the access to the thing that created the harm and/or inadequate supervision. It also creates potential liability for you for the children of others you have custody of, even overnight for a slumber party.

Some Specific Recurring High Risk Issues:

  1. Automobiles: Minor children must be specifically named and insured on any vehicle they drive. Parents are generally liable for what minors do behind the wheel, permitted or not. If they are irresponsible drivers or if they take the car without permission you must take control of the car and treat it like a loaded weapon that’s pointed at everything you own and possibly their very own survival. Your high school senior cutting class with her friends and piling them into your car to go to Starbucks for “ditch day” is remarkably less charming when, for instance, she loses control of the vehicle on the way back to school and two of her passengers are critically injured as happened in one recent case. Thanks to commonly available and inexpensive software and tracking devices, not to mention the tracking software on your kid’s iPhones you can know where they and your vehicle are at all times.

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  1. Access to Firearms and Other Dangerous Items: If you have guns in your home (or bows and arrows, ATVs, jet skis, a swimming pool, prescription drugs, or anything else that can be misused) you are legally and financially responsible for not only personal injury and property damage but in some states and fact patterns even criminal liability for the actions of your child and his friends. The cost of defense counsel alone could be financially fatal considering the possibility of someone getting injured or killed and the resulting liability and consequences.

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Conclusion

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

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Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™8Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

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Common Asset Protection Risk Factors for Physicians

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The “Issues” LIST

IKE

By Ike Devji JD

CHECKLIST

This check list is simple and by no means complete, but it helps explain the detail and variety of issues and exposures involved in preserving the assets you have at risk.

List of Exposures

• Do you and or any family members drive a vehicle?
Do you have employees?
• Do you have a professional malpractice exposure?
• Do you have a legal responsibility to protect medical and financial data?
• Are you married and do you have assets not protected by a pre-nuptial agreement?
• Do you have a current tax obligation?
Do you have children?
• Do you own a business?
• Are you a board member, officer, or director of a corporation?
• Do you have hobbies or engage in activities like hunting, flying, boating, etc?
• Do you have partners whose actions create joint and several liabilities for you?
• Do you have personal guarantees on real estate or for business loans?
• Do you have tail liability for professional services performed in the past?
• Have you made specific legal or financial representations that others have relied upon in a business context?
What kind and what dollar amount of insurance and legal planning have you implemented against these exposures?

Assessment

Knowledge is power, so use the links above to continue your exploration and act on these issues before an exposure threatens, while the widest and most effective array of options can be implemented to protect your success.

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IRA Cecklists

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Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

[PHYSICIAN FOCUSED RISK MANAGEMENT TEXTBOOK]

Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

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APPRECIATING PHYSICIAN EMPLOYEE BUSINESS CREDENTIALING RISKS

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LIABILITY FOR PHYSICIAN-EXECUTIVES AND MEDICAL EMPLOYERS

IKE[By Ike Devji  JD]

Many medical practice employees, including doctors, nurses, and various clinical assistants must be very specifically credentialed based on both the specifics of your practice and third-party payer contracts.

This additional condition of employment requires a variety of credentialing compliance best practices.

Why is This Such a Big Deal, What’s the Worst that Could Happen?

  • Once an error is identified in any one area of your billing practices, you should expect other areas, even non-related ones with lower compliance burdens, to be examined;
  • You face potential civil and criminal liability for billing third-party payers that contractually require specific credentialed care providers;
  • Your practice may face a loss of revenue due to failure to comply and substantial disruption of practice cash flow if an audit or questions arise;
  • You are subject to reputational damage, stress, and substantial legal fees easily in the six-figure or seven figure range;
  • Increased medical malpractice risk for potentially not providing the required reasonable standard of care if a non-credentialed employee is in the chain of treatment for an affected patient;
  • It may also potentially induce your liability insurance carriers to either completely exclude an event or reduce applicable coverage.

Although this process can be managed internally with the right training and by a variety of existing administrative staff, there is professional help available at nearly every scale, from small practices to hospitals. Many practices, especially smaller ones that don’t have full time HR managers, find that outsourcing this issue is a time and cost efficient form of risk management of this important issue. Outside professional resources are generally known as credentialing organizations (COs), which operate under the wider banner of HR and employee background-check services. Many of these services have accredited certified provider credentialing specialists that can work with your office and staff as outsourced compliance experts.

The biggest benefit a CO can offer is that the best of them go beyond providing just a snapshot of your current credentialing; they also offer a long-range plan to help you implement and maintain it.

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Some Advantages of Outsourcing this Issue to a Credentialing Organization

  1. They manage credentialing proactively instead of reactively and can help avoid loss of time, efficiency and revenue when, for instance, doctors or staff are taken out of the office to complete massive amounts of CME all at once on a short deadline;
  2. COs are typically better equipped to respond quickly to staff changes including the on-boarding of new staff or doctors, and can help identify and verify what is required to bring any new staff into compliance;
  3. They typically have software systems that are more consistent and reliable than the self-created systems implemented by most practices internally, typically Excel spreadsheets that need to be manually updated and checked;
  4. Using CO software systems is often time and cost efficient in related areas, like insurance credentialing and can help manage a variety of functions including background check compliance, immunizations and hospital privilege policy compliance, as just a few examples.

Risk management in this area again requires that your practice is proactive and discovers and corrects any credentialing gaps in your office before they are an unwelcome surprise discovered by a third party. The liability and financial jeopardy is ultimately that of the practice owners and managers regardless of whether you outsource to a CO or not.

Proactively addressing this serious issue starts with a few simple steps:

  • Have a specific written plan to determine and verify all the required credentialing compliance of each employee and to maintain their compliance status. This applies to both statutory compliance required by law and any other credentialing required as a provider that bills third parties under specific and enforceable contractual requirements;
  • Make a specific person accountable for managing this process and check on that management at least quarterly;
  • Implement appropriate specialty insurance coverage where possible to help protect against any gaps or errors including RAC audit insurance.

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Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

ABOUT

Mr. Ike Devji is Of-Counsel with Lodmell & Lodmell PC and is the firm’s former managing attorney. He is the Executive Vice-President of the Wealthy 100 ™, a Phoenix Arizona based wealth management and wealth strategy firm with a network of advisors across the United States.  Mr. Devji selectively consults and provides asset protection services to high-net worth, high liability clients nationwide. Ike has spoken to literally thousands of physicians, allied medical professionals and other high-net worth clients across the country. He provides continuing legal education on this subject to other attorneys and regularly lectures at the request of leading medical practice management and investment management groups, including most recently; MultiFinancial Securities, Greenbook Financial, ING, ING TRUST, Comprehensive Wealth Management, CFO Advisors, numerous banks, and both Lorman and the National Business Institute, among others.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

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[PHYSICIAN FOCUSED FINANCIAL PLANNING AND RISK MANAGEMENT COMPANION TEXTBOOK SET]

  Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™ Comprehensive Financial Planning Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

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