Administrative Contractors definition

Administrative Contractors means the persons engaged by the Administrators and to whom the Administrators may delegate duties assigned to the Administrators under this Agreement, including, without limitation, duties associated with provision of Notice, calculation of Claims, collection of Releases, and preparation and filing of tax-related documents. It is agreed by the parties hereto that neither the Administrators nor the Administrative Contractors are to be deemed agents or representatives of the Defendants or Defendants’ Counsel for any purpose, and that neither Defendants, their Related Parties, nor Defendants’ Counsel shall bear any responsibility or liability for any act or omission of any Administrator or Administrative Contractor.

Examples of Administrative Contractors in a sentence

  • All cost reports have been accepted (as provided in the CMS Provider Reimbursement Manual Publication 15-1) by the applicable Regional Home Health Care Intermediaries or Medicare Administrative Contractors with which such cost reports were filed.

  • As used herein, “Government Entity” means any government or any agency, bureau, board, directorate, commission, government contractor (including, without limitation, Medicare Administrative Contractors), court, department, official, political subdivision, tribunal or other instrumentality of any government, whether federal, state or local.

  • In any review undertaken pursuant to this Section A.3, the IRO shall apply standards that would be applied by CMS and its Medicare Administrative Contractors to the claims reimbursed by the Medicare program, and shall apply standards that would be applied by the specific MAO plan to claims reimbursed by that ▇▇▇.

  • Defendant agrees to disseminate this language to the relevant Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) and Qualified Independent Contractors (QICs), via Technical Direction Letters (TDLs), and to the relevant Beneficiary and Family Centered Care Quality Improvement Organizations (BFCC-QIOs), via Health Care Quality Improvement System (HCQIS) memoranda.

  • On December 15, 2011, ZOLL publicly announced that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ Durable Medical Equipment Medical Administrative Contractors had reaffirmed the existing Medicare reimbursement policy for the LifeVest Wearable Defibrillator, thus resolving the LifeVest reimbursement uncertainty in ▇▇▇▇’▇ favor.

  • OIG, in its sole discretion, may refer the findings of the Full Sample (and any related workpapers) received from Rotech to the appropriate Federal health care program payor, including the Medicare contractor (e.g., Durable Medical Equipment Medicare Administrative Contractors (DME MAC), carrier or fiscal intermediary), for appropriate follow-up by that payor.

  • CMS shall continue to pay claims for Medicare services pursuant to established procedures and through the applicable Medicare Administrative Contractor(s) ("MAC").

  • Claims review, including Higher Weighted Diagnosis-Related Group (HWDRG) reviews, short stay reviews, potential concerns identified during project data collections, and referrals made by the Office of Inspector General (OIG), Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), and CMS.

  • In order to assist in the billing, collection and tracking of such receivables, Sellers agree to permit Purchaser and its applicable Affiliate designee(s) with respect to an applicable Facility access to any website or accounts of CMS, any carrier or Medicare Administrative Contractors (a “Medicare Administrative Contractor”) or state Medicaid agency related to each Facility.

  • Except as set forth in Section 2.18(c) of the Disclosure Schedule, all such cost reports have been accepted (as provided in the CMS Provider Reimbursement Manual Publication 15-1) by the applicable Regional Home Health Care Intermediaries or Medicare Administrative Contractors with which such cost reports were filed.