-I taught pharmacology to international students in English.
-Design educational activities, assign and grade assignments, and keep track of progress.
-Create instructional materials such as homework, course outlines, lecture notes, or tests.
-Gather necessary material from books, own notes, and articles for presentations.
-Organize classrooms to provide that every student has the best possible learning experience.
-Accommodate the needs of the students by adapting their teaching material. When necessary, I offer specialized instruction.
-Encourage students and use positive reinforcement to foster their enthusiasm and active learning.
- I added CPT codes after each appointment based on the visit type. I added ICD codes to CPT codes, then submit them.
- Communicated with patients to explain services and their fees.
- Called insurance companies to determine the reason for payment denials and to know if our providers are in-network.
- Used portals like Availity and Gammis to get more information about patients' coverage plans and benefits, and to get more information about their current active insurances.
1st Care Management is an internal medicine geriatric care physician's office
-Educated patients and their families on lab results, newly prescribed medications, health management, and current diagnoses.
-Manage patients with chronic conditions and conduct monthly follow-up.
-Managed transition of patients from hospital back to their home setting in an effort to reduce readmission and ER visits
-Communicate with patients and their families, discussing and addressing their current complaints, chronic conditions, and medications.
-Resolve problems with challenging patients.
-Create a plan of care suitable for each patient with attending physicians.
-Write referrals to specialists, hospices, hospitals, etc.
-Attend patient consults with the nurse practitioner.
-Use of EMR such as eClinical Works and Practice Fusion to prepare charts, order labs, refill medications, imaging studies, oxygen concentrators, home health orders, and DME orders