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Georgia Preceptor Tax Incentive Program (GA-PTIP):

Georgia Preceptor Tax Incentive Program (GA-PTIP):. The Role of Academic Programs in Rewarding Community-Based Preceptors. Presented by. Associate Dean for AHEC School of Medicine, MCG/GRU Executive Program Director Georgia Statewide AHEC Network Associate Professor

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Georgia Preceptor Tax Incentive Program (GA-PTIP):

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  1. Georgia Preceptor Tax Incentive Program (GA-PTIP): The Role of Academic Programs in Rewarding Community-Based Preceptors

  2. Presented by Associate Dean for AHEC School of Medicine, MCG/GRU Executive Program Director Georgia Statewide AHEC Network Associate Professor Department of Family Medicine, MCG/GRU Denise kornegay, msw

  3. Objectives • Understand the role that academic programs play in rewarding community-based physician preceptors with the tax incentive. • Describe the preceptor/rotation information to be submitted and the reporting process. • Orient to the GA-PTIP website navigation and functionality. • Communicate the AHEC certification mechanism. After the webinar, participants will be able to:

  4. History of the Preceptor Tax Deduction Legislation 2012 Primary Care Summit recommendation First of its kind, nationally Began as HB 922 sponsored by Rep. Ben Harbin; passed as SB 391 on Sen. Don Balfour’s Tri-Care Bill Department of Revenue language negotiated for Tax Manuals for 2014

  5. Definitions: Preceptor • A licensed Georgia Physician (either MD or DO) providing uncompensated community based training for medical, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant students matriculating at a Georgia program (public or private) for selected rotations

  6. Definitions: Community Based Faculty

  7. Eligibility • Licensed physician in GA • Cannot receive direct compensation for teaching medical, osteopathic, NP, or PA students • Deduction only available for rotations supporting Georgia medical, osteopathic, NP, or PA programs • Must complete a minimum of three rotations to be eligible; deductions are provided retroactively once eligibility is established • A maximum of 10 rotations may be claimed for deductions each calendar year

  8. Eligibility-Continued • The only rotations available to receive the deductions are: • Family Medicine • General Internal Medicine (inpatient and ambulatory) • General Pediatrics • OB/GYN • Psychiatry • Emergency Medicine • General Surgery

  9. Definitions: Rotations • A rotation is defined as 160hours of community based clinical training • It can be accrued from multiple programs • Hours do not have to occur within one student rotation

  10. Eligible Programs: Physician • Emory University School of Medicine • Medical College of Georgia (Georgia Regents University) • Mercer University School of Medicine • Morehouse School of Medicine • Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Georgia Campus

  11. Eligible Programs: Physician Assistant • Emory University PA Program • Georgia Regents University PA Program • Mercer University PA Program • South University PA Program • PCOM-GA Campus PA Program

  12. Eligible Programs:Nurse Practitioner • Albany State University • Armstrong Atlantic University • Brenau University • Emory University • Georgia College and State University • Georgia Regents University • Georgia Southern University • Georgia State University • Kennesaw State University • Mercer University • University of North Georgia • Valdosta State University

  13. Example: Dr. Arms

  14. Dr. Arms’ total deductions • 1,556 hours / 160 hours = 9.8 rotations • Minimum # of rotations is 3 • Maximum # of eligible rotations is 10 • So Dr. Arms is eligible for 10 rotations each worth $1,000 in deductions for a total earned deduction of $10,000

  15. Definitions: Certification • The Statewide Area Health Education Centers Program Office at Georgia Regents University shall administer the program and certify rotations for the department.

  16. Clarification: Certifications • Only the Statewide AHEC Program Office can certify eligible rotations • Individual academic programs will report completed qualifying rotations to the Statewide AHEC Program Office • The Statewide AHEC Program Office will issue the tax letters each year

  17. 2014 Special Eligibility Caveats • Because the deduction is effective from July 1, 2014 forward, the following pro-rated guidelines will apply for the current year: • Only need 1 completed rotation to be eligible • Rotations completed in July 2014 will count, even if they began in May or June

  18. GA-PTIP: MECHANICS

  19. GA-PTIP Website: www.gru.edu/ahec/ptip • Will be live by mid-September • Will feature two online reporting portals: • Physician Registration • Program Reporting • Will provide FAQs, Eligibility Guidelines, Training Opportunities, Program Guidelines, News and Updates

  20. Provider Portal • One time online registration through the new secured website portal • Will not need to renew annually but can edit if key information changes

  21. Program Portal • Programs will submit reports of eligible completedrotations through secure online portal • Programs can submit reports at whatever time intervals desired, BUT all rotations completed after July 1, 2014 through December 31, 2014 MUST be submitted by December 31, 2014.

  22. Statewide AHEC Program Office • Will maintain website and portals • Data will be summarized at the Statewide AHEC Program Office • Tax Deduction Certification letters will be issued by the Program Office by January 31 of each year for the last full calendar year • Provide a report to the Legislature each year

  23. PTIP WEBSITE http://www.gru.edu/ahec/ptip/ (Live Review)

  24. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

  25. Can the Educational Program Register the Preceptor? • Ideally, they should not. Programs can direct preceptors to the website to provide their information directly.

  26. Do specialty rotations count toward deductions (e.g. NICU/ Nursery, Orthopedics, etc)? • Only if these experiences are part of a core rotation (e.g. Pediatrics, General Surgery)

  27. Would the individual receive full credit for precepting a student if the student rotates with more than one provider in that clinic? • The deduction can be rotated among partners, apportioned among them, or claimed by one. Whatever is decided, the academic program must report it as such.

  28. Will you provide an overview letter for physicians or can the educational institutions send the information received today to their preceptors? • You are welcome to communicate this information to your preceptors directly. Some brochures have been developed that you can download and send from your offices if so desired.

  29. If a student only needs 80 hours, will that count as a rotation? • No. However, those 80 hours would be recorded and if you precepted another student for 80 hours they would be added together to give you one rotation.

  30. Special Thanks To the Medical College of Georgia @ Georgia Regents University for underwriting the administrative costs to provide this incentive for our valued community based physicians who are supporting our primary care education pipeline.

  31. Contact Information:www.gru.edu/ahec/ptip Denise Kornegay, MSW Associate Dean, AHEC Statewide AHEC Network Executive Director dkornega@gru.edu 706.721.8331 Cindy Peloquin Program Manager GA-PTIP cpeloqui@gru.edu 706.721.8558

  32. Other Questions?

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