GoldWiseman Insights
Explore articles from GoldWiseman CPAs on financial reporting, tax planning, advisory, and business finance topics relevant to growing organizations.
Start a ConversationFinancial forecasting helps leadership evaluate risk, timing, and long-term sustainability.
Understanding the financial contribution of different services helps leadership make stronger strategic decisions.
Audit readiness is easier when documentation, reconciliations, and support processes are maintained consistently.
Strong controls support documentation, compliance, and reporting reliability.
Leadership teams need reporting that explains actual performance against expectations clearly.
Board reporting should connect financial performance to mission, operations, and strategic priorities.
Enrollment bottlenecks can create reimbursement delays even when clinical operations are ready to move.
Provider readiness does not always translate into reimbursement readiness when credentialing lags.
Denials and delayed reimbursement can materially affect cash flow even in organizations with strong patient volume.
A defensible methodology supports compliance, financial transparency, and management confidence.
Shared administrative and operating costs need a defensible allocation approach in the community health center environment.
Payroll allocation is one of the most important and sensitive aspects of FQHC cost allocation.
340B margin can support patient access and financial sustainability when leadership understands its contribution clearly.
Contract pharmacy arrangements can be financially significant but difficult to evaluate without good reporting.
340B pharmacy activity can generate meaningful unrestricted revenue for community health centers.
Reconciliation between managed care payments and PPS expectations is essential to accurate financial reporting.
Wrap payments ensure health centers receive the difference between managed care reimbursement and PPS rates.
Understanding PPS rate calculations helps leadership forecast reimbursement more accurately.
Strong reporting practices help community health centers support compliance, internal oversight, and grant stewardship.
Understanding allowable costs helps health centers remain compliant while using grant funds effectively.
Managing HRSA grant budgets requires careful monitoring of allowable costs, spending alignment, and documentation.
Healthcare organizations require accounting expertise that understands reimbursement systems, grant funding, and compliance frameworks.
Financial metrics help leadership teams evaluate operational performance and sustainability.
Healthcare organizations rely on cost reporting to better understand operational performance.
Clear financial reporting allows FQHC leadership to make informed operational decisions.
Financial planning helps FQHC leadership maintain operational stability while supporting long-term growth.
Internal financial controls help FQHC organizations maintain compliance and prevent operational risks.
Federal grants play a major role in supporting community health services and require strong financial reporting practices.
The 340B program can represent a major financial component for community health organizations and requires careful compliance monitoring.
Medicaid PPS reimbursement is a central revenue component for Federally Qualified Health Centers and requires careful financial oversight.
Strong accounting systems are critical for Federally Qualified Health Centers navigating grant compliance, Medicaid reimbursement, and operational financial oversight.
Cost allocation strategies for FQHC financial reporting.
Understanding 340B revenue reporting for FQHC leadership.
Understanding HRSA grant accounting requirements.
Financial sustainability strategies for Chicago community health centers.
Guide for Chicago FQHC leadership on accounting oversight.
CAQH credentialing is a critical requirement for healthcare providers who want to participate in insurance networks. This guide explains how CAQH works, why quarterly attestations are required, and how proper CAQH maintenance prevents delays in provider credentialing and payer enrollment.
Provider credentialing is the process healthcare organizations use to verify the qualifications of physicians and healthcare professionals before they can bill insurance companies. This guide explains the credentialing process, payer enrollment, CAQH requirements, and why proper credentialing is critical for healthcare practices.
Many business owners review revenue every month, but revenue alone does not reveal the true health of a company. Understanding a few key financial metrics can provide much deeper insight into profitability, cash flow, and operational efficiency.