In auditing of medical records, criteria used when preparing and evaluating documentation and physician performance by defining services and counting the items documented.
Insurance Encyclopedia
Documents
Forms and papers such as birth certificates, marriage certificates, W2 forms, tax returns, and deeds. These may be used by individuals applying for federal benefits.
Documents Against Acceptance (D/A)
Instructions given by a shipper to a bank indicating that documents transferring title goods should be delivered to the buyer (or drawee) only upon the buyer’s acceptance of the attached draft.
Documents For Export Transactions
In the process of exports an exporter has to prepare nearly 27 different documents before the goods can be exported. These documents can be divided into two major categories: (a) commercial documents and (b) regulatory documents.
Dodd-Frank Act
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 was passed as a response to the late-2000s financial crisis, and is intended to improve financial regulation in the U.S. to protect the strength and integrity of the financial markets. The Dodd-Frank Act established the FIO, included the NRRA, and established the FSOC, which establishes a methodology for determining which financial institutions embody systemically important risk and should be subject to heightened regulation by the Federal Reserve Board, and the OFR (created to support the data collection and research efforts of the FSOC).
Dodd-Frank Act (2011)
An act known formally as the “Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Protection Act” (Dodd-Frank). This 2010 law made dramatic, sweeping changes to the nation’s financial regulatory system. It was enacted to make the U.S. financial system more transparent and accountable and to prevent the type of financial crisis that occurred during 2008. Three specific provisions within Dodd-Frank are likely to increase the nature and scope of legal liability faced by corporate directors and officers. These include
(1) the “clawback” provision, (2) the whistle-blower provision, and (3) the “
DOI
1. Abbreviation for Department of Insurance. See Department of Insurance (DOI). 2 . Abbreviation for date of injury. See date of injury (DOI) .
Dol
An intentional act which is wrongful or unlawful.
Dollar limit (Property Insurance)
A limit on coverage in a homeowners policy. This is usually listed in the Coverage C section of the policy.
Dollar limits
The dollar amount of benefits that can be paid per month or over the life of an insurance policy.