释义 |
unbundling
un·bun·dling U0032000 (ŭn-bŭn′dlĭng)n. The separate pricing of goods and services. un·bun′dle v.unbundling (ʌnˈbʌndlɪŋ) n (Commerce) commerce the takeover of a large conglomerate with a view to retaining the core business and selling off some of the subsidiaries to help finance the takeoverTranslationsunbundling
unbundling[¦ən′bənd·liŋ] (computer science) The separate pricing of software products and services from equipment charges. unbundlingA regulatory requirement that enables a competing service provider to purchase parts of the incumbent local exchange carrier's network in order to provide service to its customers. See ILEC.unbundling The practice of expanding into individual units a group of diagnostic or procedural test codes—based on the 4th edition of Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) coding promulgated by the American Medical Association—that might have been previously included as a ‘panel’, to maximise reimbursement from third party payersunbundling Exploding Medicare reimbursement A fraudulent practice in which provider services–eg, blood or chemistry panels are broken down to their individual components, resulting in a higher payment by Medicare. See Fraud, HIPA Act, Rebundling, Upcoding. un·bund·ling (ŭn-bŭnd'ling) Use of several Current Procedural Terminology codes for a service when one inclusive code is available. unbundlingSeparately billing for laboratory tests or procedures that are normally linked in order to extract more money from a payer (such as Medicare). This practice is illegal in the U.S. unbundling
UnbundlingSeparation of a multinational firm's transfers of funds into discrete flows for specific purposes. See: Bundling.UnbundlingThe practice of separating previously joined products and selling them. Unbundling tends to become more common under deregulatory policies.unbundling The separation and separate pricing of products and services by financial institutions. When deregulation resulted in price competition and the introduction of new products, financial institutions found it increasingly necessary to offer and price each product separately.unbundling a colloquial term used to describe a DE-MERGER (the break-up of a company originally formed through a MERGER into two or more separate companies) or more generally the sale of a number of its business divisions by a conglomerate company (see DIVERSIFICATION). |