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Medical Billing Services must pursue underpayments |
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Written by Carl Mays II
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Monday, 06 July 2009 10:04 |
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by CarlMaysII
Any strong medical billing process and medical billing company must compare insurance payments to your contractual allowables and aggressively pursue underpayments. If this is not happening then most likely 5 to 10% of your practice's revenue is being lost.
Medical billing services have a number of basic steps they should incorporate into their billing process. These steps should include using a claims scrubber, use of no-response calls, posting zero pays, pursuing underpayments, and using likelihood of payment scores for patient collections.
Pursuing underpayments is the focus of today's article. This pursuit begins first and foremost with comparing the payment information from EOBs to the allowables outlined in the practice's payer contracts. This comparison must be done in an automated manner and cannot rely upon payment posters catching the underpayments on their own.
The reason that comparison to allowables must be automated is because of the clever and systematic manner in which payers typically underpay claims. These underpayment patterns can be difficult to spot, but one of the advantages a Medical Insurance Billing Service has is that it sees payment information and patterns across many clients for many payers. This allows medical claims billing services that regularly and systematically compare payments to contractual allowables to spot patterns that a single practice might miss.
As billing companies look across multiple clients they will frequently see the exact same CPTs being underpaid by the same amount by the same payer in a given month across all of their clients. The following month they will see the same payer switch to underpaying a different set of CPTs.
These underpayments are not huge (5 to 10 percent) but they add up quickly to big dollars for a medical practice. The combination of switching the codes being underpaid from month-to-month and keeping the underpayment amount "under the radar" can make the underpayments difficult for an individual practice to spot.
As you can imagine, these small underpayments switching from CPT to CPT would be difficult for a busy payment poster to notice. They will often spot the large underpayments (which occur with a much lower frequency than the small underpayments), but without automated comparisons the smaller underpayments are typically missed.
Identifying and pursuing underpayments can yield big returns for a medical practice (the average practice can increase collections by 7%). Therefore, it is imperative that your billing service is aggressively pursuing these underpayments on your behalf.
After the underpayment has been noticed it must be relentlessly pursued - this is what actually leads to top line improvement for your practice. Even the small underpayments cannot be ignored - to do so will invite larger and more frequent underpayments. Payers are constantly testing their boundaries. If they see that you respond at the first sign of stepping across the boundary they will quickly fall in line and pursue less vigilant targets.
Copyright 2008 by Carl Mays II
About the Author:
Carl Mays II, President and CEO of ClaimCare Medical Billing Services, is an expert in the field of medical billing and medical practice management. Carl has been working in the medical field for more than 12 years. Prior to that Carl worked as a mechanical engineer for Boeing. Read more about medical billing companies at ClaimCare's medical billing blog.
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