In Part 1, we addressed the pulse of your practice: trends in new patient statistics and physician referrals. If you missed Part 1, please select this link: Check the Vital Signs of Your Medical Practice-Part 1
For Part 2, let’s check that Blood Pressure-
Are the numbers of services you bill increasing, decreasing, or staying the same?
Depending
on your type of medical practice, you could expect to see one or two
procedure codes billed per patient visit or for some specialties like
Radiation Oncology, you may bill 10 procedure codes per visit. In
either case, reviewing reports that show month-to-month statistics can
allow you to recognize anomalies in your billing patterns. Sharp
declines in a certain procedure may indicate forgotten or missed coding
opportunities and therefore missed revenue. Many payers have time
filing limits from the date of service. They can range from 60 days to
one year. A regular review for missed charges will enable to meet those
filing limits and collect on all of your rendered services. If your
report showed an unexpected procedure or an unusually high number of a
certain procedure was billed, you will be able to audit the medical
record(s) for appropriate documentation. If billing errors are
discovered, you can get ahead of an insurance audit by quickly refunding
any payments received for these non-provided services. Keeping
yourself in the good graces of your payers is always important.
Is your claim reimbursement in line with your contracted fees?
This
type of analysis is invaluable to any medical practice. Once you have
signed on that dotted line with the payer, you are wise to ensure that
you are receiving the proper reimbursement based on the agreed upon
contractual rates. In the daily whirlwind of activity in the medical
office, office staff seldom has the time to comb over the detail of
every paid line item. A monthly report that compares the payments
received to the payer’s fee schedule will indicate payments that are
below (as well as above) the payers contracted fees. Payments that are
below should immediately prompt a call the Provider Relations
Department. For payments above the contracted fees, research has to be
done on the accuracy of the fee schedule you are using, for instance,
perhaps the payer has updated its schedule and you have not. This type
of report could also make you aware of overpayments. If those are
pre-emptively refunded to the payer, it will show your practice to be
following proper procedures in the eyes of the payer.
These two reports are just a small sampling of the extensive selection of practice management reporting options built into the Report Center module of Iridium Suite Medical Billing Software.
Be sure to watch for the upcoming publication of Part 3: Temperature.
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