Friday, November 21, 2008

Denial Management - Don't Perform Medical Billing Without It

By Carl Mays II

Twenty Percent. This is how much of your practice or facility's collections you are allowing payers to keep if you are not properly tracking and pursuing medical billing denials. This is a lot of money during the best of times, but particularly during tough economic times. Your practice needs an effective Revenue Cycle Denial Management system if you want to recapture this lost income.

Revenue Cycle Denial Management has become a universal and often abused term in medical billing. Some individuals use the term to describe a means of addressing claims denied for medical necessity. Others use the term to describe how some information is tracked for a specific payer, set of procedures or a place of service. Still others try to use it to describe what they do daily in the physician's office.

Given all of this confusion, how do you find out if your medical billing company or medical billing department is utilizing proper denial management for your practice? A good start is to ask a few simple questions: What do they believe denial management entails? What metrics do they utilize to measure denial management success? How much have they increased your collections in the past 6 months through their denial management system?

It is amazing how few medical billers or medical billing companies understand how proper denial management will dramatically increase the revenue of a practice. They understand the value of working denials, but this is not the only secret to good denial management. Working denials is like bailing water from a leaking ship - it can help keep the ship afloat, but ultimately you really need to fix the leak.

Achieving powerful results from denial management requires data, data and more data. Your denial management system must report and measure all claims that are being denied by your payers. With this level of data your medical billing specialists can fix the issues that are leading to the denials (whether it be issues with the claims or issues with the payers) and stop the torrent of unpaid claims into your medical billing process. Once you do this, then revenues for your practice will increase; probably by 10 to 20 percent.

Three elements are typically missing from a practice or medical billing company's denial management process: data, filtering/sorting methodologies and feedback to systematically correct errors. Most practice management systems do not properly track denials - at least not in the form in which they are typically used (i.e., they may have the capability, but only if properly implemented and used). Those PMs that do track denials typically overwhelm the practice with data that is difficult to utilize for high level denial management. Finally, even if the data is captured and can be properly utilized, most billing groups do not have a systematic way to get the information back into the billing process in a manner that prevents the denials from occurring again in the future.

The standard denial management output should track by payer, the number of claims denied and the reason for the denials. This must be coupled with a dashboard reporting tool for quick visual management. With these reports the billing team can easily identify which payers are inappropriately denying claims; they can also compare these payers to their peers for proper trending and follow-up. This output allows the medical billing team to develop and refine payer specific rules to prevent future payer denials by insuring all claims are clean when they are submitted.

Payers that are chronic violators are pursued to resolve how and when they intend to process and pay outstanding claims. If the issues persist, there may be grounds to charge penalties stipulated by the Clean Claim Law. Only by quantifying and analyzing the problem can a medical billing team discover how to improve on the process.

As previously mentioned, an effective denial management system is critical for your practice if you want to improve your medical billing and hasten your collections. Implementation of the proper system can easily increase collections by more than 10% and could even exceed a 20% increase in collections.

Copyright 2008 by Carl Mays II - 15275

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