By Carl Mays II

It has been accurately stated that you cannot manage what you do not measure. This is particularly true in the arena of medical billing denials. Without a strong Revenue Cycle Denial Management system in place you cannot properly manage this critical element of medical billing. If you are not managing your denials then you are most likely leaving more than 20% of your revenues uncollected.

Some medical billers believe denial management is the same as follow-up, others believe denial management is primarily geared towards dealing with issues around medical necessity. Many medical billing experts simply think as denial management as a description for the overall medical billing process.

To find out if your billing department or a current billing company is deploying a Revenue Cycle Denial Management System on your behalf ask them: (1) What is their Revenue Cycle Denial Management strategy; (2) What process do they use to methodically measure it and (3) what are the quantifiable results of it. If you do not receive rapid, concise answers with clear metrics then there is not a proper denial management system in place for your medical billing.

Few billing departments appreciate the value a good Revenue Cycle Denial Management system can bring to a medical practice or facility. A robust Revenue Cycle Denial Management system provides methodical management data for the billing process; the data are then used to (a) increase and (b) accelerate cash flow.

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.

Although many practice management systems can properly track claim denial information, few systems have the rare combination of having been both properly implemented to track the data and properly understood to extract the data in a meaningful manner. Without both of these elements the denial management process cannot properly provide the feedback on denials that is required. Even when this information is present, often there is no mechanism for feeding the information back into the medical billing process to correct billing problems.

Your denial management system must 1) Track all denials by payer; 2) Report on the reason for the denials and the number of claims denied for each reason; and 3) Allow for in depth analysis and comparison across payers to identify important trends. Once these capabilities are in place, the medical billing specialists can create targeted process changes and claim edits/rules that will fix systemic billing issues and increase collections.

The in depth analysis described above also allows payers that are habitual violators of Clean Claim Rules to be identified and pursued. The data and analysis will allow many opportunities for process improvements and revenue enhancement for the practice.

If you implement a powerful denial management system you can optimize your medical billing and speed up your cash flow. As previously mentioned, a strong denial management system can increase your collections by 20 percent or more.

Copyright 2008 by Carl Mays II

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