Showing posts with label AR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AR. Show all posts

Friday, October 25, 2013

Boost Medical Practice Collections by Cutting Down Patient Statements

By P.j. Cloud-moulds from Physicians Practice

Do you know how many patient statements are sent out at your practice? Do you know how high that A/R class is? These are two very important questions you need to ask yourself today. The numbers might shock you.

If you do find that the number of patient statements is too high, you can then start asking why this is the case. Here are some of the common reasons:

Your front office staff did not collect the patient copay, coinsurance, or deductible. If you have an up-to-date fee schedule, calculating the patient coinsurance and deductible is easy, and should be done at the end of the appointment prior to the patient walking out the door. Copays are easy to collect and should be collected at the beginning of the appointment.

Your front-office staff did not collect according to plan details. When verifying an insurance plan, sometimes the insurance company will provide incorrect information. Your staff may also be calculating the patient portion incorrectly. Be sure your staff is well trained in this area. It's costing you a lot of money if they are not.


 Patients are paying at the time of service, but those payments are not getting posted properly. This results in a nasty call from the patient stating that, “I paid, and will not pay again!” This is the epitome of poor customer service. Institute checks and balances at the end of each day to ensure payments are posted.

Patient “forgot their checkbook or credit card.” This is a line that you hear too often, and it's full of hot air. If the patient “forgets,” let him know that he can call in his payment by the end of the day, or he will incur a late payment fee. Yes, this is legal. If the patient can't pay now, he certainly won't pay in a month when he gets the bill.

Staff adjusts off a patient deductible. Your front-office staff performs the insurance verification, and sees that the patient has a $5,000 deductible of which only $352 has been met. Once the deductible is met, the patient is responsible for 20 percent of the allowed charges. Your front-office staff is reluctant to charge the patient the deductible amount for fear of being yelled at by the patient (who should already know her plan limitations, but most often does not) so staff charges her the co-insurance instead. This results in the patient getting a bill for the remaining amount. The angry patient then calls and yells at the staff stating, “I paid at the time of service!” Another example of poor customer service. Remember, you cannot adjust off a patient deductible.

The patient has Medicare and a secondary insurance. Since we are not allowed to collect monies from Medicare patients until Medicare pays its portion, we bill the secondary. If the secondary does not pick up all of Medicare's 20 percent, then the patient gets a bill. It's really difficult when some Medicare patients do not understand their secondary insurance has a deductible, or will not cover the entire 20 percent.

Just sending out statement after statement is a very poor way of running a business. Have a time limit of how many statements you will allow a patient to receive. Three months is a good rule of thumb. If patients need to be put on a payment plan, that's great, but put a time limit on that, as well. Your practice is not a bank, credit union, or credit card. It is a business, and no other business would allow goods and services to walk out the door before payment. Stop allowing patients to take advantage of your good nature.

Article taken from Physicians Practice http://www.physicianspractice.com/blog/boost-medical-practice-collections-cutting-down-patient-statements?GUID=2E8F906E-CDE7-43B7-AC93-7066F83372C7&rememberme=1&ts=22102013
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Friday, September 6, 2013

Revenue Cycle Management Is More Than Billing Patients

Revenue cycle management (RCM) is the lifeblood of any practice — private or nonprofit. Effective patient registration, insurance and benefit verification, charge capture, and claims processing are essential to maintaining practice viability. Before you can improve any process, you need to assess where you are now. Here are some questions you should think about:

• Do you know if you are achieving best practice standards in accounts-receivable management? • Does it take your practice too long to collect, and/or are your write-offs and adjustments too high? • Do you know your claim-denial rate on first submission (4 percent of claims or fewer is best practice)? • Have you determined that you are not leaving any money on the table with a reimbursement analysis? • What are your days in A/R? What percentage of your accounts receivable is more than 120 days old (10 percent or less is best practice)?

Patient registration The revenue cycle starts with patient registration. Patient registration begins with a phone call for an appointment request. Your front-desk staff should interview the patient on the phone to collect billing and insurance information;  invite the patient to go online to your website to complete their registration information; and follow up if registration isn't completed two days prior to the appointment — so that the patient's insurance coverage can be verified. You can use an in-office kiosk for patient check in and to collect demographic information. Some kiosks will automatically verify insurance eligibility too.  Charge capture Transferring patient charges from the EHR to your practice management (PM) system should be seamless — electronically transmitting data is an example of efficient workflow. But, if you are forcing your providers to first complete a paper visit-encounter form, and then transfer that information to the EHR, it can lead to inconsistencies, lost data, and redundant work processes. Furthermore, asking your check-out station to compare electronic patient information against the paper encounter form is burdensome and creates even more work when discrepancies arise.  Automatic payment posting Automatic payment posting can significantly reduce staff work, so why don't more billing staff embrace and drive implementation of auto-post opportunities? Holding tight to the status quo — manual payment posting and reconciliation — is an inefficient use of our most costly resource: staff. Routinely ask your payers, clearinghouses, and software vendors about new services coming online, and roll out every new payer as electronic remittance and auto-posting become available. Investigate a bank lockbox service that converts the paper explanation of benefits (EOBs) to electronic transactions (837s) for automatic posting to patient accounts.  Insurance eligibility verification Investigate and incorporate automatic insurance eligibility verification into your work flows. You can use your clearinghouse service to upload the appointment schedule a couple of days in advance, in a batch process. For walk-in patients, use real-time verification through your PM system. An integrated verification solution creates a history within the patient's record that supports follow-up collection efforts, if there are later discrepancies with the payer.

Article by Rosemarie Nelson - See more at: http://www.physicianspractice.com/billing-and-collections/revenue-cycle-management-more-billing-patients?GUID=2E8F906E-CDE7-43B7-AC93-7066F83372C7&rememberme=1&ts=29082013#sthash.Bbvb2ywQ.dpuf
READ MORE - Revenue Cycle Management Is More Than Billing Patients