Denial Management: Don’t Perform Medical Billing Without It

by Carl Mays II

A well designed and executed Revenue Cycle Denial Management system can improve a medical practice or facility’s collections by up to 20 percent. If your medical billing team or medical billing company does not have a proper denial management system in place then you are, without question, losing money.

There is a lot of confusion about the definition of denial management. If you ask five medical billing experts what this means you will probably receive six answers.

A good start to finding out if your practice is suffering from improper denial management is to find out from your medical billing service (or in-house medical billing manager) how they manage denials and how they measure success in this area.

A good denial management system is not simply about working denials, it is about systematically gathering the data required to eliminate denials. Working denials is like pumping water from your basement when a pipe bursts. Denial management is about fixing the pipe so you no longer need to pump water from the basement.

The system accomplishes this needed service by tracking, quantifying, and reporting on every claim billed for which any payer denied the service. The reporting should be comprehensive, tracking all denials (not just selected denials). If used properly, the system can reduce first-time claim denials by over 50 percent. Many practices have no way of monitoring if payers are denying their claims at excessive or unwarranted rates, or even for what reason. These practices are probably losing 10 to 20 percent of their total revenue.

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.

With the analytical capabilities available, the medical billing department or medical billing company can identify systemic medical billing problems, create and test solutions to the problems and implement process changes that will increase collections AND drive down medical billing costs. One example of this is pursuit of Clean Claim Law violators with the denial data produced from the denial management system.

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

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