Outsourcing medical billing to the correct billing company can insure that they have the same incentives as you do.
Almost all medical billing companies are paid a percentage of what they collect. This means they are only paid when you are paid. It also means the more they collect for your practice, the more they are paid. Internal medical billers, on the other hand, are almost always hourly employees. They are paid based on showing up in your office, not based upon how well they perform your medical billing or how much money they collect for your practice. This is not an alignment of incentives.
This issue, however, is often not fully understood or appreciated by many providers. These providers frequently say: "the staff works directly for me in my office-- they are more loyal and will do a better job and I can see what they are doing". Experience has shown, however, that this is often not true.
In a conversation I had recently with a busy cardiologist I heard a story that is not unusual. One of the office's medical billers called in sick. Some information was needed while she was out so the office manager went looking through her desk. She did not find the information she needed, but she did find over $40,000 worth of claims that had not been billed and had gone beyond the timely filing deadline. That is right, $40,000 worth of claims that could not be billed and for which no money would ever be realized. Upon the billers return she was "sternly reprimanded for this egregious error. Not fired, but reprimanded for costing the practices tens of thousands of dollars. There is no alignment of incentives present in a situation like this.
When I asked the doctor why a more severe action was not taken, he explained to me that "we already have staffing problems and did not want to alienate the billing staff any further." The guilty biller was apparently moved to the front-desk role and is now responsible for gathering demographic information and money.
There should be safety nets in place to catch $40,000 in missing claims. So how could this have gone unnoticed until a desk excavation? The office did not track and reconcile charges, payments or write-offs. The doctors had been told that the practice's system could not report at this level. The system, however, indeed had the capability to do this, but the billing staff did not know how to properly use it. Without the the fully aligned incentives of a medical billing company, the investment is often not made to full utilize the capabilities of a practice's medical billing system. $40,000 in missing charges is likely only the tip of the ice berg for this medical practice.
If you select the correct billing company you can avoid nightmare situations like this. Here are some of the key elements you should seek when looking for a medical billing company:
- Complete visibility and tracking of charge and payment batches should be in place. This will prevent anything from "falling through the cracks".
- Your medical billing company should reimburse your practice for what you would have been paid by the payers based on your allowable for any claims that go past timely filing for reasons within the medical billing company's control. What this means is that you never suffer financially if the billing company drops the ball. Try to have your billers reimburse you if they drop the ball.
- The practice should always (24 hours a day, 7 days a week) have access to the medical billing companies system. This allows the practice to see at any time exactly what is happening with their account.
We often hear from the physicians how hard and long they work for ever decreasing reimbursements. All this is true. However, too often we also see practices (through various reasons) hurt themselves financially - over and over again.
It has been said that the definition of insanity is doing things the same way and expecting different results. This certainly applies in the story outlined above. The biller that left $40,000 in charges unbilled will likely continue to cost the practice money. Just because she works for the practice does not mean she represents their best medical billing solution.
Selecting a world-class medical billing service that provides total visibility into their process and has incentives that are fully aligned with those of the practice is the most reliable road to outstanding medical billing and financial excellence.
Copyright 2008 by Carl Mays II
Almost all medical billing companies are paid a percentage of what they collect. This means they are only paid when you are paid. It also means the more they collect for your practice, the more they are paid. Internal medical billers, on the other hand, are almost always hourly employees. They are paid based on showing up in your office, not based upon how well they perform your medical billing or how much money they collect for your practice. This is not an alignment of incentives.
This issue, however, is often not fully understood or appreciated by many providers. These providers frequently say: "the staff works directly for me in my office-- they are more loyal and will do a better job and I can see what they are doing". Experience has shown, however, that this is often not true.
In a conversation I had recently with a busy cardiologist I heard a story that is not unusual. One of the office's medical billers called in sick. Some information was needed while she was out so the office manager went looking through her desk. She did not find the information she needed, but she did find over $40,000 worth of claims that had not been billed and had gone beyond the timely filing deadline. That is right, $40,000 worth of claims that could not be billed and for which no money would ever be realized. Upon the billers return she was "sternly reprimanded for this egregious error. Not fired, but reprimanded for costing the practices tens of thousands of dollars. There is no alignment of incentives present in a situation like this.
When I asked the doctor why a more severe action was not taken, he explained to me that "we already have staffing problems and did not want to alienate the billing staff any further." The guilty biller was apparently moved to the front-desk role and is now responsible for gathering demographic information and money.
There should be safety nets in place to catch $40,000 in missing claims. So how could this have gone unnoticed until a desk excavation? The office did not track and reconcile charges, payments or write-offs. The doctors had been told that the practice's system could not report at this level. The system, however, indeed had the capability to do this, but the billing staff did not know how to properly use it. Without the the fully aligned incentives of a medical billing company, the investment is often not made to full utilize the capabilities of a practice's medical billing system. $40,000 in missing charges is likely only the tip of the ice berg for this medical practice.
If you select the correct billing company you can avoid nightmare situations like this. Here are some of the key elements you should seek when looking for a medical billing company:
- Complete visibility and tracking of charge and payment batches should be in place. This will prevent anything from "falling through the cracks".
- Your medical billing company should reimburse your practice for what you would have been paid by the payers based on your allowable for any claims that go past timely filing for reasons within the medical billing company's control. What this means is that you never suffer financially if the billing company drops the ball. Try to have your billers reimburse you if they drop the ball.
- The practice should always (24 hours a day, 7 days a week) have access to the medical billing companies system. This allows the practice to see at any time exactly what is happening with their account.
We often hear from the physicians how hard and long they work for ever decreasing reimbursements. All this is true. However, too often we also see practices (through various reasons) hurt themselves financially - over and over again.
It has been said that the definition of insanity is doing things the same way and expecting different results. This certainly applies in the story outlined above. The biller that left $40,000 in charges unbilled will likely continue to cost the practice money. Just because she works for the practice does not mean she represents their best medical billing solution.
Selecting a world-class medical billing service that provides total visibility into their process and has incentives that are fully aligned with those of the practice is the most reliable road to outstanding medical billing and financial excellence.
Copyright 2008 by Carl Mays II
About the Author:
Carl Mays II, President and Chairman of ClaimCare Medical Billing Services, is a medical billing and process design expert. Carl has been working with medical clients for more than 12 years. Prior to that Carl worked as an aeronautical engineer for Boeing. Read more about medical billing companies at the ClaimCare Blog.
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