Group appointment, also referred to as shared medical appointment, includes multiple patients seen as a group for follow-up or routine care. These visits are voluntary for patients and provide a secure but interactive setting in which patients have:
Medicare generally pays for group visits if there is some one-on-one time with the physician, but practices should contact local carriers and other insurers about their policies; some carriers are still resistant to the idea.
Who benefits from this type of program?
Shared medical appointments can be satisfying to both the physician and the patient, used as substitution or in addition to a traditional appointment. They are most appropriate for patients requiring routine follow-up care, or frequent time with the physician, or chronic patients. They can offer an increase in the productivity and efficiency of the health care team as well as enhance the patient’s visit by offering a holistic and therapeutic approach.
Staff
Group appointments might require trained staff to act as facilitators, or even especially experienced billers and coders who are able to understand the process of group appointments, in order to get proper reimbursement for the providers, although physicians can outsource billing assistance for such appointments to professionals who are trained and experienced in group practice billing.
- improved access to their physicians,
- the benefit of counseling with additional members of a health care team (such as a behaviorist, nutritionist, or health educator), and
- share experiences and advice with one another.
- The cooperative health care clinic (CHCC), created for older patients requiring frequent, broad-spectrum care;
- The disease-specific CHCC, a diagnostically exclusive group that aids patients with chronic-disease management; and
- The drop-in group medical appointment (DIGMA), intended for established patients requiring a more comprehensive approach to their follow-up care.
Medicare generally pays for group visits if there is some one-on-one time with the physician, but practices should contact local carriers and other insurers about their policies; some carriers are still resistant to the idea.
Who benefits from this type of program?
Shared medical appointments can be satisfying to both the physician and the patient, used as substitution or in addition to a traditional appointment. They are most appropriate for patients requiring routine follow-up care, or frequent time with the physician, or chronic patients. They can offer an increase in the productivity and efficiency of the health care team as well as enhance the patient’s visit by offering a holistic and therapeutic approach.
Staff
Group appointments might require trained staff to act as facilitators, or even especially experienced billers and coders who are able to understand the process of group appointments, in order to get proper reimbursement for the providers, although physicians can outsource billing assistance for such appointments to professionals who are trained and experienced in group practice billing.
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