Healthcare delivery in the United States
of America has come a long way from cash-based to insurance-backed.
Currently, over 85% of the nation’s residents have health care plans
either through employers’ private pools, private companies, the
veterans’ health administration, the children’s health insurance program
and Medicare/Medicaid/TRICARE.
While insurance payers (whether Federal or private) essentially cover
health risks of the insured, they differentiate themselves with their
respective restrictive operational requirements. The impact of this
restrictive payment environment is such that health care providers are
increasingly finding it difficult to procure their payments on time.
And, with the Federal Government inclined to make health insurance
mandatory, care providers’ only hope is to find a way to deal with
multiple regulatory insurance payers.
Unlike United Kingdom and Canada, which
have single-payer system, US is characterized by Federal and Private
Payer systems. And Federal system is again sub-divided into
Medicare/Medicaid/TRICARE.
The majority of insured Americans
receive their health care (insurance) coverage via a private insurance
company. Currently in the country, 59.3% of all insured Americans have
coverage through private insurers. These private insurance holders can
once again be classified under:
- Group insurance, which is availed through an employer with provision to cover spouses and children, based on the particular package
- Individual Insurance, which is purchased by the insured himself to cover his or his family health risks
- Managed-care plans: The two most popular types of managed-care plan providers in America are Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) and Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs). An HMO plan will have a predetermined facility and doctor for you and/or family. When you need treatment, you will have to visit the contracted facilities and see the contracted physicians in order for the insurance to pay the bill
With so many variants of private
healthcare policies, healthcare providers usually have a hard time
understanding and billing with private payers. The stress is so much
that it is actually started to impede their clinical efficiency, which
is their main concern. There is a whole lot of stressful restrictions
that providers will come across, such as:
- dealing with deductibles and copayments,
- establishing medical necessity of a procedure
- dealing with preexisting conditions
Though dealing with Federal Payer system
is relatively less difficult, providers have to deal with
state-specific rules that govern Medicaid/Medicare:
- With the Federal Government hinting at extending Medicare base from the current 28%, providers will have more Medicaid/Medicare supported visitors
- Federal Government entertains Medicaid/Medicare beneficiaries’ bills from only a few designated providers. Therefore, care providers have an overriding duty to check insurance authorization prior to administering medical services
- Further, Medicare/Medicaid is also bound by restrictions on repetitive, pre-existing, and quantum of admissible medical expenditure to its beneficiaries
If understanding multiple payer system and their respective restriction constitutes half of the battle, billing and coding in ICD-10
and HIPAA 5010 Version will constitute the other half. But, providers,
with their clinical efficiency at stake, would do well to assign these
operational issues to external billing consultants.
Medicalbillersandcoders.com
with credible history of helping physicians realize maximum claim
realization amidst multiple payer environment – will help make the task a
lot easier. Our medical billing professionals are highly trained and
certified with experience in handling multiple payer environment and the
latest coding practices. Their expertise combined with our technology
edge is a sure way to turnaround your practices’ revenues.
No comments:
Post a Comment