Medical Billers Collect Professional Fees Due
Medical billing is a complex procedure of billing and collecting professional fees for medical and healthcare services provided to patients. Doing it right requires a broad range of knowledge and understanding of the medical billing process and health insurance company rules.
The Process (in a nutshell):
When a physician or healthcare provider renders medical services to a patient they are entitled to be reimbursed. Collecting these moneys due is the medical biller's job.After each healthcare appointment the medical biller reviews the superbill or encounter forms attached to the patient's record to establish which services were provided. Next they re-check the patient's insurance coverage and note the name of the health insurance company. Then they prepare proper invoices and submit the claim.
Why Won't The Doctor Do The Billing?
Traditionally doctors graduate from medical school with the expectation that they will practice medicine and deliver patient care. Running a business, however, is not part of the their premise. To them, running a business is for business professionals. However, the catch twenty-two is that medical practices ARE a business and need to be properly managed and run as such. Running a medical office includes certain administrative procedures, and getting paid for services is part of any business. 
This means:
Collection of accounts receivables
co-payments
and reminders for past due accounts
However, it is not the doctor's job to do the billing! Physicians don't have to do everything themselves. Running a medical office business requires a full team of medical office staff.
Medical Billers Do All That?
Medical billers are the ones who organize medical bills and statements, comb through them for errors, negotiate with collection agencies, answer patient's questions about their health-care plans and the office's billing routine, and spend hours on the phone with insurance companies on a client's behalf. Think about the large number of medical specialties, countless medical conditions and diseases, plethora of CPT codes and Medicare rules, the multitude of health insurance companies (payers), and billions of patients everywhere!!!
For Example:
If the practice administers 50 different procedures and works with 50 payers, then 1,000 monthly charges require selection from 2,500 unique fees defined by contractual agreements or “reasonable and customary pricing” (“allowed”) for every CPT-payer pair. Wow... that's huge!
The medical biller's role in this process is to translate medical terminology, diseases, diagnoses into coded billing statements, enter patient information into databases, mailing patients’ billing statements, posting payments received, follow up on unpaid insurance claims, as well as appeals and denials, and report to their employers on the financial status of the practice.
The Art of Medical Billing
Medical billers not only review charge slips and track payments, they also analyze records to produce customized reports that show profitability or areas in need of improvement. Such reports are critical when decisions need to be made on renewing and negotiating contracts. They also advise physicians of fee structure changes, new coding practices, and ways to improve the office's bottom line. Most medical billers also handle the offices dictation transcription. This saves the medical office money and allows the healthcare providers to comply with the strict HCFA rules, which mandate clarity of all Medicare claims.
A Highly Skilled and Knowledgeable Expert
Medical billers use the HCFA-1500 form to submit health insurance claims to insurance carriers. They must know appropriate responses to a variety of billing and legal situations. Bill collection, release of patient information/records, patient confidentiality rights, subpoenas, workers’ compensation rules, and Medicare regulations for reimbursement are complicated areas and must be handled competently and with care.
To get paid an Assignment of Benefits (AOB) is used, which is an authorization directing the insurer to make payment directly to the provider of benefits, rather than to the insured. The insurance carrier however, is the one who determines whether benefits are payable.
Naturally, as the expectations and standards for proper coding and billing procedures become more stringent, medical billing and coding companies are rapidly becoming a vital segment of the national health care industry. So much so, that traditional medical staffing firms have taken note, as they have expanded their suite of services to include physician coding and billing. Furthermore, publicly traded companies are quickly consolidating the medical billing and coding segment through the acquisition of smaller players.
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