Complexities in the medical claims process come from sources like coding and documentation, resulting in the unnecessary denial of claims.
Medical claims issues in healthcare organizations often stem from the intricate nature of medical coding necessary to reflect and correctly bill a patient's treatment. Errors in documentation sent from the provider can lead to discrepancies in the claims submitted to insurers. The back and forth process of resolving these claims creates an inevitable lag that causes claims to be denied or delayed.
There is also the matter of the regulations governing healthcare reimbursements in the US healthcare system. Beyond the massive differences in coverage across insurers impacting claims, there is also Medicare and Medicaid. These changes require healthcare organizations to continuously update their billing practices and in organizations with fewer resources, this can be a difficult task to constantly undertake.
These are two of the systemic issues that exacerbate the burden placed upon healthcare staff. While training allows for the instilling of the right procedures and protocols to follow in the claims process, there is still an opportunity for dysfunction if it's not handled securely.
There is also the matter discussed in Proceedings of the 19th ACM SIGKDD International Conference of Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, “Recent studies estimate that close to 30% (∼ $765 billion in 2009) of total healthcare spending in the United States is wasted, which in turn is caused by many factors such as unnecessary services, fraud, excessive administrative costs, and inefficiencies in the healthcare delivery.”
Advanced coding software:
Preauthorization tools:
Comprehensive utilization review programs:
Data integrity measures:
Data analytics:
Collaboration with payers:
Denial management process:
Medical claims are submitted by the healthcare providers for payment, insurance claims are submitted to insurers, at times by patients.
A review program assesses the necessity and appropriateness of medical services.
International classification of diseases and current procedural terminology.