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10/31/2011

It will be much easier for your practice to earn extra cash as part of an accountable care organization (ACO) through CMS Shared Savings Program thanks to a less stringent final rule released Oct. 21. The 700-page rule makes it easier for your practice to join an ACO and boost revenue, including less required measures and a risk-free track that allows you to share savings while avoiding penalties for not hitting budget marks.

10/31/2011

Don’t worry about meaningful use rules that will get tougher over time, and don’t sweat looming federal audits of electronic health record (EHR) incentive payments – that’s the message from Farzad Mostashari, MD, the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. The biggest benefit of EHRs is better information on provider productivity and health outcomes, which is needed for future payment models, he said.

10/31/2011

It’s up to you to start negotiation talks with your payer and get a rate increase. But to get the ball rolling in your favor, you must approach your payer in the right way and be persistent. For example, start by trying to schedule a casual chat with them to issue a head’s up that you want to renegotiate your contract, experts say.

10/31/2011

CMS has made several big changes to the accountable care organizations (ACO) final rule in effort to ease physician participation requirements, experts say. Here is a rundown of the most important changes from the proposed rule that will affect you.

10/31/2011

You can expect more scrutiny of your place-of-service (POS) coding habits from your CMS contractors in 2012 thanks to a new target on the HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) Work Plan. Now is the right time to make sure you’re entering the correct POS on your claims. OIG released two audits this year which looked at claims submitted in 2008 and 2009, respectively. OIG estimates errors during that two-year period resulted in overpayments of $28.8 million.

10/31/2011

This chart looks at 10 lab codes that saw significant utilization growth from 2009 to 2010, and also had a high denial rate (classified as 10% or above). NOTE: Codes with low utilization or total reimbursement were excluded from analysis. Medicare claims data for clinical labs was eliminated, so this data reflects lab codes billed primarily by physicians and non-physician providers (NPPs).

10/31/2011

We have a patient who comes in for allergy testing and then leaves the office with a vial of medicine for injection for the allergies. Medicare will only pay for one service per day. What modifiers and codes should be used?

10/31/2011

Your non-physician practitioners (NPPs) are raking in more E/M income than any previous year, according to an exclusive NPP Report analysis of the latest Medicare claims data from 2010, the first year CMS stopped taking consultation codes (99241-99255). Remember: NPPs are permitted to bill consults so long as they are not billed incident-to, which would require a physician-initiated plan of care.

10/31/2011

Your non-physician practitioners’ (NPPs) incident-to billing practices are a top target on the HHS’ Office of Inspector General (OIG) 2012 WorkPlan, which meansyour NPPs must be extremely careful when billing these services. NPPs are invisible on incident-to claims which is why it is so important to make sure a service musters up to the criteria, says Dianne Wilkinson, RHIT, a compliance auditor at West Tennessee Healthcare in Jackson, Tenn.

10/31/2011

Who picks more high-level E/M codes, nurse practitioners (NPs) or physician assistants (PAs)? These charts examine the ratio of new and established patient E/M levels by NPs and Pas, comparing 2009 data to recently released 2010 data. NOTE: Incident-to services billed by non-physician practitioners (NPPs) appear as additional physician utilization in CMS claims data, thus the NPP services in this data do not include those that were billed incident-to.

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