Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions with Full Rationale Answers

Practice Exam

Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions and answers with full rationale

Practice Exam

CPC Practice Exam and Study Guide Package

Practice Exam

What makes a good CPC Practice Exam? Questions and Answers with Full Rationale

CPC Exam Review Video

Laureen shows you her proprietary “Bubbling and Highlighting Technique”

Download your Free copy of my "Medical Coding From Home Ebook" at the top right corner of this page

Practice Exam

2018 CPC Practice Exam Answer Key 150 Questions With Full Rationale (HCPCS, ICD-9-CM, ICD-10, CPT Codes) Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions with Full Rationale Answers

Practice Exam

Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions and answers with full rationale

How to Craft a Surgical Letter

Understanding the costs associated with surgery upfront is important for both patients and payers. A surgical letter includes the expected costs a surgeon anticipates for a specific surgery. The purpose of the letter is to provide a budget for preoperative care, costs on the day of surgery, and postoperative care. The letter may be created […]

The post How to Craft a Surgical Letter appeared first on AAPC Knowledge Center.

AAPC Knowledge Center

Applicants – Please include a cover letter

If you live in New York and are applying for a job in California, please explain why (are you moving, looking for a remote position, etc.).
If your work history reflects spending only months at a time on jobs, please explain why (are you a military family, working as a temp, etc.).
If your credentials and work history are far above the skill set for a coder, please explain why.
If there are gaps in your work history, please explain why (stay at home parent, hitchhiked around Europe for a year, etc.).

A cover letter doesn’t have to be long and detailed but it should explain any questions that the resume might prompt.

Medical Billing and Coding Forum

Anesthesiology Query letter for a CANPC book study guide

Vino C. Mody Jr., M.D., Lic., Ph.D.
6154 Black Mallard Place
El Paso, TX 79932
678-427-6511 cell; 915-642-4269 home
[email protected]

February 2, 2018
Dear Agent:

Please allow me to introduce my recently completed non-fiction book—CANPC Essentials for Accurate and Efficient Medical Coding for Anesthesia and Pain Management—a self-help book aimed at readers who are pursuing a career in anesthesia and pain management coding. The primary target audience is those who are about to take the Certified Anesthesia and Pain Management Coder (CANPCTM) examination, but the book is expected to be a useful and relevant reference book for coders already working in this field.
CANPC Essentials for Accurate and Efficient Medical Coding for Anesthesia and Pain Management weighs in at approximately 23,000 words and is fully complete. My previous publications include 100 conference abstracts and 25 original scientific papers published during my eight-year tenure as a clinical researcher at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden. I also served as editor of three different clinical research journals while at Karolinska.

I have worked in the healthcare field for 15 years at different hospitals in the U.S. and Sweden. I have valid medical coding specialist certificates from the University of Georgia and U.S. Career Institute and several important coding and billing certifications (COC, CPC, CCS-P, CANPC, CCVTC, 4Med CICP, CMAA, and CBCS). I taught coding and worked as a coder for three years in health care institutes and with coding consultants in El Paso, Texas, and I worked in the medical administration department at Mesa Hills Hospital in El Paso, Texas, where I resolved billing issues by performing coding (including surgery coding), medical auditing, medical transcription, and quality data analysis. I have a medical degree from Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia, and received training from Yale-New Haven Hospital (Waterbury, CT) and Brown University/Lifespan. I have a Licentiate degree and Ph.D. from Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, and eight years of experience in ophthalmology research and teaching in ophthalmology, surgery, medicine, and pediatrics. I have drawn heavily on both my coding and teaching experience in developing CANPC Essentials for Accurate and Efficient Medical Coding for Anesthesia and Pain Management as a training and teaching tool for future anesthesia coders.

I have researched the work and interests of your agency, and I believe that my book fits well with the type of published works that you promote. I have therefore included an outline, a synopsis, and a copy of the completed manuscript for your perusal.

I thank you for your time and consideration.
Sincerely,

Vino C. Mody Jr.

Medical Billing and Coding Forum

CPC-A Cover Letter for Positions OUTSIDE of Coding

Greetings,

I just passed my exam this week (CPC-A, never worked in a medical office) and have a quick question regarding the focus of my resume/cover letter for positions OUTSIDE of coding in the revenue cycle (ex front desk, charge entry, patient registration, data entry, etc). My strategy is to emphasize my desire to gain experience elsewhere in the revenue cycle in order to gain a more well-rounded skillset with the ultimate goal of moving into coding. Would you recommend framing my application to these types of positions as a stepping stone to getting into the coding profession, or should I forget that and simply try to highlight my skill set as it relates to the position I am applying for? After all, my main selling point is a coding credential. Thanks a bunch!

Roswell Satterwhite, CPC-A

Medical Billing and Coding Forum

Letter from the editor: Accessing your newsletter content

The challenges healthcare professionals tackle each day don’t wait for solutions, and neither should you. That’s why Briefings on Coding Compliance Strategies is transitioning to a more frequent and robust publishing model this winter and expanding into a JustCoding membership.

Your updated member benefits gain you access to content and tools on JustCoding (JC)—with new resources added weekly to the website (www.justcoding.com). You’ll use the same login information you previously used to access Briefings on Coding Compliance Strategies at www.hcpro.com to access the articles and full-issue PDF at JC.

Plus, as a JC member, you gain instant access to more than 100 resources in our forms and tools library, including white papers, books, webcasts, and much more. If you are already a JC member, you will continue to receive the news and analysis you’ve come to rely on, plus expanded member benefits coming in December.

To help readers keep tabs on available content, we will announce new articles in JustCoding and Revenue Cycle Daily Advisor, HCPro’s daily e-newsletter for HIM directors and coders and coding managers. At the end of each month, we’ll roll the corresponding weekly articles into a digital issue of Briefings on Coding Compliance Strategies that mirrors the current format. As a member of JC, you can continue to download and print high-quality PDFs of the current issue, as well as several years of back issues of Briefings on Coding Compliance Strategies, directly from JC’s website. Printed editions of Briefings on Coding Compliance Strategies will no longer be mailed to subscribers.

 

We’re looking forward to delivering your coding and billing guidance and commentary in a timelier, efficient, and convenient manner. Feel free to contact editor Amanda Tyler at [email protected] with any questions.

HCPro.com – Briefings on Coding Compliance Strategies

Medical Assistant Cover Letter – Land A Medical Assistant Job

Writing a great medical assistant cover letter is not that hard if you know how. All cover letters actually follow a set format whether you use email or print out your letter. The first paragraph is the introduction, the second lists your achievements and qualifications and the last concludes your medical assistant cover letter by thanking the reader for their time.

Since you are applying for a medical assistant job which may include administrative duties such as answering correspondence, it is very important to write a very professional medical assistant cover letter. A letter that is full of grammatical errors, misspellings, missing information and other such mistakes will make you look lazy or incompetent. It is better to send a well-written cover letter to help you get a job interview.

Medical Assistant Cover Letter Format Guide

Your Address
Contact Number
E-mail

Date

Title (Mr./Ms./Dr.) Full Name
Job Title
Name of Organization
Address

Dear Mr./Ms./Dr. Last Name:

First paragraph – This should be quite short and include basic information such as why you are writing (applying for a medical assistant job!) and how or where you learned of the job opening

Second paragraph – Sell yourself! State why you are interested in the job. Highlight your qualifications and achievements. For a medical assistant cover letter, employers will be interested in four things: certifications, medical assistant training and education, relevant work experience and soft skills such as interpersonal and communication skills. You may use a short paragraph and then some bullet points for easier reading.

Third paragraph – Again, keep this short. Three or four sentences are enough. Request an interview, state that your resume is attached and, most importantly, thank the reader for his time and consideration.

Sincerely,

(your handwritten signature)
Your full name

Enclosure (Resume and anything else you are sending with the medical assistant cover letter)

Medical Assistant Cover Letter: To Email or Not?

Your options when sending a medical assistant cover letter are to email it, use snail mail or hand deliver it. The question nowadays is whether the employer or recruiter prefers email or not.

Take your cue from the employer. Read the medical assistant job description carefully. There should be instructions there which you should follow. If you were given an email address and told to apply by email then you know what to do.

What if there are no specific instructions about how to apply? If there is a telephone number given, call them and ask. When only an email address is given that means they expect you to email them.

Note that although emails are generally more informal than printed mail, for a medical assistant cover letter it is still best to use the professional letter format given above.

Medical Assistant Cover Letter Writing Tips

Each cover letter should be unique. Tailor your medical assistant cover letter using the job description given. For example, if this particular medical assistant job description mentions a lot of soft skills, then it would be good to highlight those skills in your letter.

Avoid using contractions such as “don’t,” “I’m,” “isn’t,” etc.

Keep it short and simple. Don’t write 3 pages about yourself.

Use regular white paper and black ink. Fancy colored stationary is not appropriate.

Instead of listing every little thing about yourself in you medical assistant cover letter, stick to emphasizing your main selling points only. That can be a strong clinical background, extensive experience in medical office management or a high GPA.

The perfect medical assistant cover letter is professional, brief and highlights what you can contribute to a company or organization. Your goal is to get your foot in the door for a job interview. Use the tips and format given in this article to write a medical assistant cover letter that shows that you are a serious and professional job candidate.

And now get a Free Report on the Top 10 Medical Assistant Employers hiring in 2010, just click here… http://www.AssistantMedicalJobs.com

Whether you are a fully Certified Medical Assistant looking for work or just wondering if this field is for you, our specific directions can help steer you on the road to a successful career as a Medical Assistant. Just visit http://www.AssistantMedicalJobs.com

Find More Medical Coding Articles

Letter from the editor: Accessing your newsletter content

The challenges healthcare professionals tackle each day don’t wait for solutions, and neither should you. That’s why Case Management Monthly is transitioning to a more frequent and robust publishing model this winter and expanding into a Revenue Cycle Advisor membership.

HCPro.com – Case Management Monthly