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

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

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CPC Practice Exam and Study Guide Package

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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”

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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

10 Reasons to Refuse Job Counter Offers

I was recently speaking with a recruiter for HIMIGINE Solutions, James Mason Henk, about employers who make counter offers after employees give their notice that they are leaving for a new position. He has a list of TOP 10 REASONS NOT TO ACCEPT COUNTER OFFERS and he shared them with me. I am sharing them […]

The post 10 Reasons to Refuse Job Counter Offers appeared first on AAPC Knowledge Center.

AAPC Knowledge Center

AHA offers suggestions, concerns on CMS’ NOTICE Act

CMS needs to evaluate, clarify, and modify sections of the Notice of Observation Treatment and Implication for Care Eligibility (NOTICE) Act, according to public comments made by the American Hospital Association (AHA). The NOTICE Act was signed into law August 2015 and will take effect August 2016.  CMS is currently preparing rulemaking to implement the law. The AHA supports the NOTICE Act’s goals of providing patients and their families with timely notification, both written and oral, about their status in the hospital, what inpatient observation is, and the reasons for and implications of that status, such as cost-sharing requirements and eligibility for skilled nursing facility coverage. However, the AHA also raises concerns about the implementation of the act and conflicts and confusion that may arise due to overlapping state laws. The AHA recommends revisions and clarifications be made on the following points:
 

  • Implementation timeline
  • Enforcement
  • Notification requirements
  • Timing of the notification
  • Oral explanation
  • Beneficiary signature requirement

Hospitals will need to change existing policies and procedures, update information systems, and provide education to staff. A six-month implementation period beginning after the law takes effect would allow hospitals the necessary time to make these changes, the AHA recommends. This would also allow CMS to provide clarification and detailed guidance to hospitals and MACs.

The act’s current notification requirements will include informing the patient of specific cost-sharing and coverage information. However, hospitals often do not know the exact cost-sharing and coverage information until after the patient has been discharged and the claim submitted, the AHA says. CMS should permit and make clear in the final rule that hospitals are allowed to use standard language about applicable Medicare outpatient policies regarding cost-sharing, the prohibition on coverage of self-administered drugs, and other relevant Medicare policies. Additionally, CMS should develop standard written templates for these notifications in simplified language, the AHA says.

The act currently states that if a patient refuses to sign the notification it must be signed and dated by the staff member who presented the written notification. This process should also be explicitly applied in other cases in which the patient is unable to sign due to their mental or medical condition, the AHA says.

HCPro.com – HIM-HIPAA Insider

Telemedicine Offers Benefits to Providers

Deloitte did a 2018 survey of US healthcare consumers and physicians, and found: 90 percent of physicians see the benefits of telemedicine technology but only 14 percent have the ability to perform video telemedicine visit capabilities right now, in 2018 Of the remainder, only 18 percent plan on adding the capability over the next few […]

The post Telemedicine Offers Benefits to Providers appeared first on AAPC Knowledge Center.

AAPC Knowledge Center

CMS Offers Web Updates for New Medicare Card

Patients will begin receiving their new, more secure Medicare cards beginning April 1 this year. To help clarify the transition from that date to the end of 2019, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is letting providers know what numbers will be on remittance advice. When providers submit a claim using a ps […]
AAPC Knowledge Center

Palmetto Offers a Smooth Transition from Cahaba

Palmetto GBA is preparing to become the A/B Medicare administrative contractor (MAC) for Jurisdiction J (JJ), which includes the states of Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee — and so should you if you submit Medicare claims for healthcare providers who practice in those states. Part A providers will transition from Cahaba GBA effective Jan. 29, 2018, and Part […]
AAPC Knowledge Center

Panama Medical Tourism offers Ageless Wonders

Ageless Wonders Panama, a health tourism company from Panama, has joined with PlacidWay, a medical tourism portal based in Denver, Colorado, to offer complete health & wellness services in Panama. The international patients seeking affordable and quality care can access exclusive individualized packages to fulfill all their expectations.

Executive Director of Ageless Wonders Panama, Eric De Ycaza says, “Ageless Wonders Panama assists international travelers through the entire medical procedure and care. With our affiliation with the best private hospitals in Panama that are recognized and accredited by international organizations, as well as tourism operators and after-care providers, we assess patient’s specific needs and guide them through the entire medical vacation process. The relationship with PlacidWay will allow us to expand our market reach quickly in key target markets allowing us to provide our solution to the people seeking affordable yet quality care.”

Utilizing the expertise, experience and training of specialists in many fields, Ageless Wonders Panama is proud to announce services in general and laparoscopic surgical treatments and continues to meet the needs of those seeking vision care, plastic surgery, obesity procedures and treatments, nutrition, and alternative medicine and other wellness services.

 

Pramod Goel, CEO of PlacidWay, Says “We are delighted to join hands with Ageless Wonders Panama in promoting medical tourism services in Panama.  Their vision to provide integrative medicine by combining traditional medicine with alternative medicines services are completely aligned with PlacidWay philosophies of where the future of healthcare is headed.”

Ageless Wonders Panama is pleased to announce medical travel packages that include pre and post-op care, hotel accommodations and lodgings. All needs, from initial consultation to after-care, are the focus of Ageless Wonders Panama staff.  They even assist you with packages for your family or companion. Fredrik Moulina of Illinois Says, a former patient of Ageless Wonders Panama, “The benefits from a medical vacation are priceless. We wouldn’t have known this unless we’d decided to experience this type of vacation on our own. You end up saving a lot of money, with the experience of knowing a beautiful country like Panama, and your medical procedure is taken care of by first-class professionals.”

Ageless Wonders Panama offers world-renowned experts in plastic and cosmetic surgical procedures, LASIK eye treatments, dentistry, and anti-aging treatments in Panama. From medical procedures to wellness services, professionals at Ageless Wonders Panama are qualified to offer superior medical care for meeting the needs and desires of travelers looking for alternatives to continually rising health care costs in the United States.

Conclude Goel, “We are pleased and proud to join efforts with Ageless Wonders Panama in offering the best in care and practices and resources to consumers fed up with lack of insurance benefits and astronomical medical care costs resulting from out-of-control medical malpractice insurance premiums. Affordable medical and health care is out there. It’s our job to help consumers find and evaluate that information.”

 

Thanks for everything, I’m so glad that I spoke to you and found such a wonderful Surgery. If you need to visit this hospital then feel free here: 1.303.578.0719, [email protected]

Ageless Wonders are a health tourism company in Panama, focused in the direct service of tourists who require specialized medical treatment or any particular service in the field of health or wellness.

Hospital offers incentives for identifying incorrect patient status

Hospital offers incentives for identifying incorrect patient status

It’s no secret that hospitals struggle with assigning the most appropriate status for patients, and this challenge is compounded by CMS’ frequent changes to its regulations and guidance. To combat incorrect patient status assignments, one hospital has developed a system that rewards employees for speaking up when they suspect a patient’s status is incorrect.

After an assessment of its HIM department, Montrose (Colorado) Memorial Hospital began an informal program focused on providing patient status education for physicians and engaging various departments throughout the revenue cycle in identifying whether a patient’s status is correct.

The hospital had a long-standing problem with helping physicians understand how to correctly determine patient status throughout the patient’s stay. For example, some providers would change a patient’s status from inpatient to outpatient at the last minute if a patient seen for an inpatient-only procedure recovered quickly and could return home after one night, incorrectly assuming that a stay of one midnight?regardless of the procedure type?could not be an inpatient stay. This left other hospital staff members scrambling to change the patient’s status back to inpatient or face a potential denial, says Bev Roth, BSN, case management director at Montrose Memorial Hospital.

"I tried education. I tried to pull in other departments to help," Roth says. "Case management was the lone outfielder trying to catch the fly ball before the patient went out the door."

As more and more providers began throwing up their hands, the hospital decided to take action by bringing HIM, case management, and other departments together to address the issue head on. Some departments felt that tracking patient status was not their responsibility, but Roth sought to ensure each department involved in the patient’s care could help protect the correct status, thus ensuring the patient’s insurance would be billed correctly and the hospital’s claim filed appropriately. "How do you get over the hurdle of people feeling like that type of activity is not their job?" she says.

Roth began developing cheat sheets for physicians to help them differentiate between inpatient, inpatient-only, and outpatient stays. She also worked on educating the hospital’s clinical counsel, which includes all of the directors who are directly or indirectly involved with patient care, on patient status. But because getting physicians to adhere to patient status regulations was an ongoing challenge, simple education would not be enough. For this reason, Roth focused on bringing together each department that worked with the medical record and training them to act as watchdogs, keeping an eye out for incorrect patient status assignments and changes.

 

The workgroup

The hospital established a workgroup that brings several departments (e.g., patient access, case management, HIM, utilization review [UR], coding, patient financial services, clinical documentation improvement) to the table and maps out how each one impacts patient status, says Jane Bonewell, RHIT, CHDA, senior consultant for the Haugen Consulting Group in Denver. For example, patient access would discuss the importance of patient status at pre-authorization, pre-registration, registration, and scheduling. This department is important because it follows the patient’s journey from beginning to end, but so are departments like case management and UR, which follow the patient through the middle part of his or her journey, as well as HIM, which tracks the medical record, Bonewell says. If the patient’s status isn’t right from the beginning?often the point when patient access is involved?problems may arise down the line.

"As we all know, we can get all the way from patient access to patient financial services with the incorrect patient status," Bonewell says. "In order to circumvent that from happening and fixing things on the back end or before we drop the bill, we’re trying to work through those middle pieces so that we can get it right by the time the patient is discharged."

As the workgroup walks through the patient journey together, each department often experiences "aha moments." Opening the lines of communication between the departments and allowing each to fully understand its role, as well as the role of others, can help people understand why their tasks are important not only for their own job, but also for others involved with the patient. "It’s been a really good educational process," Bonewell says.

 

The reward system

Through the case management department, Montrose Memorial Hospital developed a strategy to reward staff members for bringing a possible incorrect status assignment to the attention of the UR staff.

"We created awareness. We did the education," Roth says. But what next? To incentivize the staff to bring incorrect patient status to light, the hospital opted to use gift cards to an on-site coffee shop.

"I really wasn’t expecting a whole lot out of that. I didn’t think necessarily a free coffee was going to be the big answer to the problem," Roth says. Although some departments were resistant, she decided to roll out the incentive for case managers. Other departments soon followed suit as she began making the rounds and striving to better understand how each department works with and understands patient status. After spotting an incorrect status, staff members can call a hotline that connects them with a UR staff member who is on call for that day. UR will then review the record for medical necessity to determine whether the status is correct.

Employees can also alert the UR staff when a patient should be transitioning to a different status, Bonewell says. For example, if a patient has transitioned from outpatient to inpatient but his or her medical record still reflects outpatient status, an employee can alert others to this discrepancy and be rewarded for his or her efforts.

Often, the UR director will speak with the provider after completing the record review and view the discussion as a clinical documentation improvement opportunity as well as a way to validate patient status. "It gives them the opportunity to have those face-to-face, difficult conversations with the provider," says Bonewell. "They’re talking about options and what we can do to protect the patient and the facility." This face time with the provider is preferred over a phone call because it supplies more opportunities for education and communication. For example, if the patient’s condition is not severe enough to warrant hospital-level care, this meeting time can allow UR and the physician to discuss options for transfers or homecare, or to reach out to the patient’s family for exploration of other options.

Providers are encouraged to contact UR or case management for a status determination on their own cases, although the majority of cases are reported by the nursing staff. "It’s turned into this competition among the staff, and some providers are encouraging their peers to take advantage of the program," Bonewell says.

Regardless of whether the person alerting UR to look into a case was right about a patient’s status needing to be changed, he or she is still rewarded with a gift card, Bonewell says. If a provider is sitting on a unit or in a hospital lounge, the UR staff will often deliver the provider the coffee of his or her choice rather than presenting a gift card. This helps spur competition because the providers notice when their peers are rewarded. "They compete with each other for who is going to get their coffee delivered that morning," says Bonewell.

"It’s an informal program, but everybody gets a big chuckle out of it when you bring the [gift] card by," Roth says.

While the competitive nature of the program has helped it gain awareness and encouraged providers and others to bring attention to incorrect patient status assignments, the real measure of success is that the program has led to changes in status that could have been problematic if not identified prior to discharge, Bonewell says. In addition, it heightens awareness of problems associated with incorrect patient status, educates hospital staff members on what each status means, and gives UR or other hospital staff members the opportunity to have conversations with providers.

Most importantly, it has aided the hospital in catching incorrect patient status early in a patient’s stay. Getting the hospital’s physician champion involved in the incentive program also helped with physician buy-in. "He really backed me up," Roth says.

With 75 inpatient beds, Montrose Memorial Hospital is smaller than some inpatient facilities, so it has been relatively easy to raise awareness about the workgroup and rewards program. However, Bonewell notes that ­Montrose’s strategy could also take flight at larger facilities.

 

Analyzing trends

Roth says she is currently tracking the metrics for self-denials, although since Montrose Memorial Hospital is still focusing on education and communication, it’s not yet at the point where it can use data from the program to analyze the effort’s impact on patient status and denials.

A program such as this could be used to measure a hospital’s denials and potentially avoid a high volume of denials further down the line. It could also help hospitals progress toward assigning the correct status or pinpoint the most common mistakes when assigning or changing patient status. When the program is more mature, the UR staff may be able to report statistics from the workgroup at section meetings. At the very least, the workgroup should be prepared to share statistics about the number of hotline calls and potential patient status errors at each of its meetings, Bonewell says.

Bonewell notes that Roth’s initial goals were not just focused on getting patient status right at Montrose Memorial Hospital, but also offering staff and providers the education and tools to consider patients’ needs after they leave the hospital. She admires Roth’s commitment to ­better connect the hospital with the community to help patients tap into post-discharge resources.

"Where I see her going with this is something pretty unique that I haven’t heard happen?and part of it is because it’s a smaller community, but that’s not to say you can’t do that in a big city," Bonewell says. "There are so many resources out there that we never tap into that we can start to educate our providers on."

Roth agrees that connecting with staff and providers individually has made a difference. "This program really developed out of desperation. We had been unsuccessful previously to get buy-in on the importance of correct patient status. Taking the time to deliver a personal thank-you which rewarded them for being a patient advocate was the key," she says. "We now like to say we’re changing the world, one cup of coffee at a time."

HCPro.com – HIM Briefings

Why Outsourced Medical Billing Offers More Benefits Than Ever Before

Which Medical Billing Solution is Best for your Practice?
Demand to rise 168 percent over next eight years as more physicians outsource billing

More physicians and medical practices are choosing to outsource their medical billing. According to a recently released report by Grand View Research, Inc., the demand is expected to result in the rapid growth of the medical billing outsourcing market — from $ 6.3 billion in 2015 to $ 16.9 billion by 2024 — surpassing demand for in-house billing.

This new data echoes similar 2014 research that found that 90 percent of independent and small physician practices were planning to outsource their billing as well.

Here’s why so many physicians are moving from in-house to outsourced medical billing over the next decade and why it may make sense for your practice too.

Reasons for Increasing Demand

The entire healthcare industry has faced a bunch of changes over the past several years. From the introduction of the Affordable Care Act to the implementation of ICD-10, physicians are finding it difficult to keep up with all of the new regulations, especially those related to billing and coding.

Below are some of the top reasons why physicians are choosing to outsource medical billing:

 

  • Limited in-house expertise. Coding and billing — and revenue cycle management (RCM) in general — have become increasingly complex, requiring a greater level of expertise to achieve maximum reimbursement and optimal cash flows. While in-house billers and coders may process hundreds of claims each month, a medical billing company’s staff likely processes thousands across multiple specialties. Medical practices can benefit from this wider range of expertise and knowledge.

 

  • Obsolete software. Billing software has undergone its own series of evolutions in order to meet the latest industry demands. To stay compliant and maintain billing efficiency, upgrading software can cost anywhere from thousands to tens of thousands of dollars. Physicians who are reluctant to invest in upgrades may find that their current software is obsolete, making the billing process more difficult and less efficient.

 

  • Refocus on patient care. With changes like MACRA and the shift to value-based care, physicians are under pressure to refocus on quality metrics to prevent penalties that can lead to lowered insurance reimbursements. When billing is outsourced, physicians can focus on patient care without the added stress of also overseeing their medical billing. On a similar note, front office staff will likely benefit from reduced call volume as well since all incoming billing-related phone calls will flow to the billing company.

 

  • Lower overhead costs, increased revenues. In-house medical billing tends to be a fixed cost for medical practices. Costs related to staffing and IT expenditures can be a significant cost for an independent practice and must be paid regardless of the amount of revenue coming in. Outsourcing billing can eliminate a portion of those expenses, shifting them to variable costs that are based on the number of claims processed as well as reimbursements captured. Medical practices with high claim volume experience significant revenue growth by outsourcing, in part, because 20 percent of claims are processed incorrectly by payers, resulting in underpayment or no payment at all. Even small practices who have a few dozen unpaid claims per month can see a vast improvement in cash flow and revenues when outsourcing.

When Outsourcing Makes Sense

Outsourcing your practice’s medical billing can be a tough decision. However, there comes a time when it makes too much financial sense not to pursue it.

Making the switch can be an intimidating and daunting experience, especially for physicians who have completed billing in-house for years. But moving from in-house to outsourced billing can actually be a smooth process — not nearly as scary as many may think.

It’s important to remember that not all billing companies are created equal though. So if you currently outsource your billing and have had a bad experience, don’t settle. Look for a billing company who meets your needs, is responsive, and has a proven track record of increasing reimbursements and paid claims.

And while pricing and budgets should be part of the discussion, refrain from making that the ultimate deciding factor and look long-term instead. Paying a lower fee to a company who collects less money is not the bargain you’re looking for.

Going with a company who has proven recovery rates who also charges a higher fee often wins out. The increased recoveries not only offset the higher fee, but puts more money in your pocket to boot.

Plus, the improved cash flow means physicians can now afford to pay staff to do follow-up work and go after even more of the practice’s money.

Consider Capture Billing

If you’re interested in outsourcing your practice’s medical billing, Capture can help. As a physician-owned company, we know that every dollar and claim counts. We understand the complexities of revenue cycle management and how accurate billing processes lead to more satisfied patients — all important factors in maintaining practice profitability.

Why did you decide to outsource your practice’s medical billing? Please join the conversation below.

— This post Why Outsourced Medical Billing Offers More Benefits Than Ever Before was written by Manny Oliverez and first appeared on Capture Billing. Capture Billing is a medical billing company helping medical practices get their insurance claims paid faster, easier and with less stress allowing doctors to focus on their patients.

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