Time Your Surgical Collections Right by Referencing Payer Contracts

Find out if you’re legal in collecting patient portion before providing the surgical service. Don’t be too hasty in collecting a patient’s copay and deductible up front. “While in theory, the practice of collecting deductibles up front may sound good, you should check your carrier contracts to be sure you are allowed to do this before requesting [...] Related articles:
  1. Checklist: Collect Surgical Deductibles Up Front to Improve A/RThis 3-step checklist will boost your bottom line. With fewer...
  2. Medical Billers: Test Your Collections Know-How Here This nifty tool tells you if collections cluelessness is...
  3. 10 Carrier Contract Negotiation Tips Carrier contract negotiation is often a long, difficult process....

Find out if you’re legal in collecting patient portion before providing the surgical service.

Serenity Bay Chronicles

Don’t be too hasty in collecting a patient’s copay and deductible up front.

“While in theory, the practice of collecting deductibles up front may sound good, you should check your carrier contracts to be sure you are allowed to do this before requesting the deductible amount from the patient up front. There are plans which strictly prohibit this type of up front billing, and you can cause quite a headache for your practice if you are not well informed,” warns a subscriber who commented on “Checklist: Collect Surgical Deductibles Up Front to Improve A/R.”

True, says Medical Office Billing & Collections Alert editor Leesa Israel. It is always best to check your payer contract before implementing any billing or collections practice. Every payer, and every contract, can be different.

Whether you can collect a deposit from the patient before performing a surgery is a function of your payer contract that your physician has signed. If the contract does not exclude collecting copays and deductibles up front, you are perfectly legal in collecting the patient portion of the surgery before providing the service.

Exception: If your physician signed a contract that forbids this type of up-front collection, you would be violating the contract by collecting a pre-surgery deposit.

Lesson learned: This is why it is so important to read your contracts before signing them and why it is so important to have a copy of all of your signed contracts. That way, you can quickly and easily determine if there are any limitations or any privileges that you have as stated in the contract that affect your billing and collections procedures.

Download your 2 FREE sample issues of Medical Office Billing & Collections Alert here.

Available on CD: Billing & Collections Reference Pack, Updated for 2010. Buy individual recordings, or purchase the entire series for a discount.

Related articles:

  1. Checklist: Collect Surgical Deductibles Up Front to Improve A/RThis 3-step checklist will boost your bottom line. With fewer…
  2. Medical Billers: Test Your Collections Know-How Here This nifty tool tells you if collections cluelessness is…
  3. 10 Carrier Contract Negotiation Tips Carrier contract negotiation is often a long, difficult process….

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