Monthly Archives: October 2011

HIPAA Version 5010 – Is your Pediatric Practice Ready?

October 31, 2011 in Billing and Collections by support Team  |  2 Comments

There is much noise now about the file version called 5010. What is 5010 and what does this mean to my Pediatric Practice? Claims are transmitted in a file format from practice management/billing systems to insurance companies. The current format is known as 4010. Vendors of software need to be able to adhere to these standards to successfully transmit claims to clearing houses/insurance companies (so the practice can receive payments for services). New requirements in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 should improve the functionality of sending claims via 5010. This file format change impacts insurance companies, practices, clearing houses and software vendors that provide software for Medical Billing. The goal/reason for the change is an effort to reduce the administrative burden on Physician Practices. Some of the projected benefits include:
• Creation of an electronics funds transfer (EFT) transaction standard as well as operating rules. This should help with matching ERAs and EFT transactions (there are many ‘holes’ in the current standard within the industry which makes tracking payments more challenging).
• Implementation of an electronic claim attachment standard and national plan identifier (NPID)
• Requirement for Health and Human Services to solicit input from providers on administrative items including whether the application for enrollment of Health Care Providers by health plans could be completed in an electronic method.
• Adoption of common approaches to administrative transactions by Health Plans.
• Clarification of a transaction standard.
Currently, authors of articles published in Connexion (a monthly magazine published by MGMA), site that there is inconsistent and non-uniform use of more than 1000 claim adjustment reason codes and remittance advice remark codes. ERAs have been sent by Health Plans for which adjustments are documented incorrectly. Many practices have a difficult time matching EFTs to the ERA files. The conversion to 5010 should help with some of these issues. PhysicianXpress is currently ready and certified for 5010 transactions (ahead of the 1/1/12 due date).

The revenue cycle is very complex which needs to be maintained and managed continuously for a practice to receive consistent and optimal revenue streams. Some billing companies have a low fee but they do not manage the revenue cycle (many only upload claims to the clearing house/insurance companies without follow-up on denied or underpaid claims). There is a major difference from uploading claims to managing the revenue cycle. This is why performance to benchmarks (e.g. collection rate to the contract amount) is so important.

What do you need to do as a practice owner related to 5010? If you use a revenue cycle management service by a professional team, very minimal. If your practice manages all the internal processes then there is a check list of 10+ items that need to be completed. These include: reviewing the processes of the practice, verifying that each component in the revenue cycle is 5010 ready (clearing houses/insurance companies/billing software) and validated, identify if the practice will incur extra cost in software, transaction fees and training from the practice management software, identify if time to switch systems for the practice and/or start on an E.H.R. system.

http://www.mgma.com/5010/

Is “ObamaCare” good or bad for children and Pediatrics?

October 24, 2011 in Blog by support Team  |  1 Comments

There is much discussion related to “ObamaCare” especially with the debates heating up. Was this change in our healthcare system good or bad for your Pediatric practice? Like all changes, there are positive and negative aspects of the change.

Let’s take a look at some of the positive aspects:
*Reduce co pay cost for well checks. No co-pay provides an incentive for parents to seek the recommended Preventive appointments by a Pediatrician. Invest in the prevention of diseases or catching diseases early is great for the children of our country. Overall, Pediatricians are very focused and dedicated to preventative healthcare.
*Potential higher reimbursements for Medicaid. There is a significant gap in payments between Medicaid vs.
Medicare. The government pays for both of these programs- pediatricians need to make a living so many cap the number of Medicaid patients or do not accept Medicaid payments. With potential increase in Reimbursements in a few years, I would anticipate more Pediatricians accepting Medicaid. This could lead to less use of the ER and/or hospital by Medicaid patients. Theoretically, the healthcare system would save money since paying for outpatient visits is on average, much less cost burden than the hospital. This should also increase the revenue for Pediatric practices – alignment of incentives for patients to use the most cost effective treatment.
*Requirement for insurances to cover vaccines and preventative services. The lower the cost of
service to patients the more they will seek out preventative medicine. Preventing a condition is much
more cost effective than treating, in general.

Some of the negative aspects of the changes:
*More patients moving into some of the Health Insurance plans that do not raise their reimbursements to practices each year but increase the profitability of the insurance company significantly. The busy Pediatrician is trying to pay their bills, their staff, and make a reasonable income, are they able to monitor and appropriately manage the insurance carriers? Are the partners watching the reimbursement by carrier and identifying carriers that a contract negotiation or termination is needed? Some of the carriers are reasonable each year which others are unreasonable.
*The increase costs on businesses due to ‘children’ now being covered until they are 26 years old (many 18 year olds are working full time – should their parent’s employer receive the cost burden of their adult children?). This
increase cost to businesses may trigger lay offs to reduce cost or an employer to remove coverage. We
are considered adults at 18 years old….this means an 18 year old should be on their own plan, an employer’s plan or a plan purchased by a student at a college vs. a higher burden on an already fragile economy and over burden businesses.

As the debate heats up over the next year related to the healthcare system changes make sure to evaluate
the proposals from the perspective of what is the best approach to optimize pediatric patient management. Neither the emergency room nor a pharmacy is the right place to manage the optimal grow and maturity of the
children of our great nation. Primary care pediatrics is both cost effective and clinically effective.

Some links related to ObamaCare:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/healthreform

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The Differences between Teaching Pediatric Medical Billing and Managing the Revenue Cycle for a Pediatric Practice

October 19, 2011 in Billing and Collections by support Team  |  Comments Off on The Differences between Teaching Pediatric Medical Billing and Managing the Revenue Cycle for a Pediatric Practice

While in college and graduate school I wondered why it was rare for a professor to have experience
managing companies.  After accumulating over two decades of experience in healthcare in various roles I have the perspective to understand why this is:  teaching is a different skill set than managing.  Similar to this, there are companies and businesses that fail because they move outside their core skill set.  For example there are many software companies that have no experience in medical billing but have experience selling software.   One of these companies started as an EMR system about 10 years ago.  Although they developed their software using the most current technology at the time, they were providing a general software solution for any specialty.   This company then moved to provide their software and medical billing for 7% of revenue.  This company lasted less than 2 years with this offering.  The leaders of the company probably realized that they were not familiar and did not have the proper resources to manage the revenue cycle (I am sure their customers voiced their concerns).  The revenue cycle is filled with daily management issues and challenges.   I am sure the company leaders realized that the systems, processes and skills needed for providing both software and medical billing services is much different than providing a general software offering.
  
   The Healthcare system in the United States has many disconnects.  When a company only provides the software the disconnects become the management issue of the users (for example, if an insurance
company has a different coding logic than the standard – in this case, they need to identify the issue and then develop a process solution).  We have interviewed billers that were hired to clean up the issues of a publicly traded stock company whom claim to be the model in practice management/revenue cycle management.  I have also learned from other Pediatricians examples of poor collection and revenue cycle management from a number of companies that provide the service in the industry.   

The challenges of managing both software and medical billing services include:
-The company leaders need to provide the proper technology strategic direction.  Are the leaders still holding onto ‘yesterday’s technology’?  Are the leaders familiar and able to develop a team that moves toward the future versus holding on to the dated technology?

-The company needs to have qualified and up to date technology team members…some questions to ask are there staff with computer science and engineering degrees?  Has the company been able to link
directly with Surescripts for both formulary advice and sending/receiving prescriptions?  

-The company needs to be able to benchmark their billing performance and use continuous improvement to optimize the systems/processes as the market changes. Ask the company to provide their billing performance for their pediatric practices versus national averages provided by the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA).  If they are not familiar with MGMA benchmarks and can not provide the mean performance as well as minimal/maximum…..run away from this option!
-The company needs to be able to identify, develop and maintain billing team members whom achieve
performance for the practice.   Ask how often and the sources of training.  Our billing team participates in quarterly training provided by the American Academy of Professional Coders, the American Academy of Pediatrics and/or the Medical Group Management Association (this takes time and keeps us ‘humble’ since the rules are constantly evolving).
-The company needs to have expertise/focus in Pediatrics – we wouldn’t select a pickup truck for street racing so why do pediatric practices select an EMR system designed for geriatrics?  Because of the high cost of developing and marketing software, companies will provide a general system and leverage their sales and marketing channels to optimize the revenue for each segment.  The field of Pediatrics is too small for a company to become a large company if they focus solely in Pediatrics.  I met a few users of ‘general’ Electronic Health Record Systems this weekend at the American Academy of Pediatrics National Meeting in Boston, MA that are spending 2-3 hours a night completing their charts.
-The company needs to manage the ‘right’ type of technology to optimize medical billing and software
EMR/practice management for a practice.  Client server systems are not the optimal solution – this is why the largest player in general medical billing (AthenaHealth) uses cloud computing and start up capital is ‘chasing’ cloud solutions and not client-server solutions (strong Venture firms have the ability to forecast the future and are able to abandon the past/dated technology) .

Our company meets these challenges by leveraging the PhysicianXpress system:  a cloud-based system for Pediatric Offices to manage the Revenue Cycle, their electronic Health Records as well as their practice.  We maintain a qualified billing team that receives quarterly training in Pediatric coding, we continuously benchmark the performance of the practices we manage, as well maintain a qualified technology team.  We are committed to help Pediatric practices increase revenues while decreasing operating costs as well as administrative burden to the practice.   Practices that implement the PhysicianXpress system do not need to spend time or extra money on maintaining a server or a database/data.  When you go to sleep tonight, do you know that your practice is collecting at >99% of the contract amount?

A quick comparison of the 5010 Eligibility changes

October 12, 2011 in Healthcare Protocols and other Tech by andrew  |  Comments Off on A quick comparison of the 5010 Eligibility changes

There’s been much hype around the change to 5010 from the current 4010.  The 270 eligibility files are affected by this move.  A quick look of the changes with examples can be found on another bloggers site found here.

A good excell spreadsheet with some comparisons can be found here.

High Level Interoperability

October 12, 2011 in Healthcare Protocols and other Tech by andrew  |  Comments Off on High Level Interoperability

Alot of people see healthcare technology as being a magical land where information is shared seamlessly between applications.  In some cases this is true.  Where standards exist and are adhered to, exchange can be very beneficial to both patients and physicians.  Until all the physical connections are available however, seamless interoperability is still fiction.

Take a look at a post by a Microsoft employee explaining how Microsoft’s Health Vault can play a role in interoperability.

Programming Healthcare Silos

The Transcript is below

Programming Healthcare Silos – Presentation Transcript

  1. Vaibhav Bhandarivaibhavb@microsoft.com(Microsoft, Health Solutions Group)
    across
    Programming Healthcare Silos
    ^
    ?
    @vaibhavb#oscon #silostalk
  2. Agenda
    Challenges of Health IT
    Standards exist but..
    Open Solutions Exist
    Opportunities in Health IT
  3. Silos of Health Information
  4. Silos in the Enterprise – “On the Floor”
    Electronic Medical Record
    Nursing Workflow/ Documentation
    Clinical Notes
    Emergency Department
    Procedure Documentation
    ICU/Critical Care
    OR Management
    Dictation
    Pharmacy
    CPOE
    Advanced Analytics
    Cardiology
    Labs
    Medication Administration
    Hemodynamics
    Pathology
    Imaging
    Charting
    Medication Dispensing
    RIS
    Orders
    Image Distribution
    PACS
    Mobile Data
  5. Silos in the Enterprise – “Behind the Scenes”
    Contract Management
    Enterprise Scheduling
    Claims Management
    Financial/ERP
    Business Decision Support
    Inventory
    Medical Records Coding
    Purchasing
    Revenue Management
    Document Imaging
    Bed Management
    Registration
    Transcription
    Call Management
    Staff/Nurse Scheduling
    Outcomes Management
    Physician Practice
    Access Management
  6. Meaningful Use
    ICD-9 to ICD-10 Translation
    SNOMED-CT
    Master Patient Index
    EMR/EHR
    IHE
    HL7
  7. Meet Jim
  8. Jim’s ER visit..
  9. Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    HL7 Lab Order
    MSH|^~&|EMERGENCYEMR|RC90|INSIGHT.LAB|GUH.ER|20080114085834||ORU^R01|H20010816374944.7274|P|2.1|1
    PID|01||1430043|1572c552-f02b-49bf-b7e2-acc74765cb3e|SMITH^JIM||19790127|F||1||||||||cfd9ce6b-dc81-459d-9415-7913eb4635ec|804171277
    PV1|01|O|TPC||||331|||||||HIS|||331|O||||||||||||||||||||||||||20060721|19990921
    OBR|1||1234^LAB|88304
  10. Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Lab Result
    MSH|^~&|EMERGENCYEMR|RC90|INSIGHT.LAB|GUH.ER|20080114085834||ORU^R01|H20010816374944.7274|P|2.1|1
    PID|01||1430043|1572c552-f02b-49bf-b7e2-acc74765cb3e|SMITH^JIM||19790127|F||1||||||||cfd9ce6b-dc81-459d-9415-7913eb4635ec|804171277
    PV1|01|O|TPC||||331|||||||HIS|||331|O||||||||||||||||||||||||||20060721|19990921
    OBR|1||1234^LAB|88304
    OBX|1|CE|88304|1|T57000^GALLBLADDER^SNM OBX|2|TX|88304&MDT|1|MICROSCOPIC EXAM SHOWS HISTOLOGICALLY NORMAL GALLBLADDER TISSUE
  11. Creating & Processing Lab Order
    HAPI HL7 Parsing Library
    http://hl7api.sourceforge.net
  12. X12 Message for Eligibility Request
    ST*270*1234*005010X203~
    BHT*0022*13*10001234*20060501*1319~
    HL*1**20*1~
    NM1*PR*2*ABC COMPANY*****PI*842610001~
    HL*2*1*21*1~
    NM1*1P*2*EMERGENCY CLINIC*****SV*2000035~
    HL*3*2*22*0~
    TRN*1*93175-012547*9877281234~
    NM1*IL*1*SMITH*JIM****MI*11122333301~
    DMG*D8*19430519~
    DTP*291*D8*20060501~
    EQ*30~
    SE*13*1234~
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  13. X12 Response for Eligibility Request
    ST*271*1234*005010X203~
    BHT*0022*13*10001234*20060501*1319~
    HL*1**20*1~
    NM1*PR*2*ABC COMPANY*****PI*842610001~
    HL*2*1*21*1~
    NM1*1P*2*EMERGENCY CLINIC*****SV*2000035~
    HL*3*2*22*0~
    TRN*1*93175-012547*9877281234~
    NM1*IL*1*SMITH*JIM****MI*11122333301~
    DMG*D8*19430519~
    DTP*346*D8*20060101~
    EB*1**30**GOLD 123PLAN~

    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  14. Jim’s Ready to Go Home
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  15. CCR For Jim’s Visit
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  16. CCD or C32
  17. HealthVault Interaction
  18. Direct To Clinical
  19. Data In Jim’s Account
    Jim
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
    Jim
  20. NHIN-D
    @ HealthVault address
    Easy integration through SMTP S-MIME
    Exciting Future
  21. HealthVault Medical Imaging
    • Applications can upload large files to a users’ HealthVault record
    • http://bit.ly/hv-medical-imaging
  22. HealthVault Client & Mobile Applications
    Client Applications
    http://bit.ly/HV-client-app
  23. Leaving the Clinical Silo
    Clinical Silo
    While in enterprise your application need to comply with HIPAA 5010
    When Jim log’s in to HealthVault then the data is flowing in to consumer domain
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  24. HealthVault Open Source Resources
    Community Promise
    Open Source SDKs
    Java : CodePlex
    Ruby : RubyForge
    Python : Google Code
    PHP: SourceForge
    Reference License .NET SDK
    http://msdn.microsoft.com/healthvault
  25. Connected Health Platform Open Source Resources
    Microsoft Health Common User Interface (MSCUI)

    • Microsoft Public License (MS-PL): http://mscui.codeplex.com/license
    • Main site: http://www.mscui.net
    • Toolkit: http://mscui.codeplex.com

    IHE Cross-Enterprise Document Sharing XDS.b

    • Microsoft Public License (MS-PL): http://ihe.codeplex.com/license
    • Main site: http://www.microsoft.com/HealthICT
    • Toolkit: http://ihe.codeplex.com

    Clinical Documentation Solution Accelerator (CDSA)

    • Reference License for CDSA Toolkit: http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/cdsa/Project/License.aspx
    • Main site: http://www.mscui.net/CDSA.htm
    • Toolkit: http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/cdsa
  26. Takeaway
    Lots of opportunity to bridge the silos and empower the patient with open technologies and platforms!
  • Thank You
    Be Well. Be Protected.