Tips To Prevent Billing Errors and/or Denials

Expand / Collapse
 

Tips To Prevent Billing Errors and/or Denials


During the pre-billing chart audit, review the following:

a.  The 485, all pertinent verbal orders, and the F2F (if applicable), for the billing period, has been returned and signed by the Physician.

b.  All visits/supplies have been entered and keyed using the correct job codes/HCPCS codes.

c.  All charges are under the correct payer source, especially if the patient has more than one payer source listed.

d.  The visits/frequency/supplies match what’s on the Plan of Care (or verify by using any supplemental orders).

e.  Within the referral, especially with new admits, make sure you have the physician NPI Number and taxonomy code.

f.  If the patient has Carolina Access, make sure the Carolina Access number has been entered in the referral.  KB article:  Carolina Access Number 

g.  If the patient’s Carolina Access Provider is different from the patient’s primary physician, follow steps to Cross-Reference NPI. KB article:  Cross-Reference NC Access # to NPI

Medicaid Billing: If the patient is Medicaid primary, but patient also has Medicare, verify that the proper condition codes are listed in the referral.  KB article:  Condition Codes

Medicare Billing:  If the patient was transferred from another HHA, directly prior to your admission, verify the appropriate condition code (47) is listed under Referral > Payers > Extra Billing Info.  It is important that the Intake Dept provides this information to the billing staff.  Depending on your agency roles, the Intake Dept or the Billing Staff will need to manually enter this code.  If this code is required, but not provided on the NOA, the NOA will deny and this may cause payment penalties, due to late submission of the NOA.

Properly Discharging the Patient:  It is always important to mark the patient as discharged, in a timely manner.  Specifically for Medicare/PPS billing, if the patient is not marked as discharged, invalid episodes will continue to generate for the patient.  If the patient is not properly discharged, it could also cause EOE claims to create with the incorrect end date.



Rate this Article:

Add Your Comments


Comment require login or registration.

Details
Last Modified:2 days ago @ 10:32 AM

Last Modified By: linda@barnestorm.com

Type: INFO

Rated 5 stars based on 1 vote

Article has been viewed 10,129 times.

Options