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Are
You Aware That You May Be Overpaying Millions of
Dollars in Medical Claims?
Duplicate
Claim payments, payments made on behalf of retroactively
terminated members and simple coding errors can
easily reach these amounts even for a medium sized
health plan. Overpayment rates of 1% to 2% of
medical expenses are common, and for even a small health
plan or self insured employer, this can be well over
$250,000 a year.
Duplicate claims are paid by health benefit
organizations at an alarming rate. Added to this are
a growing number of claims paid for on behalf of ineligible
members and procedure code bundling that doesn't conform
to NCCI standards. With margins so tight
these days you can't afford mistakes, whether system
or people-generated. We can help you find those
errors and identify the claims so you can recover
your dollars.
Your
claim system isn’t catching these claims. Even the
best claim systems lack a comprehensive mechanism for
determining and properly adjudicating duplicate claims,
and as automated as you believe your claims processing
to be, a large percent of claims - especially duplicate
claims - are actually manually reviewed and approved
and people do make mistakes.
Retrospective duplicate
claims systems often are written to identify duplicates
using very simple matching criteria and often don't
catch "near" duplicates or allow sophisticated
user defined search criteria.
We
have found that most duplicate claims find their way
into the system, and subsequently get paid, due to the
following two reasons:
And
because members are moving in and out of plans so often
these days, many organizations are also paying for
services they are not responsible for. Eligibility
information is often available only after the fact –
sometimes months after the actual event – and claims
already paid based on this incorrect eligibility are
often never recovered. We also check
claims for conformance to NCCI standards. The National
Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) edits are a series
of rules developed by CMS to identify errors in two
areas of procedure code submission. The Mutually
Exclusive edits check for procedures that should not
be performed at the same time based on standard
medical practice, while the Comprehensive/Component
edits look for codes that cannot be reasonably
performed during the same session or day. These
edits seek out coding pairs where the primary
therapeutic outcome may have been billed along with
a lesser “component”. NCCI edits are
applied to outpatient and professional claims.
Pilot
Information Systems offers a unique, risk free service
to identify and report these potential overpayments.

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