Archive for the ‘Chiropractic Seminars’ Category

Solutions to Your Chiropractic Billing Problems

by Tom Necela on March 23rd, 2010 in Billing, Business, Chiropractic Seminars, chiropractic billing, chiropractic business, chiropractic coding, chiropractic practice management, chiropractic webinars, seminars

Reading time: 8 – 14 minutes

blind leading blind

Solutions to Your Chiropractic Billing Problems

Warning: this post may be offensive to some (not because of language or explicit matter) but because those who it irritates are probably most in need of hearing it.

The subject matter: your billing department and its problems.

Because I don’t see your statistics here in front of me, I can’t say for sure which problems your chiropractic practice is facing due to your billing department.  But for many of you, I can venture a guess that it is either poor collections, delayed payments, denied claims, labor intensive systems or a combination thereof.

And unlike the glaring problem of not having any new patients, billing challenges tend to dwell suspiciously beneath the surface until one day you notice you are $10K , $20K, $30K or more off your collection goals.  At that point, you are painfully aware that there is a problem and you begin to scramble for a solution.

Flawed from the Start

Many of you will scratch your head and wonder how this happened.  After all, in many (if not, most) chiropractic clinics, the billing person is the most trusted employee of all.  This is because  it is typically the spouse of the doctor who does the billing.  And this person has been handpicked, trained and has a vested interest in the success of the clinic.

While this may be true, let’s analyze that a little closer.

Handpicked? Certainly, because the budget did not permit a person of adequate skill or experience to fill the position and the spouse is willing to work “for a while” until things get off the ground.

Trained?  Ah yes, the billing person is under the careful tutelage of the doctor who received…absolutely zero training on billing or coding in chiropractic college and whose continuing education credits in the matter curiously blend in with advice from would be know-it-all colleagues who are likely just as clueless in this department, however good intentioned they may be.

Truly, this is a case of the blind leading the naked (sorry for the warped 80’s reference).

Vested interest?  This certainly is accurate. The spouse is probably the most motivated employee in the clinic.  I have seen cases where I would even replace the doctor with the spouse, would it be possible.  But the Olympics provide you with an excellent example of why this is not enough.  Every Olympian is obviously motivated enough to win; they would never had made it their without superior powers of motivation.  But in the end, skill prevails.

My Billing Stinks – What Next?

For those of you who did not need the brutal awareness that you have sent your well-meaning spouse to dine with the wolves, you too may be cognizant of the fact that, well, your billing is less than stellar.

Certainly, it is still possible for your billing person to be a slacker, inept or just not quite as effective as they could be or should be – even if they are not related to you and/or may have impressive looking credentials under their belt.

The good news is that (hopefully) you don’t go to bed with this person and are not bound by marital ties.  Because of that, they are much easier to replace, if necessary.

Before You Give Them the Boot…

Regardless of who your billing person is, if you find yourself in a huge mess, or if you would rate your employee as an “F,”  let the first letter of that rating be a clue as to what you should do.

But for everyone else, there is hope.

After all, a good employee can only rise to the level of the training and the expectations they receive.

Unfortunately, doctor, this means YOU need to get to work!

How to Rescue a Poorly Performing Billing Department

The first steps to rescuing your billing department’s deplorable performance is in your hands and here is what I would recommend:

  1. 1. Monitor the Money. If you were to chart your monthly collections and the results look like a roller coaster ride, likely you have internal issues that need fixing fast.  But the only way to figure out where to apply corrective actions is to begin studying your collections, your accounts receivable and your revenue cycles.  For more assistance in this department, see How to Oversee Your Billing Staff & Service.

  1. Provide Your Biller With the Tools & Resources They Need. I haven’t tracked it precisely, but I believe there is a direct correlation between the age of your coding book and the amount of billing problems that exist in your office.  Worse, every practice that I have been that does not even own a coding book, has multiple billing issues which can potentially take months to fix.  Quit sending them to work without a tool box.  Get them the latest ChiroCode book, (see here for a link to FREE SHIPPING on the 2010 ChiroCode book and don’t say I never give anything away free).
  1. Commit to Ongoing Training for Your Billing Person. Have them attend the FREE monthly webinars that ChiroCode offers (as they are full of useful info unlike most other “free” webinars that our profession uses for an hour long sales pitch).  This week on ChiroCode webinars is yours truly.  Join your staff for seminars on billing, coding or documentation.  I have two coming up and I guarantee you will BOTH learn enough useful info that it is well worth the trip regardless of your distance.  Ignorance is costing you more than you realize.
  1. 4. Give the biller realistic job expectations. Some offices want their billing person to double as the world’s most friendly front desk person AND the most tenacious collections bulldog a delinquent patient ever had the misfortune to encounter.  Good luck with that.  Rare is the bird that can sing both of those tunes.  If you have one, hang on tightly.  If not, consider re-defining your staff job descriptions so that each team member can excel at some needed roles in the clinic, but is not required to be a superstar at everything to meet your approval.
  1. 5. Leverage Their Time. Some clinics have a broadly defined definition of billing that encompasses everything and anything to do with money. As a result, the billing person is responsible for: sending claims, posting payments, reconciling accounts receivable, sending statements, verifying insurance, handling patient finances, presenting care plans, over the counter collections, depositing funds into the business bank account and making change for the pizza guy who delivers the staff meeting lunch.  While all of these things may technically revolve around money, it may not be efficient (or cost effective!) for your billing person to handle them, particularly if they are the highest paid employee or if their desk routinely resembles Oscar Madison’s apartment (for those of you old enough to remember The Odd Couple).  Instead, delegate tasks that don’t require billing expertise (running the envelopes for the statements through the postage meter is a favorite time waster that I see too many billers involved in) and let them focus on bringing in the money and higher value activities.

Know When To Fold ‘Em

While I don’t routinely promote Kenny Rogers as a source of wisdom, sometimes you have to just take his advice and “know when to fold ‘em.”  That is, give up the goat and outsource.  Examples:

  • Recently, a doc approached me about opening a new clinic with wife as biller and mom as office manager.  Neither have worked in chiropractic before. Neither have any training.  This is a nightmare waiting to happen.  Why would you want to start your business with your most ignorant foot forward for all the world to see?  They should outsource.
  • A marginal clinic has a poorly trained CA doubling as a billing person manning the ship.  They have no money to hire a decent person, nor can they afford to send the CA for training since she wears all the hats in the clinic. Their practice is spiraling downward since the CA can’t figure out why their collections are in the toilet, mainly because she has no clue where to even start.  My two cents: outsource & pronto!

When To Get Help

There is another option available for those of you who are unwilling to throw in the towel or for those would benefit from guided expertise.  Quite simply, it may be in your best interest get some professional help.

For a free, no obligation look at how I may be able to assist you, complete the Practice Analysis Questionnaire and send it in for my review.

And while you may think that getting professional help can be cost prohibitive, consider some scenarios I encountered while working with my consulting clients who hired me for this purpose.

  • During a recent office consult, I provided a solution for one issue that the billing person (who is excellent at her job) was struggling with.  We analyzed a handful of claims that all were denied due to this problem and unsurfaced approximately $8000 worth of reimbursable services that she will correct and get paid for.  The savings will be further capitalized multiple times over when she applies this same correction to the dozens of other claims with the same situation.
  • Another client (again, with an excellent biller) had repeatedly made one innocent coding mistake to the tune of $60,000 per year in botched income and services.
  • A struggling office was able to increase its billable services from an average of $39 per patient to $64 per patient within 2 months of my consulting, which will yield a $90,000 increase this year – even if they do nothing else!

Bottom line:  billing IS a major factor in your bottom line.  It is too big to ignore and too critical to be left in the hands of an unskilled employee.  Get a handle on your billing and you will be able to steer your practice in the right direction.  Let it go adrift and you will likely sail into dangerous waters.

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Upcoming Chiropractic Seminars — Billing, Coding, Documentation MASTERY!

by Tom Necela on February 26th, 2010 in Chiropractic Seminars, seminars

Reading time: 5 – 8 minutes

Chiropractic Billing, Coding & Documentation Mastery

Effective Strategies for Maximizing Reimbursements & Minimizing Audit Risk

Presented by:  Tom Necela, DC, CPC, CPMA & The Strategic Chiropractor

portland postcard2seattle postcard

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Saturday, March 27, 2010 — Portland, OR

Western States Chiropractic College (Hampton Hall)

2900 NE 132nd Avenue

Portland, OR 97230

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Thursday, April 1, 2010 – Seattle, WA

Best Western River’s Edge (Seattle Airport)

15901 W Valley Highway, Tukwila, Washington, 98188

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Due to the special hands-on Documentation/Coding Training Session – SEATING IS LIMITED!

Cut through the confusion and learn how to increase and protect your practice’s bottom line with billing, coding and documentation strategies you always wanted to know, but never knew who to ask!

Here’s just a sampling of what you will learn:

ð        New audit targets for 2010 that can impact your bottom line

ð        Strategies to get paid better for what you do

ð        Avoid mistakes that get your claims denied or delayed

ð        Tips to achieve defensible coding & documentation

ð        Avoid audit traps for Medicare and billing “red flag” that alert the insurance radar

ð        Systems to create internal audits that improve compliance

ð        Discover new code updates and clarifications for 2010

*** Now Featuring***

“Hands-on” case coding including actual examples of documentation do’s and don’t gained from Medicare and other commercial insurance training sessions

Here’s what DC’s are saying about Dr. Tom’s seminars:

“Tom is an expert at what he does and makes it simple for the rest of us!”  Eric Hansen, DC

“I would recommend all DC’s attend one of Tom’s classes. They are necessary, practical and essential for a professional, compliant and meaningful practice. He is one of the rising stars of the profession!”  Melinda Maxwell, DC

Dr. Necela is the most authoritative source of coding, billing, auditing & Medicare issues that I have ever seen.”  James Bowen, JD

“More useful information in 4 hrs than I received in 4 years!”  Jacob Waller, DC

I wish every state would encourage licensees to attend your seminar”  Lori Inkrote, DC

“Four hours went by fast – I could have stayed longer!” Dale Johnston, DC

“His material is packed with information, never the same and full of the latest updates – I’ve attended as many as 3 in one year and always learn something new!” – Amy, CA

About your presenter:

A former Insurance Claims Analyst, Dr. Necela is a Certified Professional Coder and the first chiropractor to become a Certified Professional Medical Auditor.  Dr. Necela uses his unique perspective and expertise to train chiropractors on sound billing, coding and documentation principles that allow them to increase their income, reduce their risk of audits and work smarter (not harder) towards a better business.  For more info, see www.strategicdc.com

Registration Details

Seminar Hours: 9am-3pm (6 CEs)

Lunch is included!

$149 in advance for DC’s / $179 at the door

$198 in advance for DC + 1 Staff / $258 at the door

$149 advance for Staff only (without DC present) / $179 at the door 


REGISTER ONLINE!


(Click Links Below)


FOR MORE INFO

Email: info[at]strategicdc.com

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Your Toughest Chiropractic Billing, Coding, Documentation Questions Answered – FREE!

by Tom Necela on December 15th, 2009 in Audits, Billing, Business, Chiropractic Seminars, Coding, Collections, Documentation, EHR / EMR, HIPAA, Medicare, Medicare ABN, OIG Report, chiropractic EMR, chiropractic documentation, chiropractic practice management, chiropractic webinars, compliance, seminars

Reading time: 3 – 4 minutes

questions_to_answers

You are invited as a guest to Join Tom Necela, DC, CPC, CPMA — Certified Professional Coder, Certified Professional Medical Auditor, former Insurance Claims Analyst, and current President of The Strategic Chiropractor — for a special FREE 60 minute Webinar!

FREE WEBINAR!


Thursday December 17, 2009

– 9 am PST/10 am MST/11 am CST/Noon EST

So…

Bring your TOUGHEST questions on Chiropractic:

  • Billing
  • Coding
  • Documentation
  • Collections
  • Getting Paid for the Work You Do!

And receive the ANSWERS you need that will help you:

  • Maximize your reimbursements
  • Decrease denials
  • Shorten Payment delays
  • Lower Accounts Receivable
  • Reduce your risk of audits

We are hosting this seminar as a special “thank you” to all of our blog readers, clients and customers who have made The Strategic Chiropractor the #1 source for teaching chiropractors how to “Work SMARTER, not harder” for increased profits.

As a sign of our appreciation we’d like to offer you a FREE seat for this webinar and the chance to have your question answered “live” during the event.

(If you cannot attend or would like a CD copy of the webinar, see below for details.)

Historically, this is our most popular event webinar of the year, so you need to act quickly! Previous editions of this webinar resulted in hundreds more questions than we could physically answer in a limited time format.

Space is limited and ADVANCED REGISTRATION is MANDATORY to submit questions (the earlier you submit them, the better chance they have for being included in the presentation material).  So register below, submit your questions and get your front row seat for the ultimate biggest bargain on the subject of chiropractic, billing, coding and documentation!


CLICK HERE TO REGISTER!


Hope to see you there!

Tom Necela, DC, CPC, CPMA
The Strategic Chiropractor

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Split-Second Audit Destruction, Chiropractic Mayhem & Profits

by Tom Necela on October 6th, 2009 in Audits, Billing, Business, Chiropractic Seminars, Coding, compliance

Reading time: 4 – 7 minutes

Breaking Into Piggybank

Here’s the bad news you already know: an increasing amount of good chiropractors are being audited by insurance companies and asked to repay hefty sums due to “insufficient documentation” or “improper coding” or other practices that somehow get viewed as substandard.  And the ensuing mayhem that this creates is destroying many practices and robbing more of profits.

Here’s the good news: for those of you who haven’t yet experienced this first-hand and who would like to learn an “insider’s perspective” on how to protect yourself, read on.

As a matter of disclosure, I used to work for “the other side” as an Insurance Claims Analyst prior to becoming a chiropractor.  I am also Certified Professional Auditor and Certified Professional Coder which only means I received the same training as those who are trying to take your hard earned money.

Just for the record, I have never performed an Independent Medical Exam, Audit, nor any other such work for an insurance company while a chiropractor (nor do I intend to!).  On the contrary, this article is focused on how to help you avoid this monster and how to protect yourself when he strikes.

While audits are too commonplace to be considered earth-shattering news (by now, most of us either know a DC who has been audited or have personally been through an audit), it is surprising – even appalling – how little knowledge of chiropractic, correct coding initiatives or even documentation standards are possessed by the auditors themselves! Even if you have not been audited in an “official” manner by Medicare or some third party insurance payer, the next time one of your claims is reviewed by an “Independent” Medical Examiner, this message may prove useful to you as well.

How to Fight Back And Hit ‘Em Where It Hurts

When you are audited or have your claims reviewed by some IME (sorry, but the reality for most DC’s today is WHEN not IF), here are some fighting tactics that are effective and easy to use:

  • Check out their credentials. You may be shocked to find out that your auditor or IME have absolutely no qualifications to review your claims, other than the need or willingness to take a check from the Insurance Company (or Third Party Administrator).  Insurance companies routinely deny or demand repayment based on codes that contain high error rates (For example, 97140 or 97112). However, just because an auditor says you used them incorrectly doesn’t mean it is necessarily the case.  After all, does he have enough experience with chiropractic to know how you are performing the procedure, is he a certified coder who can adequately judge the usage, or is he simply acting on statistical norms and assuming you are wrong?
  • Don’t write a letter asking for your research to be considered, demand that the reviewer/auditor be a licensed chiropractor in your state.  This will automatically kick aside the DC who sits in his comfy chair across the country performing paper reviews on his unsuspecting colleagues.  This also gives the boot to the nurse who is making a nice income auditing chiropractic claims despite the fact that she has no technical knowledge of chiropractic.
  • Demand that the reviewer be in active practice AND that they do not derive the majority of their income from performing reviews or audits. I like this step because it really levels the playing field. After all, not many reviewers are going to bite the hand that feeds them – especially if that hand gives them most of their food!  You are much better off being judged by some chiropractor who is trying to make an extra buck or feels some sort of moral obligation to cleanse the profession of the crooks and therefore performs audits on the side, but still gets most of his money from practice.
  • Demand to See the Actual Notes of the Reviewer/Auditor – Not Just the Final Summary.  I have seen too many clients get out their checkbooks to write the insurance company a check for a failed audit when they have not examined the details of what made them fail.  The average audit tool contains 18 items — wouldn’t it be nice to know which ones were at fault so you could correct them or (even better) dispute them?!  Get the specific records reviewed, treatment dates, and what specific items were at fault or substandard.

Obviously, there are more tricks to use and traps to avoid. If you don’t know where you stand, consider taking my Billing Quiz to give yourself an overall status report on common mistakes that are either costing you money or exposing you to trouble.

If you’re in the Northwest (or would like to be) in October and November, you may also want to consider attending one of my Seminars where you will be treated to live demonstrations of the split-second type of destruction a cranky auditor can inflict on your practice. And, of course, what to do to prevent this mayhem.  Oh, and how to increase profits while decreasing your audit risk.  In other words, necessary tidbits that will save your tail and bolster your bank account in the process.  Hope to see you at a seminar soon!

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