Know Your Numbers: Improving Financial Health through Revenue Cycle Management

October 10, 2024

At a glance

  • The main takeaway: Within the medical profession, “revenue cycle” is a term that describes the many processes and touchpoints between initial patient registration and final settlement (payment) for care rendered.
  • Impact on your business: A well-established RCM fosters the complete, accurate, and compliant submission and payment of services.
  • Next steps: Aprio’s Healthcare Advisors offers specialized CPA and advisory services tailored to the healthcare industry, and we are here to help you achieve your business objectives.
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The full story:

For healthcare organizations, Revenue Cycle Management (RCM) is an important step in managing the entire lifecycle of a patient’s account. The process starts from patient registration to final payment settlement. And as the medical industry continues to get busier, one of the top concerns is viability. Historically, a full patient schedule was a reliable forecaster of practice prosperity; however, practices have been absorbing expense increases, payor reimbursement decreases for years, and many are now at a breaking point.

A well-established RCM fosters the complete, accurate, and compliant submission and payment of services. It masters the best processes, puts the right people in the right roles, provides verified training and resources, maintains current and accurate patient and insurance information, and advocates for the right payment levels.

Some processes might be difficult to accomplish and sustain, so, let’s break down the important areas of RCM to get it right.

Front End RCM | Processes before a patient receives care

Tasks What’s Important to Get Right?
Personnel Placement
  • Consider front end roles as gatekeepers to correct claim submission and payment
  • Attention to detail and task subject matter knowledge is critical
  • Hire and compensate for accordingly
Patient Registration
  • Obtain the complete and accurate capture of demographic and insurance information before every visit/scheduled service
  • Consider providing patients the current information on file and asking them to only update changes
Appointment Scheduling
  • Should align with available practitioners and support staff
  • Consider self-scheduling software to promote patient ownership, reduce no-shows
  • Send visit reminders (not too many to be frustrating or ignored)
  • Create a cancellation list with advance notice requirements
  • Track no-show rates and consider overlapped scheduling for high-rate patients
Prior Authorization
  • Create a list of procedures and payors that routinely require prior authorization
  • Inquire about and obtain required insurance approvals as a function of the scheduling process
Patient Responsibility
  • Promote payment compliance by informing patients at the point of scheduling and/or service on anticipated amounts they may/will personally owe, payment policies and eligible payment plan options

MIDDLE RCM | Processes that merge the financial and clinical aspects of care

Tasks What’s Important to Get Right?
Personnel Placement
  • Task subject matter knowledge is critical
  • Consider well-vetted or credentialed coders (e.g., CPC, CCS, CMC) for complex services, provider specialties or payors
Charge Capture
  • Identify all services rendered (including noncovered services) to track resource needs and guarantee proper payment levels
  • Mitigate revenue leakage through routine documentation audits for missed charges; educate on meaningful findings
Coding
  • Services are paid only at the level they are documented and coded so routinely audit for same; educate on meaningful findings
  • Inaccurate coding can result in rejected and denied claims; consider adding scrubbing tools to catch problem areas prior to submission (e.g., prohibit inaccurate code combinations, requisite modifier use)
Claim Submission
  • Consider billing software that submit claims quickly via standardized series of prescribed steps (i.e., mitigates human shortcuts and errors)

BACK-END RCM | Processes after the claim has been submitted

Tasks What’s Important to Get Right?
Denial Management
  • Staff knowledge of payor-specific points of contact and billing requirements is key; consider assigning billing staff by payor not provider to promote depth not width in this area
  • Learn from your denials (analyze, categorize, train on patterns and adjust middle RCM processes to mitigate)
  • Create custom tracking codes to post any post-payment denials at the claim level since original remittance advice and denials reporting will not include these claims or related reason codes
Appeals
  • Appeal promptly, clearly and concisely to demonstrate resolution of all denial reasons
  • Consider practice cost to appeal to guarantee net positive result
  • Consider larger strategy where warranted (e.g., an addiction treatment provider might negotiate higher frequency drug test coverage by showing metrics on successful patient outcomes)
Coding
  • Services are paid only at the level they are documented and coded so routinely audit for same; educate on meaningful findings
  • Inaccurate coding can result in rejected and denied claims; consider adding scrubbing tools to catch problem areas prior to submission (e.g., prohibit inaccurate code combinations, requisite modifier use)
Adjustment Posting
  • Track claim adjustment reason codes (CARCs); validate material amounts or patterns that result in unexpected or avoidable non-payment
  • Create detailed, meaningful non-contractual adjustment categories that inform on non-payment reasons
  • Make necessary process changes for material and unexpected patterns (e.g., adjusting off charges covered by a research grant is expected, adjusting off charges for lacking a required prior authorization or coding error is not)
Payment Posting
  • Implement internal controls when automating payment posting to quickly identify and report erroneous amounts
  • Maintain a standard, written procedure for manual posting steps to guarantee accuracy
  • Perform regular audits of expected vs actual payment amounts; promptly follow up on discrepancies
  • Track aging and reason for unapplied payments
Secondary Claim Submission
  • Automate conversion steps where primary and secondary payor requirements are different (e.g., bilateral use of modifier -50 vs -RT/-LT)
Patient Statements
  • Web-based payment options are preferred by patients and result in faster, better A/R resolution
Credit Balances
  • Proper management and refund of credit balances is critical for regulatory compliance and revenue cycle integrity
A/R Follow-Up
  • Consider patient satisfaction when developing the manner and frequency of follow-up
  • A dedicated, approachable person in this role can promote timely, more complete resolution
  • Consider empowering A/R follow-up staff to inform on and approve patient payment plans within defined parameters
  • Consider lower payment amounts more often (e.g., $25 every two weeks vs $50 per month)
General
  • Keep a paper trail for any payor communications, including payor point of contact and next steps (email or call notes); retain for quick recall

The bottom line

Revenue cycle management has a host of tasks that can be unpredictable, inconsistent, and ever-changing. We hope the tips shared are helpful in building, refining, and supporting successful, profitable RCM at your practice. Be on the lookout for Part II of this article, “Proven Metrics to Monitor RCM Effectiveness.” Aprio’s Healthcare Advisors offers specialized CPA and advisory services tailored to the healthcare industry, and we are here to help you achieve your business objectives.

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About the Author

Mark Armstrong

As Leader of Aprio’s Healthcare industry practice, Mark Armstrong provides impactful solutions to urgent, mission-critical problems. With nearly 30 years of executive-level experience, he helps owners, governing boards, executives and lenders improve the long-term role, relevance and sustainability of their organizations. Schedule a consultation to learn more about what Mark’s team can do for you and your business.


Rachel Harris

Rachel Harris is the Director of Healthcare Consulting at Aprio, specializing in revenue strategy, business intelligence-driven practice reporting, and transactional due diligence for healthcare organizations of all sizes. With a focus on solving physician/provider matters, her deep knowledge on the business side of medicine and sophisticated, data-driven approach help healthcare decision-makers make informed and innovative decisions. She is a member of the American College of Healthcare Executives and the American Health Lawyers Association.


Chelsea Dorfeld

Chelsea specializes in helping her clients minimize their tax liabilities with thorough tax planning year-round. She has extensive experience working with S corporations and partnerships within the professional service world, particularly medical practices and architectural and engineering firms.


Shannon Euart

Shannon Euart is a Senior Manager at Aprio, bringing over 25 years of expertise in tax, accounting, and consulting services tailored to medical practices and physician owners. She excels in developing compensation models, conducting future growth projections and analyses, managing special projects, and providing income tax analysis and savings strategies. Her academic and professional credentials include a BBA from the University of Georgia, CPA certification, and memberships in the Georgia Society of CPAs and the American Institute of CPAs.


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