Hospital Access Management – October 1, 2014
October 1, 2014
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`Skinny’ network plans growing — Patients blindsided by changes
Patients are increasingly presenting with out-of-network coverage, due to more narrow networks in health plans. Patient access needs revamped processes to confirm eligibility, inform patients, and apply for patient-specific agreements. -
Stop `no auth’ denials with new processes - Access is struggling with new payer requirements
Payers are requiring authorizations for many additional procedures, which results in increased claims denials and dissatisfied patients. -
Work with clinical areas to obtain authorizations — Ask them to involve access from the beginning
Clear and open lines of communication between the clinical team and patient access is the single best way to prevent claims denials due to no authorization, according to Aaron Robison, CHAA, a patient financial advocate at University of Utah Health Care in Salt Lake City. However, this step remains a significant challenge for the department. -
Send all the information you can to payers -- `Littlest thing’ can avoid denied claim
Sending the correct information to the insurance companies to show the medical need for services has become quite a task for patient access, says Aaron Robison, CHAA, a patient financial advocate at University of Utah Health Care in Salt Lake City. -
Flex access staffing based on volume — Fixed model approach is no longer effective
One of the biggest challenges in staffing patient access areas is incorporating volume flexing into the staffing model, says Jen Nichols, senior director of revenue cycle operations at Kaleida Health in Buffalo, NY. At many organizations historically, patient access was staffed in a fixed model, she explains. -
When staffing, don’t forget `other’ work
Staffing models dont always factor in additional tasks performed by patient access, warns Stacy Calvaruso, CHAM, assistant vice president of patient access services at Ochsner Health System in New Orleans. -
New tools needed to staff access — Flex according to volume at any given hour
In the past, the only way for patient access managers to develop productivity standards was through time studies, says Mark Sammartano, interim director of revenue cycle and managed care at Waterbury (CT) Hospital. -
MSP mistakes can cost millions in revenue -- Staff must understand meaning of questions
Most errors involving Medicare as a Secondary Payer Questionnaire (MSPQ) can be attributed to two things, according to Kevin Willis, director of Medicare Services in the Harrison, OH, office of Claim Services, a document retrieval company. Willis is a former Medicare Secondary Payer auditor. -
Patient access leaders can use these strategies for Medicare as Secondary Payer (MSP) training
Incorrectly labeling Medicare as the primary insurance, or missing payers that are primary to Medicare, often costs facilities greater reimbursement and puts hospitals at risk for audits/fines. -
Simple-sounding question is actually complex — Reading questions aloud is `poor approach’
Although it is possible to keep training on Medicare as Secondary Payer (MSP) fairly simple, there are times when you need to stop, think, and ask a lot of questions, says Elizabeth Reason, MSA, CHAM, director of patient access for Cleveland County HealthCare System in Shelby, NC. -
ICD-10 transition date finalized for October 2015
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has announced that the final deadline to comply with the ICD-10 implementation requirement is Oct. 1, 2015, according to the National Association of Healthcare Access Management (NAHAM). The 10th edition of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) is widely viewed as a significant change in the way claims that are submitted to Medicare and private insurance payers are classified. -
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