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Payments (RAs), Appeals, and Secondary Claims

13. Payments (RAs), Appeals, and Secondary Claims. 13-2. Learning Outcomes. When you finish this chapter, you will be able to: 13.1 Explain the claim adjudication process. 13.2 Describe the procedures for following up on claims after they are sent to payers.

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Payments (RAs), Appeals, and Secondary Claims

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  1. 13 Payments (RAs), Appeals, and Secondary Claims

  2. 13-2 Learning Outcomes When you finish this chapter, you will be able to: 13.1 Explain the claim adjudication process. 13.2 Describe the procedures for following up on claims after they are sent to payers. 13.3 Interpret a remittance advice (RA). 13.4 Identify the points that are reviewed on an RA. 13.5 Explain the process for posting payments and managing denials. 13.6 Describe the purpose and general steps of the appeal process.

  3. 13-3 Learning Outcomes (continued) When you finish this chapter, you will be able to: 13.7 Assess how appeals, postpayment audits, and overpayments may affect claim payments. 13.8 Describe the procedures for filing secondary claims. 13.9 Discuss procedures for complying with the Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP) program.

  4. 13-4 Key Terms • aging • appeal • appellant • autoposting • claim adjustment group code • claim adjustment reason code (CARC) • claimant • claim status category codes • claim status codes • claim turnaround time • concurrent care • determination • development • electronic funds transfer (EFT) • explanation of benefits (EOB) • grievance • HIPAA X12 835 Health Care Payment and Remittance Advice (HIPAA 835)

  5. 13-5 Key Terms (continued) • HIPAA X12 276/277 Health Care Claim Status Inquiry/Response (HIPAA 276/277) • insurance aging report • medical necessity denial • Medicare Outpatient Adjudication (MOA) remark codes • Medicare Redetermination Notice (MRN) • Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP) • overpayments • pending • prompt-pay laws • RA/EOB • reconciliation • redetermination • remittance advice (RA) • remittance advice remark code (RARC) • suspended

  6. 13-6 13.1 Claim Adjudication • Payers follow five steps in order to adjudicate claims: • Initial processing – payers first perform initial processing checks on claims, rejecting those with missing or clearly incorrect information • Automated review – claims are processed through the payer’s automated medical edits • Manual review – a manual review is done if required • Determination – the payer makes a determination of whether to pay, deny, or reduce the claim • Payment – payment is sent with a remittance advice/explanation of benefits (RA/EOB)

  7. 13-7 13.1 Claim Adjudication (continued) • Concurrent care—situation in which a patient receives independent care from two or more physicians on the same date • Suspended—claim status when the payer is developing the claim • Development—process of gathering information to adjudicate a claim • Determination—payer’s decision about the benefits due for a claim

  8. 13-8 13.1 Claim Adjudication (continued) • Medical necessity denial—refusal by a plan to pay for a procedure that does not meet its medical necessity criteria • Remittance advice (RA)—document describing a payment resulting from a claim adjudication • Explanation of benefits(EOB)—document showing how the amount of a benefit was determined

  9. 13-9 13.1 Claim Adjudication (continued) • RA/EOB—document detailing results of claim adjudication and payment • HIPAA X12 835 Health Care Payment and Remittance Advice (HIPAA 835)—electronic transaction for payment explanation

  10. 13-10 13.2 Monitoring Claim Status • Medical insurance specialists monitor claims by reviewing the insurance aging report and following up at properly timed intervals based on the payer’s promised turnaround time • Insurance aging report—report grouping unpaid claims transmitted to payers by the length of time they remain due • Prompt-pay laws—states’ laws obligating carriers to pay clean claims within a certain time period

  11. 13-11 13.2 Monitoring Claim Status (continued) • Monitoring claims (continued): • Aging—classification of accounts receivable by length of time • Claim turnaround time—time period in which a health plan must process a claim

  12. 13-12 13.2 Monitoring Claim Status (continued) • The HIPAA X12 276/277 Health Care Claim Status Inquiry/Response (276/277) is used to track the claim progress through the adjudication process • HIPAA X12 276/277 Health Care Claim Status Inquiry/Response—standard electronic transaction to obtain information on the status of a claim • The inquiry is the HIPAA 276 • The payer’s response is the HIPAA 277

  13. 13-13 13.2 Monitoring Claim Status (continued) • The HIPAA X12 276/277 Health Care Claim Status Inquiry/Response (276/277) (continued) • Claim status category codes—used on a HIPAA 277 to report the status group for a claim • Pending—claim status when the payer is waiting for information • Claim status codes—Used on a HIPAA 277 to provide a detailed answer to a claim status inquiry

  14. 13-14 13.3 The Remittance Advice (RA) • Electronic and paper RA contain the same essential data: • A heading with payer and provider information • Payment information for each claim, including adjustment codes • Total amounts paid for all claims • A glossary that defines the adjustment codes that appear on the document

  15. 13-15 13.3 The Remittance Advice (RA) (continued) • To explain the determination to the provider, payers use a combination of codes: • Claim adjustment group codes (CAGC)—used on an RA/EOB to indicate the general type of reason code for an adjustment • Claim adjustment reason codes(CARC)—used on an RA/EOB to explain why a payment does not match the amount billed • Remittance adviceremark codes (RARC)—explain payers’ payment decisions • Medicare Outpatient Adjudication (MOA) remark codes—explain Medicare payment decisions

  16. 13-16 13.4 Reviewing RAs • The unique claim control number reported on the RA/EOB is first used to match up claims sent and payments received, and then: • Basic data are checked against the claim • Billed procedures are verified • The payment for each CPT is checked against the expected amount • Adjustment codes are reviewed to locate all unpaid, downcoded, or denied claims • Items are identified for follow-up

  17. 13-17 13.5 Procedures for Posting • The process for posting payments and managing denials: • Payments are deposited in the practice’s bank account, posted in the practice management program, and applied to patients’ accounts • Rejected claims must be corrected and re-sent • Missed procedures are billed again • Partially paid, denied, or downcoded claims are analyzed and appealed, billed to the patient, or written off

  18. 13-18 13.5 Procedures for Posting (continued) • Electronic funds transfer(EFT)—electronic routing of funds between banks • Autoposting—software feature enabling automatic entry of payments on a remittance advice • Reconciliation—process of verifying that the totals on the RA check out mathematically

  19. 13-19 13.6 Appeals • An appeal process is used to challenge a payer’s decision to deny, reduce, or otherwise downcode a claim • Appeal—request for reconsideration of a claim adjudication • Claimant—person/entity exercising the right to receive benefits • Appellant—one who appeals a claim decision • Each payer has a graduated level of appeals, deadlines for requesting them, and medical review programs to answer them

  20. 13-20 13.6 Appeals (continued) • Medicare participating providers have appeal rights that involve five steps: • Redetermination—first level of Medicare appeal processing Medicare Redetermination Notice (MRN)— resolution of a first appeal for Medicare fee-for- service claims 2. Reconsideration 3. Administrative law judge 4. Medicare appeals council 5. Federal court (judicial review)

  21. 13-21 13.7 Postpayment Audits, Refunds, and Grievances • Filing an appeal may result in payment of a denied or reduced claim • Postpayment audits are usually used to gather information about treatment outcomes, but they may also be used to find overpayments, which must be refunded to payers • Overpayments—improper or excessive payments resulting from billing errors • Refunds to patients may also be requested • Grievance—complaint against a payer filed with the state insurance commission by a practice

  22. 13-22 13.8 Billing Secondary Payers • Claims are sent to patient’s additional insurance plans after the primary payer has adjudicated claims • Sometimes, the medical office prepares and sends the claims • In other cases, the primary payer has a coordination of benefits (COB) program that automatically sends the necessary data to secondary payers • If a paper RA is received, CMS-1500 is used to bill the secondary health plan

  23. 13-23 13.9 The Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP) Program, Claims, and Payments • Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP)—federal law requiring private payers to be primary payers for Medicare beneficiaries’ claims • The medical insurance specialist is responsible for identifying situations in which Medicare is the secondary payer and for preparing appropriate primary and secondary claims

  24. 13-24 13.9 The Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP) Program, Claims, and Payments (continued) • Under the MSP program, Medicare is the secondary payer in any of these instances: • Patient is covered by an employer group health insurance plan or covered through an employed spouse’s plan • Patient is disabled, under age 65, and covered by an employee group health plan • Services are covered by workers’ compensation insurance • Services are for injuries of an automobile accident • Patient is a veteran choosing to receive services through the Department of Veterans Affairs

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