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What is a medical billing clearinghouse,
and what do they do?
[Article]
Why Clearinghouses Transmit Electronic Claims to
Insurance Carriers, and Why the Service they
Provide is Essential to Medical Practices.
The simplest way to explain what a medical clearinghouse is, and does, is to paint a picture of the problem they solve - their piece of the puzzle.
Imagine 3 to 4 million licensed healthcare professionals and facilities all using a different Practice Software, sending out claims to over 3000
different insurance carriers daily - across fifty different states -- each state having its own insurance regulations; and then each carrier having it's own internal
software infrastructure. In essence, what you have is the perfect recipe for
an
information super-disaster.
If on average just 10 claims a day were sent to 5 different
insurance carriers by every practice, you'd have millions of
claims daily heading to the four corners of the earth. Now compound
this situation with the numerous phone calls
and claim re-submittals that each claim error will produce until all reimbursement issues are resolved and the bill is paid.
For years these claims went to insurance carriers by paper -
an absolute
nirvana for the U.S. Postal Service - who just so happens to have the infrastructure to handle it, and on a good day they do.
But the manpower required for thousands of insurance carriers to handle
all the paper work and phone calls for each claim and each claim
error represents a huge cost to health insurance, which we as individuals
pay by way of insurance premiums (here, a medical office manager would say: "Just pay the darn claim and I wouldn't have to call!) But that would eliminate the problem.
Somehow, deep in our subconscious, it appears that we really need all those auditors, adjusters, underwriters, actuaries, reviewers, and insurance bureaucrats et el.
GOING ELECTRONIC
Enter the advent of health claims being transmitted
electronically. Sounds great at first. Except that you no longer have a US Postal Service
to do the transmitting. Electronic claims clearinghouses were devised by
Medicare and the insurance companies to step in electronically where the postal service was unable to
-- to prescreen for claim errors, and
act as air traffic controllers of electronic claim transmittal, so to speak.
Most simply, medical clearinghouses are aggregators (senders and receivers) of mountains of medical claim information;
almost all of which is managed
by software. Large clearinghouses today process trillions of transactions
each year. They are essentially 'regional' hubs
that enable healthcare practices to transmit electronic claims to insurance carriers,
and additionally they provide a Biller or an Office Manager a place to manage all their claims
from
one central location --usually an online
control panel, similar to online checking.
How A Claims Clearinghouse Works
Here's the nuts and bolts of how it works. The billing software on your desktop creates the electronic file (the electronic claim),
which is then sent (uploaded) to your clearinghouse account. The clearinghouse
then scrubs the claim checking it for errors (arguably the most important thing a clearinghouse does); and then once the claim
is accepted, the clearinghouse securely transmits (very important) the electronic file
to the specified payer with which it has already established
a secure connection that meets the strict standards laid down by a
HIPAA.
At this stage, the claim is either accepted or rejected, but
either way, a status message is sent back to the clearing house
which updates the claim's status in your account. It then alert's you (e.g. by email)
that you have an accepted or rejected claim. If rejected, you have
a chance to
make the needed corrections and then re-submit the claim.
Ultimately
assuming there are no other corrections needed and the patient's
insurance is valid, you'll receive a reimbursement check along with an explanation of benefits
(EOB), all very simple. Not
The same sort of activity takes place every night within the federal banking system as our checks and banking activities are sent electronically from local banks to central ACH repositories (Automated Clearing Houses) and then on to banks of origin across the country, and then back to local banks -- all done electronically, and somewhat
instantly .
Thus today, you have dozens of regional medical clearinghouses
throughout the
country all serving the same role; that of scrubbing claims and then transmitting the claim information
securely to insurance carriers electronically.
You might think: "That's nice, but why do I need one?"
The best clearinghouses offer added features that provide a
whole new level of claim intelligence for revenue cycle management
that makes their
services extremely compelling from a financial perspective, and as
well, highly desirable from an office-staff efficiency point of
view.
Here are some highlights on what to look for regarding premium
services:
- Eligibility Verification -
Determine coverage before treatment
- Electronic Remittance -
Have your accounting automatically updated
- Claim Status Reports -
Know the status of a claim at all times
- Rejection Analysis -
Have error codes displayed in plain English
- Online Access -
Edit and correct claims day or night online
- Printed Claims
- Have non-par claims automatically dropped to paper but
still be able to track them electronically.
- Patient
Statement Services - Have your patient statements put on
'autopilot', often at less cost than you can do mail them out yourself.
- Real
Support - The best clearing houses offer 1-on-1 personal
training and
support provided by billing experts.
- Affordability
- When you take into consideration the purchasing of
forms, printing, envelopes, and postage; a clearinghouse
ends up costing
about the same as sending paper claims.
Main Clearing House Benefits
Here are the main benefits of using a electronic claims clearinghouse - in a nut shell.
Using an electronic clearinghouse to send claims:
- Allows you to catch and fix errors in minutes rather than
days or weeks
- Results
in significantly higher claim success --fewer rejected claims.
- Rapid claims processing: Submitting claims electronically can reduce your reimbursement times to under ten days.
- Eliminates the need to prepare claims
and manually re-key transaction data
over and over for each payer.
- Submit all your electronic claims
in batch all at once, rather than submitting separately to each individual payer.
- It provides a single location to manage all your electronic claims
- Avoid long hours of being on-hold with Medicare and Blue Cross inquiring about claim errors.
- Vastly improve vender relationships with insurance carriers.
- If you subscribe to a good
clearinghouse, you'll be speaking with a knowledgeable support person within just a few rings.
- Shorter payment cycles
lead to more accurate revenue forecasts.
- Reduce or eliminate need for paper forms, envelopes and
stamps
- Plain and simple, using a clearing-house will greatly simplify your claims processing.
But you may ask (legitimately) "If I can submit my claims directly to
a payer for free, why should I pay a clearing house?"
ADVANTAGES OF GOING DIRECT:
Many large payers such as Medicaid, Medicare or BlueCross act as their own intermediary allowing you to submit claim information directly to them. Here are the advantages:
- Ability to submit claims directly to the payer without a middleman
- Free of charge. No recurring fees.
DISADVANTAGES OF SUBMITTING DIRECTLY TO PAYERS
Each new payer that you want to send claims to can entail a potentially long and involved testing/certification
process that can take weeks (or months) while you send (endless) test claims
(and then live claims) which
get rejected over and over until all the details unique to that
payer are worked out. Going direct to each payer would mean
repeating this process afresh each time you want to add a new payer to send claims
to (here, a clearinghouse administrator would say yes, I know).
Submitting claims directly to more than a single entity puts an extra, unnecessary
burden on billing
staff who are forced to remember multiple transmission methods, multiple logins
and passwords, multiple file names and file types, and to memorize each carrier’s
often cryptic error codes, and interpret each carrier's often
confusing claim status reports. Here are a few disadvantage highlights:
- Lack of centralization (claims and claim data at many
locations)
- Hidden costs. Often you must purchase additional software
components,
which can impact your regular software support fees.
- The unnecessary added confusion of multiple accounts to log
into,
and multiple data entries, which increase the opportunity
for errors
- Lack of tools for efficient claim management.
- Little to no support (Would you naturally really call Medicaid
or
Medicare for technical support?)
In the end, it becomes difficult to calculate the actual cost of 'free' when it
translates so fundamentally to potentially wasted time, frustrated staff, increased billing errors,
increased claim denials, and lengthened payment cycles. There may
be good and bad clearinghouses, but submitting claims directly to more than a single entity begins to
look like inefficiency gone to seed, whereas the advantage of submitting claims to a single entity
are clearly evident.
So, in conclusion, the vast majority of health insurance carriers do not have the
manpower or the infrastructure to handle millions of medical practitioners
(each using a different billing software) daily sending electronic claims (in slightly different ways) across 50 states that are each regulated
differently. So there exist a desperate need for the centralization, standardizing, and
the secure transmission of claims via these important
intermediaries we call a clearinghouse.
How To Tell If You Need One
You can easily tell if you would directly benefit from subscribing to an electronic claim clearinghouse service by answering a few questions:
- Does your practice bill (or plan to bill soon) electronically?
- Does your practice bill a number of insurances; ..or just one or two?
- Is your staff experienced at billing electronically? (The less experience, the greater the need, and greater the benefit).
- What is your claim volume? The cost of a clearing house is often offset by no longer having to send in paper claims.
- Would it help to quickly and greatly reduce claim errors?
- Would it help to drastically shorten reimbursement times?
- Do you have better things to do than be on hold for hours with Medicare and Blue Cross trying to figure out claim errors?
How to Select a Good Medical Clearinghouse
How does one distinguish a good clearinghouse from a bad one? The answer is not always simple. But
here are some important things to look for:
Payer List:
First and foremost, make sure that the insurances you bill on a regular basis are on their payer list. This list is most often available online at their website.
Nationwide:
Many clearinghouses are regional. Steer towards ones that operate nationally.
Office Software:
Let them know what medical billing software you have and ask if they
have people using it on their system - (successfully we might add). This part can
make a tremendous difference to avoid what billers know as
clearinghouse hell.
Clearing house hell is when you call your clearing house about a
claim error and they tell you that you absolutely have a billing
software problem. Then you call your billing software and they
assure you that the problem lies with the clearing house. This
circle of stupidity can go on for weeks and make you insane when
all you want is the darn claim to go through, but no one will take
responsibility to get to the bottom of it. Avoid
clearinghouse hell when at all possible.
Easy-out Contract:
Most of the better services today offer a month to month subscription.
Support:
Try contacting their support before you sign up.
Error Reports & Control Panel:
Most clearinghouses will offer you a quick tour of their control panel, (the location online where you'll be managing your claims). What you want
here is easy navigation within the management area, and claim errors and rejections
to be reported in clear,
concise
language, not merely as numbers which
can be extremely confusing.
Monthly Fees:
Many of the best clearinghouses charge between $85 and $125 per
month, per doctor (rendering provider in box 24-J). The ones that charge more are not necessarily worth the extra cost.
Pets:
If you're a pet owner, choose a claims clearinghouse that's pet friendly (..really :):)
Advanced Features:
Over and above just transmitting electronic claims, the best medical clearinghouses offer many highly desirable advanced
features such as: Eligibility Verification, Sent File Status, Claim
Status Reports, Rejection Analysis, Paper Claims (created for you
and mailed when necessary), Secondary Claims Processing, Electronic Remittance Advice (ERA), Patient Statement Services
(you no
longer have to mail out all those patient statements each month), Payment Processing, and finally, Transaction Summaries of
all your clearinghouse activity. These advanced features make a
good clearinghouse worth its weight in gold.
Copyright ©2006-2009. All Rights Reserved.
No part of this work may be copied or reprinted without
written permission from the author, Michael J. Sculley
Clearinghouse Directory
Following is a growing directory list of 'happy' clearinghouses.
Ones that operate nationally, provide one-on-one support, and
have a good reputation as rated by thousands of our medical
billing software users.
National Directory of Electronic Claim Clearinghouses
* Just O.K., ** Good, *** Excellent,
**** Highly Recommended
iPlexus
***
|
Gateway EDI
***
|
MPMedi
****
(Highly Recommended)
|
| ZirMed
*** |
| Availity
* |
| Thin
* |
| Magellan |
| ENS Health ** |
| MCC - Medical Claims
Corp * |
| Capario (Previously
MedAvant) |
| RelayHealth (Previously
McKesson) |
|
Emdeon
|
| Envoy |
| ediHealthcare |
| ClearConnect
(Regional:
Minnesota only) |
| ET&T |
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