In a recent Modern Healthcare article, long-time IT editor, Joseph Conn, predicted a “rocky” ICD-10 roll-out according to a survey conducted by the magazine. Even though the majority of respondents were optimistic, chaos is the predicted descriptor of the Oct. 1 deadline for nationwide conversion to the ICD-10 codes, according to the survey.
GeBBS Healthcare Blog
Michael Liss
Recent Posts
Tags: ICD-10, Revenue Cycle Management (RCM), Medical Coding
Our Forward Thinking Series On Preparing For The ICD-10 Transition
Posted on Tue, Mar 11, 2014 @ 10:08 AM
Most healthcare providers we talk to are worried (or at least concerned) about severe reductions, or even the complete stoppage, of their revenue streams caused by potential ICD-10 coding errors and slowdowns in their coding workflows – and rightly so! The transition to ICD-10 has the potential to produce a tremendous backlog of insurance claims.
Tags: ICD-10, Clinical Documentation Improvement (CDI), Medical Coding
Strategies for Managing the Increased Self-pay Revenue Stream
Posted on Wed, Mar 05, 2014 @ 06:52 AM
In an earlier blog, we admonished healthcare providers not to let their revenue cycles be swamped by the rising number of new self-pay patients entering the healthcare delivery stream. Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), the self-pay portion of a healthcare provider’s receivables is going to increase significantly. According to a recent Healthcare Financial Management Association (HFMA) study, the current self-pay average is 20 percent of a healthcare provider’s receivables, but that is only going to increase over the next few years. How to manage the accounts of patients who must pay a significant percentage of their bill out of pocket will be a key strategy to achieve or maintain profitability during the new rollout of federal reform mandates.
Tags: Revenue Cycle Management (RCM), Accounts Receivable (A/R), Affordable Care Act
Managing New Patient Volume Driven By The Affordable Care Act
Posted on Tue, Feb 25, 2014 @ 09:23 AM
The good news about the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is that more patients should have insurance coverage and seek care from physicians. The bad news is that some practices may need to turn away patients due to the fact that they are "closed" to new patients or patients will have long waits for initial appointments. The Medscape Multispecialty e-Newsletter recently offered some good advice to physicians who may be swamped with these new patients -- who will have very high deductible insurance plans. They suggest physicians:
Hospital Revenue Cycle Management is about to be challenged by an unintended consequence of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Even as hospitals are set to see an influx of newly insured patients, industry watchers warn that bad debt may become an even larger problem under theACA, putting more pressure on already thin margins.
Tags: Revenue Cycle Management (RCM), Accounts Receivable (A/R), Affordable Care Act
Big Data Is A Really Big Deal For Healthcare Revenue Cycle Management
Posted on Wed, Jan 29, 2014 @ 07:11 AM
In our initial blog on big data, we posed the question: “Is big data a big boondoggle or a big solution?” Based upon our experience of helping literally thousands of healthcare providers use vast amounts of financial and clinical data to improve their revenue cycles and care delivery – we believe that big data can provide big answers. What exactly is big data? A report delivered to the U.S. Congress in August 2012 by the TechAmerica Foundation defines big data as: large volumes of high velocity, complex, and variable data that require advanced techniques and technologies to enable the capture, storage, distribution, management, and analysis of the information.
Big Data: Solution or Mistake for Healthcare Revenue Cycle Management?
Posted on Wed, Jan 22, 2014 @ 07:55 AM
Big data is the hot buzz word right now in healthcare IT. The constant news barrage about the value of big data and business analytics/intelligence (BI) is forcing healthcare IT departments to take notice and determine what value big data really has for their facility. As this terminology has evolved in healthcare, big data has become the popular term to describe the exponential growth and availability of all kinds of data -- both structured and unstructured. What is the potential importance of big data to healthcare providers?
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, it is October 1, 2015 and new HOPE has come about. We have come through a period of civil strife; rebel space ships -- forcing a complete change to our coding system -- have ceased to strike from hidden bases. A little history on this struggle -- the World Health Organization created the basis for ICD-10 in 1994. The Clinical Modification (CM) was added in the U.S. by the National Center for Health Statistics to create ICD-10-CM for use in inpatient and outpatient diagnosis coding. The move to mandate this new coding system for all healthcare providers created great consternation throughout the galaxy.
Tags: ICD-10
MGMA Fears 'Catastrophic Backlogs' From ICD-10 Testing Pullback
Posted on Fri, Oct 11, 2013 @ 06:53 AM
MGMA is "extremely concerned" that Medicare has announced it will not be conducting ICD-10 end-to-end testing with external trading partners, including physician practices, says the group's CEO.
Tags: ICD-10
Tags: ICD-10