There is a distinctive difference between billing for Durable Medical Equipment (DME) services and other clinical procedures – durable medical equipment services are ancillary to the primary clinical purpose, and their admissibility is subject to certain conditions. Physicians since long have found these conditions tricky and challenging to understand, and often either been denied or underpaid for DME services, which may either have been
- Deemed medical unnecessary,
- Uncertified by Medicare/Medicaid/private health insurers,
- Beyond the permissible reimbursement level
- Lack of solid grounding in the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS), which governs level II codes designated for DME equipment and supplies
While physicians have the right to recommend DMEs as part of a clinical treatment, they will have to back their recommendation with sufficient proof of them being medical necessary. Proving medical necessary alone will not suffice; it is equally important to know whether or not patient’s health insurance coverage supports DME services. With Medicare, Medicaid, and even certain private insurance schemes cautious about supporting exorbitant DMEs, physicians would do well to be verify whether or not patients’ health plans support DMEs.
Reimbursements are subject to the condition that physicians or patients source the admissible DMEs from payer-recognized vendors or manufacturers. While this condition may endorse payers’ commitment toward quality DMEs that last long and are competitively priced, physicians will certainly be put through the process of identifying Medicare/Medicaid/private insurer recognized vendors or manufacturers. What is more interesting is that Medicare has designated certain pharmacies that can only supply admissible DMEs. Therefore, physicians’ task of identifying and sourcing DMEs has certainly become more complex than ever.
DMEs have grown to be clinically superior and functionally perfect these days. While appreciation in quality has facilitated clinical efficiency and patient well-being, price has been a major issue. Payers have not been all that receptive to the idea of supporting DMEs that are not operationally viable. Medicare/Medicaid too has its own reservations against highly-priced DMEs, and has put a ceiling on DMEs reimbursements. Physicians, therefore, need to be aware of these restrictions while encountering patients that require DMEs well beyond their insurance eligibility.
Lack of solid grounding in the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS), which governs level II codes designated for DME equipment and supplies, has largely been responsible for physicians’ below par realization of DME bills. In fact, if we revisit payer reports, wrong codes, absence of modifiers and insufficient narration seem to have contributed to drastic fall in reimbursement of DME bills. With care providers transiting to a more streamlined coding practice in ICD-10, DME-relevant codes will further get emphasized.
But for physicians, who are already reeling under a series of health care reforms, DME-related challenges may prove to be simply unbearable. In-house staff, who are generally tied with clinical duties, may not be able to stretch beyond their general billing capability. The situation prompts an external medical billing intervention that can offer DME billing as part its comprehensive medical billing services.
Medicalbillersandcoders.com has verifiable success in DME billing services for practices across the 50 states in the U.S. The experience of negotiating DME claims with state-specific Medicaid policies, Medicare, and a host of private health plans is itself proof of our competence. With a team of DME billing experts at your service, challenges associated with ascertaining DME necessity, Medicare/Medicaid/private health insurers’ approval, permissible reimbursement level, and Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) might just be the thing of the past!
Medical Billers and coders (MBC) is one of the leading Medical Billing Companies in USA & help doctors to shortlist Medical Billing Companies, Medical Billing Services according to their preferences of specialty, city, software and services performed.
1 comments:
Thanks for sharing all of this. We've been trying to figure out how to do our Las Vegas medical billing. Do you have any suggestions?
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