CARDIOLOGY MEDICAL BILLING

Our Cardiology Billing Services Are Widespread

Advances made in cardiac treatments in recent years have increased the success of treatment but have also resulted in new and more complex cardiology medical coding and billing requirements.

Cardiology is a Relatively High-Cost Medical Field

Because cardiology is a relatively high-cost medical field, practices stand to lose large amounts of revenue due to the inaccurate cardiology billing codes. The complexity of the ever-changing codes means that there may be errors, so it is extremely important to work with cardiology billing companies that are experienced in claims submission.
That way they can minimize errors and efficiently handle rejected and denied claims, unlike less experienced office staff, who are likely to end up spending several hours sorting out each claim and may not figure out the more complicated coding issues in the required time, resulting in unpaid claims and significant revenue losses.

Challenges Associated with Cardiology Medical Billing

Complications Start With Scheduling

The medical billing for the cardiologists start in the scheduling phase when insurance company coverage and payer requirements have to be confirmed. Even details such as whether the appointment happened in an in-patient, out-patient, or emergency room/urgent care setting must be accurate codes or the claim will be denied. We make the billing processes for cardiologists efficient and ensure effective denial management.

Complicated Procedures and Treatments Involve Complex Coding

Modifiers are an important part of billing and coding. These additional subcategories of numerical codes are required to give the details that are required in order to be reimbursed for all services delivered. Cardiology medical billing companies help you submit clean codes to payers for full reimbursements.
While inexperienced billers and coders can look up the general code for a procedure, they often do not know how many levels of modifiers they need to include or all the numerically coded details that need to be added. Payers are trending towards more bundling of costs into single codes, which can simplify billing—but coders must recognize any variance from the standard bundled items and know-how to itemize to avoid over-and under-coding.