Claim denials continue to remain a thorn in the side of many providers in the healthcare space. Owing to growing complexities in the regulatory framework and ever-changing payer behavior, there has been a steady rise in denials, underscoring the urgent need for providers to rethink their denial management strategy. These denials not only affect their bottom line but also silently underline the need for revenue cycle management (RCM) solutions that could help providers optimize their operations for improved financial outcomes.
To improve the resilience of their revenue cycle with a clean claim rate, healthcare systems need to implement a well-thought-out strategy that can target denials head-on and help them maintain financial stability in the long run. Dive into this blog to explore why claim denials happen and what measures providers can take to make their revenue cycle bulletproof.
Why denials happen
Claim denials happen when the insurer or the payer rejects to pay for the services billed by the provider on grounds like incomplete or inaccurate documentation, lack of medical necessity, prior authorization issues, coverage-related issues, and delays in claims submission. It is particularly frustrating when avoidable mistakes like inaccurate information or insufficient documentation during the front-end of RCM throw wrench in the works, not only impacting the revenue of the provider but also souring the experience of the patients.
Industry trends that have been making the rounds
A 2023 analysis by Crowe revealed an 11.9% YoY jump in initial denial rate based on the data from 1,800 hospitals, highlighting the growing need for providers to curtail the denial rate through revenue cycle optimization. Likewise, claim denials were the top revenue cycle issue in the 2022 survey by Kaufman Hall as well.
In the 2023 Denials Management Research Summary Report surveying 415 revenue cycle executives, the Healthcare Financial Management Association (HFMA) found inefficiency and inaccuracy during prior authorization and incorrect medical coding and billing as the main causes of claim denials. Another interesting finding of the report was that despite denial prevention being the focus area of healthcare finance leaders, they found themselves between a rock and a hard place, unable to allocate adequate resources to RCM due to staff shortage challenges.
These industry statistics throw light on the plight of providers struggling hard with claim denial management, and the need for them to re-devise their RCM strategy that is viable and can help them witness improvements in their revenue cycle outcomes.
The silver lining
The good news is that more than two-thirds of denials can be prevented and are recoverable if providers get to the heart of the problem and identify the root cause behind denials and devise a robust revenue cycle optimization strategy. Here are a few quick tips to address denials and improve the financial health of your practice.
Quick tips to address denials and reclaim your revenue
- Decode denial reasons to fix them: They say, knowing is half the battle won. Yes, one of the key aspects of a robust RCM strategy is finding and bridging revenue gaps and putting measures in place to prevent claim denials from happening in the first place. This requires a pragmatic approach to RCM that is the right blend of technology and expertise to mitigate claim denials effectively.
- Integrate technology to boost efficiency: Using technologies like artificial intelligence (AI), business intelligence (BI), and automation for root cause analysis, performance insights, and automation of repetitive tasks, you can identify areas for improvement, implement targeted interventions, and speed up processes. This will help improve the clean claim rate, reduce the cost to collect, and expedite collections. For instance, using robotic process automation (RPA)-assisted bots, you can sort tedious tasks related to patient eligibility verification. These bots are capable of fetching updated coverage information from vast payer databases within a matter of seconds, which otherwise might take hours if done manually. Besides saving time and costs on resources, the technology can help you ensure accurate information capturing in compliance with regulatory and payer policies.
- Invest in staff training and education: In case of an in-house RCM team, it’s important to conduct regular training and staff education on process workflows to ensure they maintain accuracy of the highest level and stay abreast of the latest coding practices and changing regulatory and payer policies to reduce errors that can result in denials.
- Monitor KPIs to boost performance: Keep your finger on the pulse to track and analyze key performance indicators (KPIs), such as the clean claim rate, denial rate, accounts receivable (AR) days, and cost to collect. This will help identify areas for improvement and implement timely corrective measures to prevent denials.
- Have the expertise by your side: Combining the right expertise with innovative technologies can further enhance your prospects of improving the first pass rate of your claims by making sure you are sending out clean claims the first time itself. Moreover, with trained RCM specialists, ensuring accurate information, charge capture, and timely intervention to scrutinize, submit, and resubmit claims becomes easy. This further allows to achieve seamless RCM workflows from the front-end through the backend.
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Conclusion
With the successful implementation of these tips, providers can effectively and efficiently minimize claim denials and improve the prospects of their revenue recovery. A well-thought revenue optimization strategy that is based on bringing together the right mix of expertise and technology can be a foolproof way of reducing revenue leaks and denials. To maximize the prospects of revenue integrity, it’s important to embrace RCM solutions that target revenue cycle complexities and errors resulting from inefficient operations and labor-intensive, time-consuming processes.
However, despite most of these measures, it might not always be feasible to eliminate claim denials and achieve desired financial results with an overworked in-house RCM team. For those overwhelmed with denial management and recurring instances of claim rejections, and delayed payments and underpayments, outsourcing RCM could be a wise decision. Partnering with an RCM services company allows for the better allocation of resources for the improvement of patient experience and other critical clinical aspects of the practice, without worrying about claim denials.
At Jindal Healthcare, we offer tech-enabled expertise to supercharge your revenue optimization journey. This allows you to not only target revenue leakage to reclaim your revenue but also improve your workflow efficiency with analytics-driven, real-time insights for informed decision-making. With timely corrective measures, you can plug potential leaks in your system, stave off denials, and secure your practice financially.