For many behavioral health providers, billing starts as an internal function. A small team manages claims, tracks payments, verifies insurance, follows up on denials, and
For healthcare providers, a payer audit can feel disruptive, stressful and overwhelming. Even when a practice has operated in good faith, receiving an audit request
For many healthcare providers, denial management becomes a reactive process – something that happens after claims are rejected and revenue is delayed. But the most
For healthcare providers, financial performance isn’t just about how much revenue is generated – it’s about how quickly that revenue is collected. Accounts receivable (A/R)
In today’s healthcare environment, accuracy is no longer just a goal, it’s a performance metric. The clean claim rate, often referred to as first-pass acceptance
In medical billing, denial prevention is often treated as a reactive process – something that happens after claims are submitted and problems appear. But many
As the year progresses, healthcare providers often begin to see subtle shifts in payer requirements, documentation expectations, and reimbursement policies. Mid-year updates may not always
Revenue loss in medical billing rarely comes from a single major mistake. More often, it’s the result of small, overlooked issues that quietly compound over
For many healthcare providers, billing audits happen only after something goes wrong – when denial rates spike, payments stall, or payers begin requesting records. By
Eligibility verification has always been a foundational step in the billing process, but today, it plays a more critical role than ever before. As insurance