Medical Billing Forum
Payments => Insurance Payments => : shellykelly March 29, 2011, 05:40:06 PM
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I'm writing an essey about the number one reason claims are denied. It would be nice to hear the opinion of someone who is working in the "real world" of billing. What reason have you found that is on the top of the list of denials? Is it patient info.? Do you think this may be the easiest to avoid?
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For me it would be that the information given to us by parents is wrong. ex: my daughters date of birth is 9/15/95, but insurance has it as 9/16/95. IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE.
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In many of the reports I've seen, "Duplicate Service(s)" usually ranks at the top. I think alot of that has to do with practices that just automatically refile claims that have not been processed within a certain amount of time. I personally don't recommend practices do a rebill unless they are positive the original claim was not received and/or processed - duplicates can trigger payer flags for a possible audit.
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Patient information has to be accurate so we always make sure it is correct to avoid denials. For us (we bill a lot of PIP) the most common reason is that the patient did not submit a piece of information to the insurance and we cannot avoid it. As far as something we could avoid, entering the wrong claim # or a name different than what the insurance has on record or mailing the claim to the wrong insurance company would be a reason.
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Without question, after billing for 10 years, incorrect patient/insurance information. And that includes bad data entry!