Audit your top compliance risk area
Healthcare Auditing Weekly, September 23, 2003
Use a "finders and fixers" plan to review and correct your organization's biggest compliance issues. After performing your audit, help staff members identify their problem areas, then show each worker how you uncovered them and how they can prevent them.
The list below is a starting point for some of the key areas to audit internally:
- All areas of risk as identified in the Office of Inspector General (OIG) work plan
- The UB-92 and chargemaster for new codes, old codes, and deleted codes Review your denial management process-find out whether back-end fixes are being made
- Review billing of pass-though items, especially from 2001 to 2002
- Review units of service reporting, especially for drugs; determine whether rebilling opportunities exist
- Review the charge capture process in the emergency department, as well as other departments
- Audit modifier usage, especially -25, -52, 59, 72, and 74
- Check evaluation and management guidelines created and the distribution of code levels
For more on auditing your biggest compliance issues, order the book "Compliance Troubleshooter: Tackling the Top 10 Compliance Challenges." This book features information on the False Claims Act, outlier payments, quality of care, economic and traditional economic credentialing criteria, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA), nonphysician practitioners, billing and documentation, outpatient prospective payment system, the Stark physician self-referral law, and inpatient compliance issues. Click here for more information or to order.
Related Products
Most Popular
- Articles
-
- Q/A: Volume requirement for reporting hydration services
- Featured blog post: Nurses face felony charges after reporting physician to the Texas Medical Board
- Catch up on what's new with injections and infusions
- HIPAA Q&A: Level of encryption needed for email
- Identify potential Medicaid RAC target areas
- Topic: CMS, OESS post new security compliance review information, checklist
- Capturing all necessary codes for IUD insertion and removal can be challenging
- What does case-mix index mean to you?
- OB services: Coding inside and outside of the package
- QA:Coding multiple initial infusions
- E-mailed
-
- Q/A: Volume requirement for reporting hydration services
- Featured blog post: Nurses face felony charges after reporting physician to the Texas Medical Board
- HIPAA Q&A: Level of encryption needed for email
- CMS has reformulated payments for some bilateral procedures
- Q&A: Follow CMS' coding guidelines when using modifier -25
- What does case-mix index mean to you?
- Catch up on what's new with injections and infusions
- New conflicts of interest create new challenges
- Q/A. One injection code or two?
- Cohesive History and Physical Requirements
- Searched
