Outsource
Medical Billing Services |
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Should
a physician outsource medical billing services?
This
is a very difficult decision for any physician
and partially boils down to this or her own
personal ideology and comfort level. Hospital-based
physicians will almost always be better off
outsourcing because of the office related expenses
that they would not otherwise incur. As the
owner of medical billing service you may think
I'm naturally biased towards outsourcing. I
can assure you that this is not the case. Physicians
who are overly controlling, uncomfortable or
mis-trusting toward billing services are nearly
impossible to administer. I don't want anything
to do with those types of physicians but I completely
respect and understand their point of view.
Setting all ideology aside I would like to delve
into the pros and cons of this difficult and
complicated decision.
1.
I am a physician who is very interested in the
business aspect of medicine and I do not mind
spending my valuable time managing the medical
billing aspect of my practice.
Clearly,
the best way to do your billing is to do it
personally. Obviously, doing it yourself is
probably not an option but if you're willing
to spend the time and have the interest I would
recommend that you do your own billing. Keep
in mind that most billing service owners and
certainly our employees have limited medical
backgrounds. Physicians who study CPT, regularly
attend billing seminars and keep up to date
on industry changes are the ultimate medical
billing gurus in my view.
2.
I am a physician who has absolutely no time
or interest in the medical billing aspect of
my practice. I am completely reliant upon my
office manager and billing staff.
Unfortunately,
most physicians are in this position. Even if
they were interested in keeping up with all
the changes and elements of medical billing
the practical reality is that there is absolutely
no time. Let's face it; time is your most valuable
asset. It's sort of like mowing your own lawn.
You'd be way better off financially seeing patients
for three hours on Saturday morning. I believe
the following information will dramatically
help with your decision to outsource your billing
or continue to do it yourself and with future
decisions in the ever-changing business aspect
of medicine.
The
pros and cons of outsourcing your medical billing
services.
I
would like to preface this article with a couple
of obvious but important points. If you have
a system of controls, keep an open mind about
the competence of your office manager, you've
got an excellent computer system, proper information
systems and your office is doing a superb job
at collecting your money, then by all means
do not make any changes. Conversely if you're
planning to outsource your billing make sure
you hire quality firm. I'll spend some time
at the end of this article discussing this further.
Most leading experts
agree that it costs about 4.5% of net collections
to perform the billing function within a physician's
office. Incidentally, this is close to my actual
cost as well.
Theoretically,
a billing service should be able collect more
money than a physician's office because it is
our core competency. The question is how much
more? This is why I focus on how to choose a
billing service at the end of this article.
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