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The Medicare Audit In my earlier three Articles, I described a unique method of procuring new patient referrals from MD's. In this series of Articles I'm going to discuss a relatively new phenomenon in the field of physical healing: The Medicare Audit. If you accept Medicare patients, or if you are considering taking on Medicare patients, you've likely heard a horror story or two of doctors being "Audited" by Medicare. This newsletter will cover the different types of Medicare Audits, and how to go through an Audit and come out the other end relatively unscathed. The key, of course, is preventive medicine on your part. The more you know about this area and the governmental requirements involved, the less susceptible you will be to any adverse effects of a Medicare Audit. Trained by the IRS? There are primarily two main types of Audits: The Pre-Payment Audit and the Post-Payment Audit. The potentially most costly Audit is the Post-Payment Audit. This is where Medicare requests complete and thorough documentation covering a specific period of time. If your documentation does not adequately demonstrate the need for treatment (in the eyes of Medicare, that is), they could "request" that you pay them back what they have already paid you. This, in effect, could conceivably be much worse than the dreaded IRS Audit. And if you do need to "pay them back," they can extract it from other money they owe you, sort of like money you owe the IRS being garnished from your wages, whether you like it or not. The Office of Inspector General So, what are the reasons Medicare Audits are on the increase? Well, most of the reasons are delineated in a study that the Office of the Inspector General, which is a part of the Department of Health and Human Resources, published in June of 2005. This study had the stated objective: "To determine the underlying causes of, and potential ways to reduce, vulnerabilities associated with Medicare payments for chiropractic services." First of all, keep in mind this is a government report. When it speaks of "vulnerabilities associated with Medicare payments for chiropractic services.", it is referring to their perceived weaknesses in their own system, resulting in what they consider too much money being paid out for chiropractic services. In my next Article, I'll get into this study in much more detail, in terms of which services are allowed and which ones aren't. This Article is concerned with one aspect of the government study, Documentation. In 1972, Congress passed a law amending another law which defined chiropractors as "physicians who are eligible for Medicare reimbursement, but only for manual manipulation of the spine to correct a subluxation, or malfunction of the spine." Another Federal regulation further limited Medicare payment to "treatment of subluxations that result in a neuromusculoskeletal condition for which manual manipulation is appropriate treatment." The law also requires that "all services billed to Medicare, including chiropractic manipulations, be medically necessary and supported by documentation." Documenting a Subluxation One of the findings of the above government study was that: "34 percent of chiropractic services were not supported by an evaluation that met the Manual’s (Medicare Carriers Manual) specific requirements for documenting a subluxation. This lack of proper documentation partially explains the increased scrutiny. But, insufficient or incorrect documentation does not necessarily mean that the doctors involved did not perform a correct evaluation, it just means that they didn’t document it well enough. How bad can a post-payment audit be? One of my Sales Reps talked to a doctor a few weeks ago who had to pay back $38,000. We also know plenty of doctors who have not had to pay back one red cent. In the latter case, their letters from Medicare state to the effect, "I am pleased to inform you that all the services that you submitted were allowed, as the documentation supported the services billed." Bottom line: A post-payment audit is a risk that is totally manageable. Document your daily visits correctly and you will not have to worry. And that's where Report Master comes in. The quality of the reports, and their comprehensiveness both being vital in this type of campaign, the next question is how long should it take to produce such reports? Knowing the Medicare Rules The above study, which I will further detail in my next Article in this series, can be found online: CHIROPRACTIC SERVICES IN THE MEDICARE PROGRAM: PAYMENT VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS If you commit to sending high-quality, professional reports to Medicare, chances are very good that you will never have a problem stemming from documentation. If you don't own Report Master yet, check out some of the Testimonials on our web site, to see what others are saying about the Report Master Software. And you can also take the entire system for a Free Test Drive. Report Master takes the work out of the Narrative and SOAP Note writing process, so you'll have more time to do the things you would rather be doing, and still maintain the necessary quality in your reports that Medicare and other providers demand. If there is anything about narratives or Daily SOAP Notes you would like me to talk about, or if you have any questions about the Report Master Chiropractic Report Writing System, write to me directly.
Article Source: http://www.articledirectorylive.com
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