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Ways to deal with "Usual and
Customary" payment reductions
How many times have you received
reduced payment on claims for charges that are "above usual and
customary"? Many insurance companies get their payment data from
Ingenix and use the 80th percentile to determine how
much they will pay for a specific CPT code. Anything billed over
that amount is denied as above usual and customary. Our company
always fights these denials. When the usual and customary
reduction occurs on claims from insurance companies that my
clients do not participate with, we bill the balance to the
patient and one of two outcomes usually occurs: (1) the patient
gets the insurance company to pay the difference, or (2) the
patient pays the difference. You heard it right…we get paid 100%
of the claim billed to non-par insurance carriers…a novel idea
and a very strong argument for not signing up to participate
with every insurance carrier who throws a contract in front of
you. We frequently get requests from insurers to accept a
reduced fee in exchange for prompt payment. The requests go
something like this:
Dear Provider,
Although the usual and
customary charge for the procedure you performed is $1,200, we
will agree to pay $1,494 of your $2,100 charge if you sign
below. You will agree not to balance bill the patient any
difference, and we will pay you in 48 hours.
--Your Friend, The Insurance
Company
We never sign this, and we get the
full fee for our doctors every time. On one rare occasion, this
request was sent directly to our client’s office, and the new
office manager signed the agreement. The insurance carrier paid
nothing because the patient had a high deductible. The patient
did not pay the bill, and the claim went to collections. After
the collection agency reported the patient to a credit bureau,
the patient paid the reduced fee (which the office manager
agreed to), and our client received that amount less the
collection agency fee. What do you think would have happened if
the office manager had not signed the agreement?
Unlike traditional claims, workers’
compensation (WC) claims are governed by different laws, and the
provider (by law) may not balance bill the patient. In the
Northeast United States, only New Hampshire and New Jersey do
not have WC fee schedules. A fee schedule is a pre-determined
fee that encompasses all CPT codes and is approved by the state.
If you do business in a state that does not have a WC fee
schedule, read on about a ruling in New Hampshire that questions
Ingenix validation process and rules that Liberty Mutual’s
reduction for “usual and customary” is arbitrary.
In New Hampshire, RSA 281-A:24
governs Payment for Reasonable Value of Service. The statute
states in part:
281-A:24 Payment for Reasonable
Value of Services.
I. The employer or the employer's
insurance carrier shall pay the full amount of the health care
provider's bill unless the employer or employer's insurance
carrier can show just cause as to why the total amount should
not be paid. Effort shall be made to resolve any dispute as to
the reasonable value of service prior to applying to the
commissioner for resolution of such a dispute.
To see the full RSA online go to:
http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/rsa/html/XXIII/281-A/281-A-24.htm
Instead of sending a request for
reduced payment like the previous example, many WC payors just
pay a reduced fee. If the charge submitted by the provider is
above the "usual and customary" fee determined by the WC payor,
the difference is denied. We recently appealed several WC claims
that had been denied as "above usual and customary". The
State of New Hampshire Department of Labor concluded that the 80th
percentile used by Liberty Mutual was arbitrary and that the
data supplied to them by Ingenix was potentially flawed.
On November 7, 2005 the State of
New Hampshire Department of Labor rendered a decision on an
appeal for the denial of claims for above "usual and customary".
The appeal submitted on behalf of several ProClaim (medical
billing service) clients was for nine claims totaling over
$30,000. These claims had been reduced significantly by Liberty
Mutual. Of the nine cases, eight involved just the cost of the
claim, and one case involved a coding issue in addition to the
cost. The decision stated, “Based on the evidence
presented, it is determined that Liberty Mutual Insurance
Company has failed to meet its burden of proof that the charges
billed are unreasonable.”
The findings of fact revealed that
Liberty Mutual Insurance Company has contracted with Ingenix of
Salt Lake City, Utah for a proprietary payment system that
calculates statistical data provided by Ingenix. The system
calculates the mean, median and mode, meaning the average,
middle and most commonly occurring charge for an identical
medical procedure within a set geographic boundary called a
Geozip. Liberty Mutual has the ability to pay charges based on a
percentile of the various amounts billed, and Liberty Mutual has
chosen to pay claims based on the 80th percentile.
A witness from Ingenix stated that
they have contracts with various third party payors (insurance
companies) for raw data collection for non-discounted fee for
services for professional services sorted by insurance code. The
data is divided into geographic areas. Ingenix has a
proprietary validation process. They collect over one billion
charges in the course of a year nationwide. The witness
testified that Cigna/Healthsource is a contributor of data and
that Anthem Blue Cross/Blue Shield is not. No Medicare or
Medicaid data is provided to the database. The witness could not
say they were receiving charges for professional services from
every provider performing a particular procedure within the
Geozip area. Furthermore, although the validation process
requests and requires the non-discounted fee for services, the
witness was able to offer no evidence that the providers were
not submitting to Cigna/Healthsource their contract rate rather
than their full charge. It was unknown what type of validation
process and/or screening the third party payor may perform
before sending it to Ingenix.
There was additional discussion
about the zip code data. It was noted that as a billing company,
ProClaim uses its own address on the claims for payment
purposes, thus making the zip codes used by Ingenix incorrect by
not being where the actual procedure took place. ProClaim has
clients all over New Hampshire, including Berlin, Nashua,
Portsmouth, Concord, Woodsville, Plymouth, Lebanon, New London,
Claremont and other towns throughout the state.
Another witness testified that the
80th percentile used by Liberty Mutual seemed to be
arbitrary and provided no specific reason as to why Liberty
Mutual chose that rate. The fee schedules used by my clients are
purchased each year, and the providers each chose to set those
fees at the 90th percentile (rather than the next
lowest percentile of 75%) from a PMIC publication called
Medical Fees in the United States. It was noted that the
Ingenix fee schedule and the PMIC fee schedule were similar. It
was noted that Liberty Mutual adheres strictly to the codes and
reimbursement amount provided by Ingenix. However, in rare
cases, they appear to consider arguments by physicians who have
higher billing rates due to their skill level, the difficulty of
the operation, complications, etc. There is no real appeal
procedure for providers to argue for full payment of their
services, besides a Labor Department hearing.
ProClaim’s clients whose cases were
being reviewed were established surgeons. One was a general
orthopedic surgeon with 18 years experience, and another
specialized in knee surgery performing over 100 procedures in
question per year, both believing that their experience and
specialized service deserved a higher charge. I argued that any
reduction in my clients’ bill should be disallowed and that the
prices charged for the specific cases are reasonable based on
the experience of the physicians and the fact that there is no
fee schedule or set price within the statute.
The Department of Labor made the
following findings.
1.
Ingenix was not prepared to provide or did not provide the
sources of their data for use in New Hampshire.
2. It
was not known whether all providers performing a particular
orthopedic procedure in the state were represented in the data.
3. It
was not known if the various providers had been classified in
the correct geozip area for comparisons.
4. The
division of the state into only two geozip categories was too
broad of a comparison.
5.
Liberty Mutual Insurance Company’s choice to pay in the 80th
percentile was an arbitrary choice.
6. The
“validation process” is flawed. It appears that Ingenix is
dropping the lowest charges and highest charges from review.
This narrowing of the measurement area may create a downward
bias in the statistical analysis.
The Department of Labor ordered
Liberty Mutual Insurance Company to pay the difference between
what they already paid and the charges submitted by ProClaim on
behalf of their clients. It is important to note that the fees
ProClaim’s clients used were not an arbitrary number such as a
multiple of Medicare allowables. It is important to set your
fees using a method that will hold up under scrutiny.
For more information, contact Jon
Feins, President of ProClaim Inc., at jon@proclaiminc.com. |