| HOME |
| SERVICES |
| PRODUCTS |
| EVENTS |
| LINKS |
| FINANCING |
| ECS INFO |
| USER INFO |
| PC INFO |
| GEN INFO |
| ARTICLES |
| JOB LISTINGS |
| SUPPLIERS |
| VENDORS |
| DOWNLOADS |
| SURVEY |
| PRIVACY |
| EMAIL US |
ELECTRONIC BILLING INFORMATION
There are many alternatives for
offices wanting
to do Electronic Claims Submission (ECS)
today. One that has come to our attention is superior
in many ways.
SETUP -
A one time fee of $150 is the total cost.
There is no yearly maintenance
fee.
SUPPORT
- Is through e-mail and
is at no charge.
CLAIM COST -
Various rates apply as follows:
$25 per month
for unlimited claims to
Medicare, Medicaid, Champus and BCBS
(in most states)
$0.25 per claim
for all other carriers that accept ECS
$0.45 per claim
for paper claims
$0.49 per statement
- you choose from 6 different
statement styles
This includes a laser printed statement,
mapped to your print capture, mailed to your
patient address with a return envelope included with your
mailing address on it. Some statements have a Visa/MC authorization
on them to help promote easy prompt payment.
This company can get you billing quickly
and correctly at a low cost. They accept HCFA-1500 and UB-92 forms as
needed and are a large nationwide company. The only requirement is
that you must have
Internet access in your office and be somewhat
knowledgeable with it.
For more information contact
our office by
phone or fax with your practice and personal
contact information.
* * * * * * * *
We also have another clearinghouse that offers
additional services such as: HMO/PPO Authorizations
& Referrals, Check Guarantee, Credit
Card Transactions at 1.51%, and Medicaid
Verifications. With only a $150 start up fee.
A third clearinghouse has no startup fee and offers a
reasonable claims fee, so you can get started and see how
it works for you with almost no cost. Call us and let us help
you decide which is best for you.
* * * * * * * *
The following is an article reproduced here
for your information.
Clearinghouse vs. Direct
Some of our customers have
asked which method
is better for them to use - a clearinghouse
or direct to the carrier. Here are several
things to consider:
Direct to the carrier
is probably the least
expensive method if your practice primarily
submits claims to only one carrier. However,
if you submit claims to more than one carrier,
it is probably not the least expensive method.
With the clearinghouse, you only need to
dial into one location. If you choose to
go direct, you will need to dial into each
carrier and/or send paper claims to the rest.
With the clearinghouse, all claims can be
submitted in one transmission. The ease of
simply sending claims to one location cannot
be underestimated. Submitting claims to multiple
insurance carriers requires your staff to
become experts in each of the claims submission
modules that you use. Since each carrier
is unique, someone must be adequately trained
and available to submit your claims or your
practice will not be reimbursed. Claims submission
to a clearinghouse is all done through a
few mouse clicks in the ECLIPSE software
and almost anyone can do it after reading
the on-line user manual, using the help screens
and/or calling our technical support line.
Customers cannot submit claims directly to
NEIC or to the majority of individual commercial
insurance carriers.
Most carriers that
receive claims electronically
cannot edit the claims on-line (meaning at
the time that you actually are transmitting
the claims to them). The clearinghouse can
edit your claims for completeness and validity
to reduce the possibility of a rejected claim
at the same time that you are sending your
files. You will be notified before you sign
off if there are any problems with your claims.
Many carriers have
designated only certain
times when claims can be sent. The clearinghouse
will accept claims whenever you are ready
to send them. Using the clearinghouse reduces your phone
bill. Many carriers will require that you
pay for the telephone expense for your claims
transmissions. The clearinghouse supports
a toll-free line for claims transmissions
(or in the above case, using the Internet).
Telephone expense is often overlooked when
comparing direct transmission to a clearinghouse.
Updates to an insurance carrier's transmission
software are free and transparent when using
the clearinghouse. When using a direct submission
module, updates must take place at the customer's
site and often require a programmer's attention,
which can be very costly ($100 to $325 per
hour). With a clearinghouse, a single confirmation
report is produced for all insurance carriers.
Separate confirmation reports are produced
for each carrier where claims are submitted
directly. Some insurance carriers require special communication
equipment/software. The only piece of equipment
that is required to submit claims to the
clearinghouse is a standard PC modem.
The clearinghouse is a priority to the insurance
carriers because of the claim volumes they
submit. Unless your practice submits insurance claims
to only one carrier and you have a highly
technical staff with little employee turnover,
we recommend that your practice submit your
claims to an electronic claims clearinghouse.