Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open (Jul 2024)

Revenue Cycle Management: The Art and the Science

  • Rajiv Chandawarkar, MD, MBA,
  • Prakash Nadkarni, MD,
  • Elizabeth Barmash, MD,
  • Stephany Thomas,
  • Allison Capek, PAC,
  • Kathleen Casey, PAC,
  • Freddy Carradero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/GOX.0000000000005756
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. e5756

Abstract

Read online

Summary:. Simply working hard is not enough to maintain a profitable clinical practice. Prompt and complete payment for services is just as critical. Revenue cycle management (RCM) tracks the payment process from patient scheduling through treatment, coding, billing, and reimbursement. Even though reimbursement rates for service codes are preset, and the service is documented, this apparently straightforward process is complicated by insurance payors, negotiated contracts, coding requirements, compliance regulators, and an ever-changing reimbursement environment. Not typically trained in RCM, physicians struggle with its demands of timeliness, accuracy, paperwork, and the constant scrutiny for underpayment or unfulfilled reimbursements. Consequently, they often relent to the pressures and simply accept the decreased reimbursements as “cost of doing business” or else relegate RCM to others on the team. In either case, they leave significant amounts of money on the table. Using published work in health care and other allied sectors, we present a systematic method to understand and improve RCM processes. It also creates a strong partnership between clinicians and their administrative counterparts. Optimizing RCM improves patient experience, reduces the time between submission of claims and payment, eliminates fraud at both the coding and patient levels, and increases cash flow, all of which create a financially stable clinical practice.