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Experts Weigh in on The Future of Rev Cycle Payer Audits

Analysis  |  By Amanda Norris  
   July 11, 2023

Payer scrutiny won't be letting up anytime soon, in fact, expect it to intensify.

The COVID-19 public health emergency has come to an end, which means more audits will be coming your way.

To prepare for a potential increase in payer audit activity, especially from CMS, it’s essential for revenue cycle leaders to examine upcoming trends so they can best protect an organizations’ bottom line.

In fact, organizations should expect heavier scrutiny from Medicare risk adjustment data validation (RADV) auditors in the near future, Rose Dunn, chief operating officer of First Class Solutions Inc. in Maryland Heights, Missouri, told NAHRI. “We are definitely going to see an uptick in activity because the RADV auditors have a few years to catch up on,” she said.

Telehealth will be looked at more intensely moving forward, Sandy Giangreco Brown, director of coding and revenue integrity at CliftonLarsonAllen LLP in Minneapolis, Minnesota, said in the same article. “I’ve done a fair number of audits for telehealth over the last three years and identified some things,” she says. Now that the public health emergency is over, leaders need to determine what will and won’t be allowed by different payers, she said.

To help with telehealth policy compliance and avoid potential payer audits, Brown suggests conducting internal audits as soon as possible. “I think we’re going to have to do our due diligence and make sure we are following who is allowing what,” she says.

Telehealth audits will likely focus on whether provider organizations were billing appropriately based on what rule was in place at that point in time, Dunn says. Auditors will look for documentation issues, as well as whether it was appropriate to treat a patient via telehealth. “I think this area is ripe for audits,” she says.

Going forward, Dunn emphasized to NAHRI that the need for national rules that preempt state requirements, especially for providers who are located near state borders.

Providers should also expect heavier scrutiny on reimbursement for COVID-19 claims, according to Brown. “We’ve seen some really sick patients who had COVID-19 on top of comorbidities,” she says. “And those are some long lengths of stay with very complex patients.”

Responding to COVID-19 audit requests shouldn’t be different than responding to any other audit requests based on diagnosis, such as sepsis or malnutrition, Brown noted to NAHRI. As long as the documentation is thorough and the audit response is complete and timely, there shouldn’t be any surprises.

Amanda Norris is the Director of Content for HealthLeaders.


KEY TAKEAWAYS

To prepare for a potential increase in payer audit activity, it’s essential for revenue cycle leaders to examine upcoming trends so they can best protect an organizations’ bottom line.


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