Close

Articles Posted in Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs)

Updated:

Can We Settle This Audit Overpayment?

When a healthcare provider’s claims are reviewed or audited by a payor or insurance plan, the payor often asserts various deficiencies in the provider’s claims or documentation. The payor then alleges that the provider has received an overpayment for those claims and demands the provider pay it back. Appealing claims…

Updated:

Medicare Audits: What a Provider Can Expect

Medicare claims audits can be a complex and frustrating experience for healthcare providers who choose to accept Medicare. If claims are denied during the audit – and they nearly always are – the appeal process can itself take months or years and contains many strategic decisions for a provider to…

Updated:

RAC to the Future: AI in Healthcare Audits

Healthcare providers are starting to see the first claims audits based on analysis and determinations made by artificial intelligence (AI). Although the technology is new, many of the issues remain the same. Especially where the companies that develop AI-based audit tools sell these tools and services to commercial insurance companies,…

Updated:

Appealing Medicare Audits: What to Know

When a Medicare contractor denies a claim, the provider generally has a right to a lengthy appeal process, which is both complex and contains many strict deadlines. In some circumstances, claims can take years to fully progress through the appeals process. However, some limited cases may be eligible for settlement…

Updated:

Why It’s Important to Appeal that Medicare Audit

There are many types of Medicare audits, conducted by many types of Medicare contractors: Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs), Unified Program Integrity Contractors (UPICs), the Supplemental Medical Review Contractor (SMRC), and others. Sometimes, where a Medicare audit results in a relatively small overpayment demand, a healthcare provider…

Updated:

A Primer on Appealing Medicare Audits

When a Medicare contractor denies a claim, whether as part of a pre-pay, post-pay, Targeted Probe and Educate, statistically extrapolated, or other type of review or audit, the provider generally has a right to a lengthy appeal process. The process is complex and often relies on strictly enforced deadlines and…

Updated:

More Than One Medicare Audit? Better Check for Overlap.

A phenomenon in Medicare audits that is gaining increased visibility is Medicare contractors “double-dipping” from providers by using overlapping audits. Once viewed as isolated aberrations, it is becoming increasingly common for Medicare contractors to audit and deny the same claims twice in different audits. This practice generally leads to overpayment…

Updated:

A Primer on Medicare Statistical Extrapolations

Medicare audits often include a statistical extrapolation to estimate the full extent of an alleged overpayment. Medicare contractors are authorized to review the merits of only a small “sample” of submitted claims and extrapolate the results of that review to a large “universe” of claims to estimate the overpayment amount.…

Updated:

Medicare Audits Return in Full Force

After a hiatus during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Medicare audits have resumed in full force. Providers and suppliers should be prepared to respond to audits that were paused during the pandemic, the initiation of new audits, and audits relating to the various pandemic relief programs. In early 2020,…

Updated:

HHS Expands Settlement Conference Facilitation

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) recently announced the annual expansion of the Settlement Conference Facilitation (SCF) program. SCF is an alternate dispute resolution mechanism used to resolve Medicare claims appeals. However, because SCF is meant to help reduce the appeal backlog, only appeals filed before a certain…

Call Us