
24/7 Support Across All Specialties
Physician billing excellence is now just a call away! Be it credentialing, charge capturing, coding, or compliance, we offer round-the-clock personalized support to all healthcare specialties, ensuring our clients seamlessly advance through the billing process. Our specialists are available via call and live chat 24/7, whether rain or sunshine, to troubleshoot billing problems for gynecologists, radiologists, neurologists, and hematologists alike. Get expert assistance when and how you want it.
FAQ's
We have curated a framework for streamlined physician billing, leaving ample room for flexibility and customization to cater to our clients' unique needs. We leverage advanced technology to automate repetitive and logic-based tasks like charge entry, claim scrubbing, and progress tracking, simultaneously enhancing the productivity of our workforce and ensuring speed and accuracy in our workflow. Partnering with Medbills means you get affordable, tailored, compliant, and results-driven physician billing services for timely reimbursements and improved cash flow.
It includes several sub-processes like patient eligibility verification, charge capture, medical coding, claims processing, claim filing, denial management, A/R follow-up, patient collections, payment posting, and data analytics.
Outsourcing physician billing services to us is more cost-effective than in-house billing. We only charge 4-6% of the total monthly collections for our full-stack physician billing services. New clients can avail of our promotional 1% rate for the first month of service.
Physician billing is the intricate, comprehensive, and often complex process of collecting insurance payments for the healthcare services rendered to medically insured patients. It is also known as professional billing and is distinct from hospital or institutional billing.
Yes, A physician assistant (PA) can bill a new patient visit. However, he must use his own name and NPI number on the Medicare claim form instead of the physician he assists. This is because Medicare does not accept “incident to” billing if an encounter has not taken place between a new patient and a supervising physician.
