Title: Preparing for RAC? Strengthen Your Denials Management Process
1Preparing for RAC? Strengthen Your Denials
Management Process
December 19, 2008
Practical, Innovative, Medical Management
Solutions
2PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Goal
- Develop a proactive attack plan to prevent
- financial risk for the organization
- Assemble a RAC Taskforce
- Interdisciplinary approach with core players
- Utilization Review
- Medical Records
- Risk and Outcomes Director
- Patient Financial Services Director
- Information Technology Representative
- Physician Representative (in-house or contracted)
-
3PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Determining the Action Plan
- Establish line of authority for hospital wide RAC
program - Use existing data to analyze/identify denial
drivers - Perform in-house audits and determine hospital
wide and system weaknesses - Establish process improvement plans
- Develop an interdepartmental tracking system
4PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- In-House Physician Advisors
- PROS
- Decrease hospital expense
- No contingency fees
- Existing internal peer relationships
- CONS
- Increases existing physicians work load
- Physician often not be specialized in denials
management - Difficulty persuading others to embrace practice
improvements - Limited ability to produce valuable educational
reports and denial tracking reports
5PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Results Achieved Denials Outsourcing
-
- FYE 2005
- - 29.54 of Total Cost denied
- - 21.00 overturned after in-house appeal
- FYE 2006
- - 27.53 of Total Cost denied
- - 44.90 recovered utilizing physician appeal
- Summary
- Significant Denials Decrease
- - 19.50 is the average recovery prior to
program launch - - 29.00 is the sustained recoveries since 2006
6PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Demonstration Project RAC Statistics
- 32 medical necessity denials
- 42 incorrect coding denials
- 9 insufficient clinical
- 88 inpatient
- 11 appealed
- 5 overturned
- 42 of hospitals had no denials issued
7PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Denials Increasing from Numerous Sources
- CMS Denials
- RAC Denials
- Emergence of Medicare Never Events Denials
- Increased Denials
- Medicaid MCOs
- FFS Medicaid
- Commercial Payors
- Use RAC Preparations as Catalyst to Revamp your
Denials Management Process
8PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Key Components of an Effective Denials Strategy
- Primary Strategy - Proactive Prevention
- Use data to identify key drivers of denials
- Develop processes to mitigate these drivers
thereby further reducing denials - Minimize denials through an effective Concurrent
Review/Case Management and notification process - Supporting Strategy - Denials Recovery
- Aggressive appeals process recover denied dollars
- Close the loop between approval and payment
9PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Primary Strategy Data Management
- Audit existing data to identify opportunities for
improvement including areas of RAC emphasis - Use audit results to develop processes that
address identified areas of opportunity - Enhance existing UM/CM/SW processes based on
audit findings - Develop educational sessions as needed
- Re-assess and monitor impact of newly implemented
processes
10PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Using Data to Identify Opportunities
- Audit charts for each RAC area of emphasis
- Objective chart review using CMS medical
necessity criteria (InterQual) - Subjective chart review using physician medical
judgment - Data capture and analysis of denial variables
- Analyze audited data and existing denials data
- Diagnosis
- Physician
- Denial type
- Delay reason
11PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
Denials Management Tracking and Audit Application
12PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Building Processes to Minimize Denials
- Obtain buy in from key stake holders to improve
chances of success - - Physicians, nursing, UM, IT
- Prioritize process improvement to maximize
returns - Select improvements with highest success rate
- - Broadest impact across all payor types
- - Simple implementation
- Primarily systems enhancements
- Minimal resource allocation
- - Enhance and strengthen existing processes
13PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Building Processes to Minimize Denials
- Examples of Process Improvement Activities
- Short stay denials
- RAC emphasis
- UM/CM/SW process enhancements
- - Improve communications with payors
- Education
- - Use data to identify educational activities for
staff - - Employ external resources as needed
14PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Short Stay Denials
- Case manager assigned to ER to review admissions
for select diagnosis based on audit results - Consult done in ER when possible prior to
admission - Consider implementing rapid chest pain protocol
- Educate ER staff on admissions criteria for
commonly denied diagnosis
15PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- UM/CM Process Enhancements
- Hold carriers to timely denial notification by
denial log - Use log to eliminate denials for no clinical and
to drive peer-to-peer process - Use denials audit results to focus case
management and discharge planning activities - Work closely with payor case manager on complex
cases
16PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Education
- Use denial audit results to guide educational
initiatives - Physician and UM/CM/SW educational sessions based
on frequently denied diagnosis - Hospitalist groups respond positively with
impressive end results - Individual physician improvements more difficult
to accomplish
17PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Secondary Strategy Denials Recovery
- Ensure processes are in place to maximize denied
claims - recovery
- Develop strong appeals capabilities
- Ensure aggressive payment follow through
- Ensure strong data capture and reporting
capabilities - Use data to identify areas of opportunity to
enhance the entire process - Close the loop on denials prevention CQI
18PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Advantages of Physician Led Appeals
- Recognized as clinical expert vs other clinicians
- Able to challenge payers and provide clinical
conviction - Peer-to-peer review shown to prevent 15 of
denials - RAC auditors must provide a physician for
peer-to-peer when requested - Select payors now require a physicians name on
the appeal
19PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- The Appeal Process
- Types of Appeals
- Informal peer-to-peer as soon as denial is
identified, 1 day of denial - First Level appeal with medical records, 15 to
180 days depending on payor - Second Level for some payors typically 30 to 90
days - Third Level for some payors typically 30 to
90 days - External appeals - usually through the MIA or CMS
- Complexity of Appeals
- Multiple payors ? Multiple rules
- Multiple levels ? Multiple time frames
- Multiple regulators
-
20PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
A Staged Approach to Appeals Management
Automation and Data Management
Research Approval Strategy Development
MCO Submission
Denial Mitigation through Education
MCO Process Management
Appeal Response Determination Process
Payment Management Process
Denial Process Intervention Reporting
21PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Internal Appeals Process
- A strong appeals process is critical in
developing a successful denials mitigation
program. - The components of a successful appeals process
include - - Identifying the denial as soon as possible
- - Collecting medical necessity information
- - Generating the appeals letter
- - Managing the payors appeal response process
- - Appeal response determination process
- - Payment management process
- - Data management, reporting and performance
improvement
22 PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Identifying the Denial
- The EOB is the gold standard and should be cross
referenced with other denial sources to ensure
denials are correctly identified - For carriers with a short appeal response
timeframe the denial must be identified before
the EOB is received - Most denials are identified through the denial
letter sent from the payor or phone calls - Payors daily log is a good source for
identifying denials
23 PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- The Medical Necessity Argument
- Critical components necessary for success
- Timeliness is critical and requires a complex and
efficient process to meet the varying
requirements of numerous insurers. - Medical necessity knowledge is key to a
successful appeal and often requires the
leadership and input of a UM trained physician - Intimate knowledge of criteria sets (Milliman,
InterQual etc.)
24PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Managing The Appeal Response Process
- All appeals documentation must be
- - Sent by certified mail
- - Tracking option activated
- - Follow-up calls to facilitate return of late
appeals - Payors fail to return 35 of initial appeals for
a variety of reasons - Depending on the insurer, only 35 to 60 of
appeals are completed within the required 30 days - Process difficult to monitor without an appeals
tracking system
25PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Once an appeal response is received a decision
must be made on next steps - If approved, clearly payment must be pursued
- If denied
- Should a Level 2 or 3 be pursued?
- Should the account be closed?
- Should an external review be filed?
- Between 10 to 25 of Level 2 or 3 appeals can be
overturned - Significant medical necessity knowledge is needed
to assess which appeals warrant a Level 2 or 3
26PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- From Approval to Payment
- Assign accountability for payment follow-up
- Close the loop between approval and payment
- Follow-up with payor to ensure 100 of approvals
are paid - Pay close attention to TPAs
27 PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Data Management, Reporting and Performance
Improvement - Provide monthly results to key players
- Status reports provide updates on the appeals
process - Actionable reports drive the CQI process
- Monitor impact of process improvement activities
with tracking and trending of data
28PREPARING FOR RAC ATTACK
- Summary
- Preparation is key
- Minimize operational disruptions its just
another denial - RAC demonstration 42 of facilities had zero
denials - Use the opportunity to enhance your denials
management process and come out ahead - Reporting and continuous process improvement are
critical
29Case Management Covenants, LLC
- Case Management Covenants is a Maryland based
- healthcare consulting services company
specializing in - denial management, appeal management and RAC
audit - preparation services.
- Key Staff Contacts
- President Olakunle Olaniyan, M.D. still a
practicing physician and former managed care VP
and CMO. - Chief Operations Officer Iskla Chris Brown -
nurse executive with many years experience in
healthcare accreditation organizations,
commercial and government health insurance
entities. - Vice President, Business Development Doug Allen
a strategic planning professional with
significant experience in both the commercial and
non-profit healthcare sectors. - 410-715-4913