Front Desk Support
Front Desk And Back Office In A Medical Office
What happens when one component is missing or falls short in performance are essential to controlling your revenue cycle.
															Best Practices
For Front Desk And Back Office In A Medical Office
Essential Tasks Performed By Front Desk
Scheduling
Major tasks of the front desk include patient scheduling, insurance eligibility and authorization, as well as collecting payments, such as co-pays, deductibles and other balances due, up front.
Patients should be scheduled in a manner that promotes sufficient provider time for each visit, with short waiting times. Long waits as well as limited access to care can put a practice in jeopardy as patients seek care elsewhere. This can also cause problems with patients seeking care from out-of-network providers by reducing care coordination between the primary physician and other providers.
															Use Our Easy-To-Use Reporting Tool and See The Bigger Picture
Insurance
Insurance verification and pre-authorization
As the ‘face’ of the practice, front desk greets patients and verifies insurance information with each visit. Having some “face time” with patients allows them to express concerns and received explanations and recommendations from the doctor.
A recent survey found that while 79 percent of practices verified insurance information at an initial visit. Only 25 percent of those verified coverage on subsequent visits.
In addition, according to the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA), missing or incorrect insurance information were among the top five reasons for denied claims.
Payers are also increasingly asking providers to submit prior authorization forms up front prior to providing services or treatment. Doing so beforehand can reduce denied claims and headaches for your back-end staff.
															Front-end verification can therefore make the back-end’s job easier by reducing the chance of denials up front.
Staff should be asking patients the following:
- Is insurance registration information accurate and up to date?
 - Is this patient covered on the plan?
 - Are there other insurance plans covering the patient?
 - Are there a maximum number of allowable visits?
 - What is the patient’s liability of the total costs?
 
															Upfront collections from patients
Spending more “face time” with patients by the front desk or reception also gives them a better chance to collect monies owed up front, also known as “point of service” collections.” The front desk shouldn’t limit collecting to just co-pays for that particular visit but any other amounts already owed. Higher-deductible plans mean more money due form patients, so collecting balances due or other costs at the time of service can mean an easier time collecting payments due by your back office’s A/R department.
Back office
A/R and collections
															
															Follow-up on denials
Get feedback from patients and other employees
How can each component’s performance of be measured and improved?
															
															Communication is key to success
Paartnering
How can partnering with a medical billing service help your revenue cycle?
- Turning your billing tasks over to the professionals can help free up medical office staff for more patient-centered tasks.
 - We can work with all practice management software.
 - Improved documentation accuracy prior to claim submission with the process being handled by certified experienced coders and billers. Accurate, timely submissions mean fewer denials caused by staff often distracted by other office and patient-related duties.
 - Faster follow-up within resubmission deadlines on any claims that may be denied mean a better chance of still capturing reimbursement.
 - Fewer denied claims will result in higher reimbursement rates, which improves the bottom line of your revenue cycle.