Overview
The Denials and Insurance Follow-Up Specialist is responsible for managing denied claims, following up with insurance payers, and ensuring accurate reimbursement for hospital services. This role is critical to optimizing revenue recovery by investigating, correcting, and resubmitting denied claims while working closely with the Revenue Cycle Management (RCM) team to identify and address patterns in denials. The ideal candidate will have strong analytical skills and experience in medical billing and insurance follow-up, with a focus on reducing accounts receivable days and improving cash flow.
Responsibilities
Denial Management:Review and analyze denied claims to determine the cause of denial, coordinating with coding, billing, and clinical staff as needed to gather additional information or correct claim errors.Prepare and submit appeal documentation for denied claims, following up with payers to ensure resolution within timely filing limits.Track, document, and report denial reasons, resolution actions, and outcomes, identifying patterns and trends that require additional training or process improvements.Insurance Follow-Up:Conduct timely follow-up on unpaid claims with insurance companies, ensuring that all accounts are resolved or escalated within the hospital’s standard timeframes.Verify insurance eligibility and benefits as needed to validate patient coverage and support claims correction or resubmission.Communicate effectively with insurance representatives to resolve outstanding issues, confirm payment status, and clarify discrepancies in payments or coverage.Account Reconciliation and Resolution:Reconcile accounts to ensure payments align with expected reimbursement, identifying and addressing underpayments, overpayments, or unapplied funds.Work closely with the RCM team to adjust accounts, apply payments accurately, and resolve balances on patient accounts after denial or underpayment resolution.Reporting and Analysis:Generate and analyze regular reports on denial rates, follow-up activities, and recovery outcomes to provide insights into common denial reasons and support improvement strategies.Collaborate with management to develop and implement best practices for denial prevention, appeal success rates, and insurance follow-up efficiency.Qualifications
Qualifications:DCH Standards:
WORKING CONDITIONS
Physical presence onsite is essential with possibility of hybrid work schedule. Hearing and vision must be normal or corrected to within normal range. Able to perform the duties with or without reasonable accommodation.
Valid driver’s license and automobile liability insurance. Very good interpersonal communication and customer service skills required.
Physical: Medium work – Exerting 20 – 50 pounds of force occasionally, and/or 10 to 25 pounds of force frequently, and/or greater than negligible up to 10 pounds of force constantly to more objects. Physical Demand requirements are in excess of those for Light Work. Good manual and finger dexterity. Ability to tolerate prolonged periods of sitting. Some light driving required.
Psychological: Contact with Others, Deal with external customers/clients, sometimes dealing with unpleasant people, occasionally coordinating letters/memos, working with work groups or as a Team constantly/consistently.