Reducing the Compliance Burden

As healthcare payment models evolve, it’s more important than ever to protect your revenue. Yet the number of audits—recovery, government and commercial—continues to rise. The effects of these audits have both financial and human capital implications.

In its semiannual report to congress, the HHS OIG reported that $3.35 billion was recovered in 2015. The first half of the year saw $1.8 billion in take-backs. Compare that to the first half of 2016 where $2.77 billion was recovered. This means that in just the first half of this year, the government has recovered nearly the full amount recovered for all of 2015.

As if that weren’t enough to keep providers awake at night, these audits are requiring significant human capital investments. The time and expertise required to manage audits and appeal processes have become a real burden.

How are providers to overcome this challenge? Data.

“With so much effort expended on audits, how can providers reap a return on their human capital investment? The answer lies in data,” said Dawn Crump, vice president of audit management solutions at CIOX Health, in an article for Health Data Management. 

Data—and the ability to analyze that data—is crucial to reducing the financial impact of audits and streamline the workflows and manual processes associated with those audits. Additionally, predicting audits and proactively addressing revenue cycle red flags—rather than reacting to audits—is essential.

In a recent webinar, Ed Reyes, senior compliance auditor from Sutter Health discussed how he has leveraged his data to improve compliance efficiency and proactively prepare for audits.

With self-service analytics, Reyes and his team proactively monitor audit risk, pinpoint the root causes of audits and boost efficiency by streamlining audits and appeals across the organization. “Our department needed to mature our data analytics process from a risk perspective,” said Reyes. “Having the ability to aggregate, analyze and assess data has provided tremendous opportunity.”

Analytics enable Sutter and many others to improve their compliance efforts by:

  • Proactively identifying audit target areas to reduce take-backs
  • Mitigating audit risk and uncovering opportunities to improve coding and documentation
  • Automating the audit and appeal process to increase compliance efficiency
  • Improving appeal success by managing appeal workflows, organizing documentation, and managing deadlines
  • Maximizing compliance resources and pinpointing claims likely to result in take-backs
  • Comparing compliance performance with benchmarking data
  • Standardizing compliance through a centralized analytics platform

Data must be actionable to successfully manage compliance efforts. With data analytics, you can regain power—as you reduce both the financial impact and the human capital expense in compliance.

Learn more about MedeAnalytics compliance capabilities and watch the webinar recording to learn more about Sutter Health and how they use data analytics to mitigate risk and protect revenue. 

Posted in

MedeAnalytics

MedeAnalytics is a leader in healthcare analytics, providing innovative solutions that enable measurable impact for healthcare payers and providers. With the most advanced data orchestration in healthcare, payers and providers count on us to deliver actionable insights that improve financial, operational, and clinical outcomes. To date, we’ve helped uncover millions of dollars in savings annually.

Leave a Comment





Get our take on industry trends

Why Unconventional Businesses Will Find Success in Healthcare: It’s the Data

January 7, 2020

It seems everyone is moving into healthcare. It’s a rapidly growing industry, historically dominated by large, well-embedded companies and organizations, and “pure tech” companies have had difficulty breaking in. That, however, is changing.

Read on...

Data and Social Determinants of Health

December 19, 2019

By Scott Hampel – I think a lot–and I’m not the only one–about how we can improve the ways we pull information from data. Data on its own is inert: just waiting to be understood and then used. And that’s a major challenge for many organizations. Data is often trapped in different applications with no easy or convenient way to extract it.

Read on...

Why Social Determinants Need Analytics for Success

December 10, 2019

Many challenges face healthcare’s underserved. There are issues with food, housing, reliable transportation, steady employment and more. Each contributes to and is one element of social determinants of health (SDH). In communities around the world, public and private organizations are taking steps to address SDH-related issues and challenges that negatively impact healthcare.

Read on...

Healthcare Organizations Recognize Importance of AI for Reporting

November 21, 2019

Healthcare providers continue to recognize the value of using AI in reporting operations throughout the organization. AI has many strengths when applied to the healthcare industry:

Read on...