Showing posts with label assistant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label assistant. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Basic Collections Job

This post sponsored by
Common Ground Chiropractic Center.
2927 NE Everett Street, Portland, OR 97232.
503-232-4099 commongroundpdx.com



Gary Shannon here.


Collections Clerk, Accounts Clerk, Billing Clerk


are names for an entry level position for someone with a head for details and figures.
Their idea is that we know where and when every penny owing to the office will come from. This is the job that makes that possible by taking the time to keep good records and send out good communications about what we need paid.

Here is a the job description:

~~~Establishment:

(This is really the boss's job to train you, but you must take this in hand.)
  • Locate and create a working space with room for files and tools
  • Locate old and current service, price and coding lists.
  • Locate all patient and insurance record file caches.
  • Locate all computer billing programs and passwords.

~~~New Patient Accounts:
(For every new patient customer, make a basic account. )

~~~Billing cycle: (shared with others)
(You share some of these duties with the Receptionist, but you see that it's done completely.)
  • Daily, post all charges and payments and reconcile them.
  • Prepare and deposit money to the bank.
  • Locate un-posted charges and post them
  • Produce claim forms and statements regularly* by type
  • Produce recieveable lists regularly* and audit them.
  • File payment and treatment records.

~~~Accounts Audits:
(This part requires organizational and detail-oriented skill:)
  • Create and maintain a tickler/reminder collections system
  • Query unpaid first visit charges after 60 days
  • Query other unpaid insurance charges after 90 days
  • Query unpaid patient charges after 30 days.
  • Query legal and settlement accounts, provide data.
  • Provide what non-payers need to pay the claim., such as notes and bills.
  • After queries, make a tickler card for follow-up.
~~~Accounts Repair:
(This part touches on what an Account Manager will handle.)
  • Locate faulty charges and claims and repair them
  • Locate partially or un-posted payments and repair them
  • Locate partially and unpaid insurance claims, and repair billing
  • Locate long un-collected charges and repair or write off.
  • Back-up computer records relating to you job and use them as needed.

~~~ Backlogs & Special Projects:
(Will vary from office to office and time to time. Examples:)
  • Locate missing pre-authorization needed claims from last year to present
  • Review appointments and sign-in sheets back 52 weeks and see charges posted.
  • Shred the 10 year old patient files, but not children's files.


*"REGULARLY"
Your office account manager (or office manager or owners) sets your audit and account schedule. "Regularly" differs from office to office and account type to account type. I use this schedule:
  • Tickler system: every day
  • Flagged and Buggy Accounts: every three days
  • Personal Accounts: every month.
  • Insurance Accounts: every four to six weeks.
  • Dual Insurance Accounts: every 10 weeks.
  • Attorney Accounts: every three months.
  • Barter Accounts: every four months.

All the best to you and yours.

This post sponsored by
Common Ground Chiropractic Center.
2927 NE Everett Street, Portland, OR 97232.
503-232-4099 commongroundpdx.com



Chiropractic Assistant Training

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The Chiropractic Aide

Gary Shannon here.

I've aided chiropractors since 1985 now. I've learned a few things along the way. It's time for me to share them.

Why The Chiropractic Aide?

"Chiropractic" means "using hands" (from Greek). Rarely using drugs or surgery (the two main tools of the American Medical Doctor), Chiropractic Doctors find and fix physical problems related to the body with hands-on methods. Doctors of Chiropractic have been though years of training, similar to Medical Doctors. They generally know exactly what they need to do to help patient achieve better health and better life.

In all that schooling, though, there are a lot of details about running a fun, effective office that chiropractic colleges do not teach. Thus,

DOCTORS ARE NOT TAUGHT HOW TO:
  • run all the elements of a efficient practice,
  • take on staff legally and efficiently,
  • train and teach staff how to do their jobs,
  • to help staff to work together (the doctor included),
  • to work well with other professionals,
  • repair administrative and personnel problems when they occur.
Doctors are motivated and smart. They generally only need a little training and guidance, then they "get it". These points are not part of the usual doctor curriculum. A lot of doctors do find out this stuff. A lot of it. A lot of them. Not all of them. Not all of it.

The Aide

That's where I come in. I have learned this stuff, through formal training, careful study and decades of experience. Thus I do consulting and contract work here out of Portland, Oregon. Based on my reputation, Chiropractors have contacted me for help and advice with all kinds of situations, big and small, wanting to know "how to" and "what to" and "can you". Then I give them the answers and solutions and techniques that they need.

This blog, then, is the course that chiropractor's didn't get while they were in college. Even chiropractic assistant training and office staff training doesn't generally include this stuff. After a while, I suppose I'll turn this into a text-book or something. For now, though, it'll be a more or less randomly organized set of essays about the details of a well-run office. I'll post the best comments. I'll update links. I'll add posts as time and demand allows. You can use is as you wish.

Disclaimer:
You know your position a lot better than I do. If any thing I write here doesn't fit your experience or situation, don't use it. If you want something here clarified, corrected, amended or edited, please ask. I'm not hard to contact.
All the best to you and yours.