Accounts Receivable
open account
accounts that are subject to charges from time to time
adjustment
the amount corrected on a patient ledger due to an error or the difference in the amount billed by a practice and the amount allowed by the insurance company for payment of a claim
Co-payment
the amount that the insured has to pay toward the amount allowed by the insurance company for services
deductible
the amount that the insured must pay before the insurance company will begin benefit payments
conversion factor
the dollar amount determined by dividing the actual charge of a service or procedure by a relative value
collection ratio
the relationship between the amount of money owed and the amount of money collected
Inquiry
Checking or tracing a claim sent to an insurance company to determine payment or processing
EOB
Explanation of benefits
EOMB
Explanation of medicare benefits
RBRVS
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accounts receivable
A/R, the total amount of money owed to the physician for professional services provided to a patient
accepting assignment
The provider of services agrees or is willing to accept as payment the amount allowed/approved by an insurance company as the maximum amount that will be paid for the claim
professional courtesy
a discount or fee exception given to a patient at the discretion of the physician
profile
a list of CPT codes used by the physician with a corresponding fee that is usually calculated and maintained by a third party payer
posting
a process of transferring account information from a journal to a ledger
ledger card
a record to track patient charges, payments, adjustments, and balances due
Dun/dunning
a request or message to remind a patient that the account is over due or delinquent
appeal
a request sent to an insurance company or other payer asking that a submitted claim be reconsidered for payment or processing
Accounts payable
amounts owed by the practice to creditors for property, supplies, equipment
fee schedule
an established price set by a medical practice for professional services
aging accounts
analysis of accounts receivable that indicate delinquency of 60, 90, to 120 days
assignment
authorization by a policy holder to allow a third party payer to pay benefits to a health care provider
cycle billing
breaking the account receivable amounts into portions for billing at a specific date of the month
limiting charge
typically applies to medicare reimbursement. this is the absolute maximum fee a physician may charge a medicare patient when not accepting assignment on the claim