Nov 8
2022
MDaudit Annual Benchmark Report Reveals 82% of Claim Denials Are Associated With Medicare
With 82% of 2022 claims denials associated with Medicare, and third-party audit volume rapidly climbing, hospitals and health systems are under intense pressure to protect and grow revenues.
These were among the key findings of the 2022 MDaudit Annual Benchmark Report released today by MDaudit, the healthcare technology company that harnesses the power of analytics and its proven track record to allow the nation’s premier healthcare organizations to retain revenue and reduce risk.
“Our analysis suggests that the post-pandemic era has given rise to a new phenomenon for healthcare. Medical spending is more discretionary for consumers impacted by inflation, driving dramatic reductions in revenues generated by physician office and hospital visits for the third quarter of 2022,” said Peter Butler, president and CEO, MDaudit. “Exacerbating this situation is the need to successfully defend against more third-party audits amidst chronic personnel and resource shortages.”
Driving Smarter Audits
Payers are investing in predictive modeling and artificial intelligence (AI) tools to scrutinize claims more closely before adjudication to reduce improper payments. The 2023 Department of Health and Human Services budget requests $2.5 billion in total investments for the Healthcare Fraud and Abuse Control and Medicaid Integrity Programs, $900 million of which is allocated for discretionary spending to advance technologies to scrutinize payment accuracy — up $26 million from 2022.
This should be a concern for healthcare organizations – and the push compliance leaders need to find more efficient ways to retain at-risk revenues. Per the MDaudit analysis:
- Billing compliance leaders mustleverage data and analytics as catalysts to proactively detect risks and perform audits for corrective action. Data-driven, risk-based audits (up 28% in 2022) can complement the annual compliance plan to ensure effective audit scope coverage.
- By deploying prospective (up 31% in 2022) and retrospective auditing methods, compliance teams can drive cross-functional initiatives that mitigate compliance and revenue risks.
Defending Revenues
A key element of a successful revenue defense is to help compliance teams become more efficient in managing external payer audit requests to retain at-risk revenues. The role of billing compliance needs to be increasingly data-driven and cross-functional, as well as serving as a business partner to other teams including coding, revenue integrity, finance, pharmacy, and clinical, to meet changing and more complex risks. The MDaudit analysis also found that: