When a pain management practice evaluates billing companies, the conversation usually starts with three questions: How do you handle prior authorizations for interventional procedures? What is your clean claim rate? How do you manage denials? These are the right questions. But there is a fourth question most practices forget to
The moment a pain management claim submission process is complex & lot of things to be considered before we submit the claim, did we updated correct patient demographic, correct charges & etc. because it may lead to clearing house rejections or insurance denial. If the claim is clean correctly coded,
Pain management CPT codes, Modifiers, and Diagnosis Codes billing accuracy depends on three elements working together correctly on every claim: the right CPT procedure code, the right modifier, and the right ICD-10 diagnosis code. When all three align procedure documented, modifier applied correctly, diagnosis supporting medical necessity claims process cleanly.
Pain management practices bill some of the highest-value outpatient procedures in US healthcare. A single interventional session an RFA procedure, a spinal cord stimulator implant, a multi-level transforaminal injection can represent $1,500 to $30,000 in billable services. So why are so many interventional pain practices collecting significantly less than they




