Family medicine medical billing looks straightforward on the surface. Office visits, preventive care, a few chronic conditions, some in-office procedures. Most family physicians assume their billing operation is fine as long as the deposits keep coming. That assumption is costing the average family medicine practice between $80,000 and $150,000 per
Every pain management practice we work with comes to us with some version of the same story high procedure volume, experienced clinical staff, and a billing operation that can’t keep pace with the complexity of what they’re delivering The challenges aren’t random. They follow predictable patterns patterns that show up
Pain management revenue cycle management is not a function that rewards mediocrity. When your revenue cycle is running correctly every prior authorization confirmed before the procedure, every interventional claim coded with approach-level precision, every ERA reconciled against contracted rates, every high-value denied claim pursued through the right appeal pathway an
Pain management coding is not forgiving. (Pain Management Coding Issues) A single missing modifier on a bilateral facet injection. A transforaminal approach billed under the interlaminar code. Imaging guidance submitted without a permanent image record. An RFA claim that cleared internal review but hit a payer’s clinical criteria wall because




