The problem of incorrectly denied medical claims has many repercussions throughout the industry. The obvious one is that when providers can't get paid, patients often get stuck holding the bag. The secondary issue is that when independent providers cannot get paid for services rendered, they look to join larger groups/health systems with greater resources and negotiating power with which to fight back against insurance companies. Problematically, consolidation almost always (still looking for a counter-example - please share in the comments if you've found one) leads to higher prices for consumers and lower quality care. The larger the provider, the more negotiating power it has with insurance companies, the higher the rates it can command, and since patient co-insurance is a percentage of the overall cost of services, costs to the patient go up. A Modern Healthcare article (https://bit.ly/45nBRtE) reported that merging hospitals?raised prices by an average of 1.6% in the two years after a transaction, based on data from 322 hospital mergers between 2010 and 2015. According to a 2020 article (Beaulieu, Nancy, Ph.D, Et. Al. “Changes in Quality of Care after Hospital Mergers and Acquisitions”. NEJM. 2020; 382: 51-59)?in the New England Journal of Medicine, the quality of care at hospitals that have been acquired during recent consolidation of health care systems has stayed the same or gotten worse, and that hospital prices almost always increase as a result of market consolidation. The study examines outcomes from nearly 250 hospital mergers that took place from 2009 to 2013.?Using data collected by CMS, they analyzed variables such as 30-day readmission and mortality rates among patients discharged from a hospital, as well as clinical measures such as timely antibiotic treatment of patients with bacterial pneumonia. Another article (Frakt, Austin. “Hospital Mergers Improve Health? Evidence Shows the Opposite”.?The New York Times. February 11, 2019.) also reiterates that multiple studies show that as the market for hospitals has become more consolidated in recent years, health outcomes have become worse. According to many academic experts, there is three decades of evidence that suggest hospital mergers do not improve quality. More than 200, or 20%, of completed mergers from 2002 to 2020 were anticompetitive based on the Herfindahl–Hirschman Index, a commonly used measure of market concentration.?Yet the FTC, which is meant to protect consumers from monopolies, took enforcement action against only 13 of 1,164, or 1% of hospital mergers from 2002 to 2020. In summary, help is not coming from the FTC/the government. It is up to the private sector to fix these problems. At Covered, one of our objectives is to restore the balance of power between payors and providers, and allow independent providers to remain independent.
关于我们
Covered Health is automating the most challenging and time consuming elements of appealing denied medical claims for providers. By streamlining access to diverse databases and inputs, Covered uses technology to helps RCM specialists identify denial root causes, and generate appeals.
- 网站
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https://www.CoveredHealth.AI
Covered的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 医院和医疗保健
- 规模
- 2-10 人
- 总部
- New York,NY
- 类型
- 私人持股
- 创立
- 2023
地点
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主要
E 6th St
US,NY,New York
Covered员工
动态
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We are honored to be presenting in front of HIP this week!
We kick of the HIP?#investor?meetings of 2024 this week. We are excited to learn more about the following #healthcare?#startups: Vivifi Medical?- developing a permanent solution that reverses Benign Prostate Hyperplasia (#bph) through a robotic/laparoscopic procedure Givers Health?- Platform to better integrate informal #caregivers into the #healthsystem, starting with training, support, & pay Covered?- Building automation into the process of appealing denied #medicalclaims Bone Health Technologies?-?#FDA approved prescription wearable device and digital therapeutic to improve #bonehealth and reduce bone loss in #postmenopausal women with low #bonedensity Samir Batra?Rakesh Patel MD?Raheel (Raz) Zia?Keith Winter #prostate?#healthyaging #denialmanagement #osteoporosis #laparoscopicsurgery #medicaldevices #digitalhealth?#healthtech?#healthcareinnovation?#lifesciences
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Spoiler alert: Hospital CEOs ranked workforce challenges as their No. 1 concern in 2023, and close behind were financial challenges. At Covered, we help with both. Payors use algorithms to deny claims, and providers have to use people to overturn those denials. Given the sheer volume of denials within a health system, under a certain dollar amount, it does not make sense to fight. By automating the process of appealing, we can help address workflow shortages by improving the efficiency of the average RCM employee, and revenue challenges by making it efficient to go after denials that were previously too time-consuming and costly to fight.
The No. 1 problem still keeping hospital CEOs up at night
beckershospitalreview.com