Novel Method and Apparatus For Repricing a Reimbursement Claim Against a Contract6
A method for repricing a reimbursement claim under at least one contract is provided herein. The method may include a combination of steps such as: converting each contract into a series of contractual terms; converting a claim into a series of claim lines, containing claim codes, unit numbers and corresponding charges for the claim codes; comparing claim codes and contractual terms and identifying matches therebetween; determining any priority conditions associated to the matching contractual terms, and eliminate any matching contractual terms that are excluded by the priority conditions; calculating the reimbursement amount for the claim by determining the reimbursement charges for the non-excluded matching contractual terms; and determining and making any adjustments depending upon any discount terms for the entire reimbursement amount.
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The present application is a continuation application of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/709,141, filed Dec. 10, 2012, entitled “Novel Method and Apparatus For Repricing a Reimbursement Claim Against a Contract,” which is a continuation application of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/352,960, filed Jan. 18, 2012, entitled “Novel Method and Apparatus For Repricing a Reimbursement Claim Against a Contract,” now U.S. Pat. No. 8,407,071, which is a divisional application of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/975,647, filed Dec. 22, 2010, entitled “Novel Method and Apparatus for Repricing a Reimbursement Claim Against a Contract,” now U.S. Pat. No. 8,160,905, which is a divisional application of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/577,386, filed May 23, 2000, entitled “Novel Method and Apparatus For Repricing a Reimbursement Claim Against a Contract,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,904,317, which claims priority to Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/159,306, filed Oct. 14, 1999, entitled “Novel Method in System Utilizing Distributive Processing and Modularized Components Lodging to Design Software,” all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
REFERENCE TO MICROFICHE APPENDIXReference is made to a Microfiche Appendix hereto, having a total of 1 microfiche and a total of 43 sheets comprising approximately 930 separate programs.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThis invention relates to a computer method and apparatus for processing and modularizing software, and more particularly, to a method and system for modularizing software for repricing a reimbursement claim against a contract.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONA preferred provider organization (referred to herein as “PPO”) is a collection of physicians, hospitals, clinics, etc. (referred to herein as “providers”) which have agreed to provide healthcare services to PPO members (such as employers, employees, and consumers, referred to herein as members) at a reduced cost. The individual providers contract with the PPO to provide specific services to the members at a shared cost. It is important to note that a single provider may belong to a number of PPOs, For instance, a cardiologist may belong to two or more hospitals, each hospital having a physician PPO with its doctors. The cardiologist may also belong to a PPO formed by a collection of cardiologists. The PPOs further contract with insurance companies, third party administrators, and employers (referred to herein as “Insurers”) in order to share the allocation of risk and cost. Since Insurers can reach a broad area and range of members, the Insurers develop and group numerous PPOs to cover such a broad range.
The reimbursement of the healthcare services provided by the providers is designed about a submitted claim system built for point of service insurance. When a provider treats a member, the provider submits a claim, for the services rendered, not to the PPO but to the Insurer for reimbursement thereof. Since, as mentioned above, a single provider contracts with numerous PPOs (with separate contractual arrangements for each), and the PPOs then contract with the Insurer, the Insurer must review all governing contracts to determine the proper amount of the reimbursement.
By way of example, a typical claim may include services from multiple doctors for various services performed. For instance, a claim may include services from a Radiologist for $1,000, an Emergency physician for $2,000, and an Anesthesiologist for $3,000. Each physician may have a contract with the PPO or Insurer to pay 100% of their services under $3000, but the hospital may also have a contract with the PPO stating that submitted claims in excess of $5000 for a single patient will be repriced at 85% of the charges. If the Insurer reimburses the claim as is, the Insurer has overpaid. Alternatively, if the Insurer reprocesses the claim under the governing contracts and reduces the reimbursements proportionally to each physician (known as “repricing”), the physicians may disagree with the proportionality or the repricing and appeal their reimbursement amount. In order to avoid such repricing by the Insurer, physicians may unbundle the claim into three claims, and submit the three claims separately. The separately submitted claims each receive the total amount of their reimbursement but the Insurer has overpaid.
Since, Insurers may have tens of thousands of separate contracts covering hundreds of thousands of individual providers the ability to review all governing contracts for every submitted claim is extremely time consuming. If the Insurer, however, pays all submitted claims as is, the Insurer will be overpaying. To compensate with overpaying claims Insurers may spot check claims or check every claim. When, however, the Insurer begins accurately checking all claims, reimbursement is significantly delayed. In response to Insurer's delaying reimbursements, laws have been enacted that require Insurers to reimburse claims within a specific period or pay a penalty. As such, Insurers may intentional short each reimbursement, regardless of any governing contracts.
Prior systems or software, which managed contracts, typically viewed the contracts as linear single tier contracts. Each contract was independent of all other contracts. Moreover, if a contract was outdated, replaced or no longer in effect (or if a term within the contract was replaced or no longer in effect) a new contract would be developed from a contract template. The new contract would be added to the end of the outdated contract, providing the Insurer with a long linear list of contracts, some of which were no longer in effect. In order to determine which contract governed a claim or claim line the Insurer would have to review all contracts, determine which terms governed, the priority of the governing terms and determine if subsequent contracts governed over prior ones. As multi-tiered contracts developed, i.e. one tier governing the provider and the PPO and a second tier governing the PPO and the Insurer, the systems similarly bundled the two contracts end-to-end, into a single tier contract, effectuating the same problems. Since providers now belong to numerous PPOs, numerous contracts are created and the ability to update and manage these contracts has now become extremely difficult. When two or three multi-tiered contracts are bundled into single linear contracts, there is no interaction between the multi-tiered contracts. Consequently, if a provider changed information in one contract, the information would have to be changed throughout all governing contracts or an entirely new contract would have to be created.
As such a need exists for a method and apparatus, which provide the ability to organize, maintain and modify these contracts between the Insurers, the PPOs and the providers. The method and apparatus should be able to create contracts, store generally information globally apart from the terms, such that other contracts and/or claims may share the information. This information which when changed or edited will then be changed throughout each contract or claim. Moreover, since all contracts are governed by pre-defined industry standards, the contracts may now be organized and processed to provide the method and apparatus with the ability to determine which contracts and terms govern a claim, without having to manually search through each contract.
As such, a need also exists to provide the Insurers and PPOs with the ability to determine the correct reimbursement for claims based upon these governing contracts and terms. Moreover, a need exists to provide adequate reasons, based upon these governing contracts, as to why claims were reprocessed. Moreover, the ability to control the data integrity of the contracts and claims is significantly increased. Modifications to contracts are easy and globally done. Additionally, the need exists for a centralized database to maintain and manage the contracts. The ability to electronically submit claims and have the claims repriced through the database would greatly decrease delays in reprocessing. The PPO or Provider electronically submitting the claim would receive immediately (approximately) the amount of the reimbursement, and the reasons why the claim was repriced.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIn accordance with the present invention a method and apparatus provides for the repricing of reimbursement claims against contracts. In an embodiment of the present invention, a method for repricing a reimbursement claim under at least one contract includes converting each contract into a series of contractual terms and converting the claim into a series of claim lines. The method then sequentially compares each claim line against each contractual term of a contract. When a claim line satisfies a contractual term, the method identifies the contractual term as a matching contractual term associated to the claim line. Upon identifying all matching contractual terms, the method will determine any priority conditions associated to the matching contractual terms, and eliminate any matching contractual terms that are excluded by such priority conditions. The method then calculates the reimbursement amount for the claim by determining the reimbursement charges for the non-excluded matching contractual terms. The method may then determine and make any adjustments depending upon any discounts or stop losses for the entire reimbursement amount.
In other embodiments, the method would store the reimbursement amount and the repriced claim in a storage location. A second claim being repriced would be compared to other repriced claims to determine if the claims are identical or whether the claims were unbundled from a single claim. If the claims were unbundled, the method would bundle the claims and reprice the bundled claim, replacing any reimbursement amounts for the unbundled claims.
Other embodiments provide for the contracts to be stored within a data center, on a network. The data center stores a plurality of networks, each containing a plurality of contracts. The contracts having specific identifying codes allow the contracts to be sorted in specific networks: The reimbursement claims also containing identifier codes identify which network the claim will be repriced against. Once the network is located the method determines which contract(s), within the network, governs over the claim. The method would then reprice the claim against the governing contracts. Default settings, or user-defined settings could select the highest or lowest reimbursement value from the governing contracts.
Numerous other advantages and features of the invention will become readily apparent from the following detailed description of the invention and the embodiments thereof, from the claims, and from the accompanying drawings.
A fuller understanding of the foregoing may be had by reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
While the invention is susceptible to embodiments in many different forms, there are shown in the drawings and will be described herein, in detail, the preferred embodiments of the present invention. It should be understood, however, that the present disclosure is to be considered an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the spirit or scope of the invention and/or claims of the embodiments illustrated.
A. OverviewMedical contracts entered between PPOs, Providers and Insurers, and reimbursement claims, submitted by the PPOs or Provider to the Insurers, utilize standards driven and created by the industry in order to maintain a single continuity throughout the industry. Typically an Insurer receiving a reimbursement claim would manually reprice or reprocess the claim. Contracts and claims maintained and stored by systems, in the prior art, were done simply to store the information, not to actually reprice or reprocess the claim. The standards, discussed in greater detail below, allow for the contracts and claims to be broken or tom down into standard pre-defined, as well as user defined, contract terms and claim lines. Once broken down, these contract terms may be organized and sorted to provide a repricing flow, which can be applied to virtually all medical contracts. The claim lines may now be “bounced” against governing contracts to determine the proper amount of the reimbursement.
In the preferred embodiment, an input and output device, such as a mouse, for “clicking” or selecting graphic elements as well as a keyboard for inputting and editing, are used to manage and maintain the contracts and reimbursement claims. The system using a contract platform, such as Resource Information Management Systems Inc.'s NetworX™ Administration software, provides a user with the means to create and manage contracts. The contract platform may be separate and apart from a platform used to create, manage and reprocess reimbursement claims, referred to herein as a reimbursement platform. The reimbursement platform, such as Resource Information Management Systems Inc.'s Manual Claim Entry 1.2.6.1 software, allows the Insurer to create reimbursement claims and reprice the claims by bouncing the claims against the contracts managed by the NetworX™ Administration software. The two platforms while preferably separate platforms may be combined into a single platform.
The reimbursement platform preferably permits the Insurer to manually create or enter the reimbursement and designed to accept the reimbursement claims through various communication mediums. Reimbursement claims received through various communication mediums, such as digital or electronic transfers, would speed up the reprocessing of the claims.
Preferably the contract terms and claim lines are gathered, by the above mentioned platforms, and stored individually as specific types of beans, discussed in greater detail below. The platforms are created using reusable software components, which can be used with a software development environment. Software development environments can integrate visual and source views of the components through use of certain features such as, for example, drag-and-drop. The drag-and-drop feature allows a software developer to modify the property values associated with the graphic user interface or “GUI” component while simultaneously viewing the modifications to provide the user with a type of virtual processing. The virtual processing pattern removes the dependence between components, because components at all levels have very little interdependence between inner components. It makes the systems easier to modify and upgrade, such that individual components may be replaced rather than replacing entire products. These components may be downloaded and installed using standard Internet technologies.
Illustration figures used throughout represent a general overview of the graphical user interface for the windows and features used by the contract platform and the reimbursement platform. The illustrations used throughout are for example only and are not used to limit or restrict the scope of the claims or the invention.
B. Contracts PlatformThe contract platform, as mentioned above, provides the ability to create, maintain and manage contracts (also referred to herein as “rate sheets”) between the PPOs, Providers, and Insurers. Each rate sheet includes terms, created and stored independently of each other, providing the means to edit and change the terms separately. Moreover, data shared by both the contract platform and the reimbursement platform, for instance, provider or PPO identification data, is stored globally separately from the two platforms, permitting access to such data from either platform. This provides a dynamic inter-relationship among the platforms and the data maintained and managed by both of the platforms.
The Roles tab 12a allows a user to define and manage security access levels for various groups of personnel employed by the user. An Insurer using the platform may have numerous personnel groups that separately access, maintain, edit and enter the information stored by the platforms. The Roles tab 12a allows the Insurer to define the level of access for each group. For example, since contract data entry personnel typically only need access to read/write/delete information regarding rate sheets on the contract platform, access to the reimbursement platform would be restricted. The Roles tab 12a, for security reasons, would typically only be available for a platform administrator. The platform administrator would define the level of access utilizing the Roles tab 12a and assign individual security logins and passwords to each personnel, using the Users tab 12b.
The Providers tab 12c allows the user to manage information on each Provider. Illustrated in
When selecting the RateSheets tab 12d, shown in
The Calculation Categories tab 12e opens a category window 40 and a calculation window 45, illustrated in
The Code Groups tab 12f, provides the user with the ability to maintain groupings of qualifying pre-defined codes. When entering in a rate sheet, each contract term is defined under a sub-section headings, for instance, Medical and ICU/CCU/NICU. Code grouping permits the user to define which codes qualify for repricing under these sub-sections. For example, when using revenue codes, the industry has determined that revenue codes 120-123 define procedures under a Medical sub-section, while the revenue codes 174 and 200-219 define procedures under the ICU/CCU/NICU sub-section. The pre-defined codes include age, ICD9 procedure and diagnosis codes, DRG codes, CPT-4 codes, revenue codes, and Provider groups (such as Surgeon, Assistant Surgeon, and Anesthesiologist). Under the code groups tab 12f the pre-defined code groups may be adjusted or new groups may be created to cover specific terms in a rate sheet.
The Routing Rules tab 12g is used to establish which mailbox, created using Mailbox tab 12h, reimbursement claims are routed to. For instance, after a data entry personnel enters claims into the reimbursement platform, the system may save the entered claim and route the claim, using defined routing rules, to a repricing mailbox. A second personnel may thereafter, open the repricing mailbox, retrieve the claim and reprice the claim.
C. Claim Reimbursement PlatformAs mentioned above, the claim reimbursement platform is used to manage and maintain the claims. The user may create, edit and reprice the claims against the rate sheets utilizing the tools provided by the reimbursement platform. As illustrated in
Illustrated in
As mentioned above, since information is stored as beans, the information is easily shared and used by both platforms. As such, the provider beans used by the contract platform may be used and linked to claims created on the reimbursement platform, such as the information identifying a provider entered in boxes 76a-76e,
While the information identifying X provider (i.e., Provider Code, zip, city, state, address, etc.) may be stored in the provider container 82 of RateSheet context 80, it is preferably stored in a Provider context 90. The provider context 90 has stored within containers corresponding to the providers, represented as container 92a corresponding to A provider; container 92b corresponding to B provider; . . . ; container 92x corresponding to the X provider; . . . ; 92n container corresponding to n provider; each container housing identifying beans that represent the provider's information. Closely examining the container 92x, which stores identifying information in relation to the X provider, the container includes identifying beans 94a . . . 94n. Each identifying bean represents a single piece of information regarding the X provider, for instance, bean 94a may represent X provider's zip code. As with the RateSheet context 80, the provider context includes logic links 96a . . . 96n to the provider containers stored within.
Also illustrated in
This permits multi-level interaction between contracts and reimbursement claims. Tens of thousands of contracts relating to hundreds of thousands of PPOs may be managed and organized within seconds, instead for hours. Moreover, and as described in greater detail below, the reimbursements claims may be bounced off of all of the stored contracts, to determine all governing contracts more quickly and more efficiently than prior systems.
D. Rate Sheet or Contract Creation ExampleIn this example, a simple Provider Contract 140, as shown in
As mentioned above, the contract is broken down into its terms and stored as term contexts (as in
1. Creating a New Rate Sheet
Before repricing a reimbursement claim, a user must create a rate sheet. A Rate Sheet 200, such as shown in
To create the Rate Sheet 200 a user begins by clicking the RateSheets tab 12d on the Main Administration screen 10, shown in
In a preferred embodiment, the terms of the rate sheet are organized or listed under pre-defined sections. These sections include Outpatient Exclusions, Outpatient Per Diem, Outpatient Case Rates, Outpatient Services, Outpatient Stop Loss, per Diem, Case Rate, Exclusion, Inpatient Services, Stop Loss and Professional/Other Services and are listed in an available sections box 158a. Moreover, since the contractual terms categorize within pre-defined sections, a flow process in which reimbursement claims can be processed and repriced may be developed, discussed in further detail below. When a rate sheet contains a term categorized under a pre-defined section, that pre-defined section is selected and added to the selected sections box 158b. When al of the pre-defined sections are selected, the OK button 159 is depressed. As illustrated in
Once the OK button 159 is depressed, a rate sheet window 160 opens illustrated in
2. Creating Terms
The user may now begin to enter in the terms of the contract. When no terms exist, as illustrated in
The description window 172 assists the user in defining the term. The description of the term or heading is entered in description box 172b and the effective dates of the term, which may be different then the contract, may be entered into date boxes 172c and 172d. Included within the description window 172 is also a heading box 172a, which is selected when the description, in description box 172b, is a note to clarify the term or condition.
The qualification window 174 permits the user to select the type of codes associated to the term and the value of the codes. As mentioned above, the pre-defined code types, selected from code type pull down menu 174c includes, for example, ICD9 procedure and diagnosis codes, DRG codes, CPT-4 codes, revenue codes, etc. When using a specific range of codes, the code value box 174a is selected. The user then enters in a range of code values in the value range boxes 175a and 175b, illustrated in
The calculation window 176,
Preferably, the amounts, days and percentages of each calculation are user-defined in order to customize the calculation for each term. For example, a surgical single level per diem charge in a rate sheet may include: “a surgical charge of $950 a day.” In this instance, only the amount of the charge is modifiable. To change this term to for instance, “a surgical charge of $950 for the first 2 days and $500 thereafter” the category must be changed to a 2 level per diem charge. The pre-loaded categories include, but are not limited to, allowed, maximum allowed, cost, percentage, discount, per diem, unit, case rate, DRG (diagnosis related groups), reasonable and customary, schedule, stop loss and no calculations.
Illustrated in
When the term is complete, the user clicks the OK button 190. The system will then convert the entered information into beans and store the beans in a container. As illustrated in
Referring now to
Illustrated in
As mentioned above, each term has a pair of corresponding footnotes or priority notes, shown in
The first set of priority notes, relating to (1), (2) and (3) listed above define how a calculation in the rate sheet 220 will be applied to the claim 210. The first priority note states that if a contractual term applies to a claim line, then the corresponding calculation will be used against the entire claim not just the claim line. For instance, Per Diem and Case Rate Sections will typically reprice the entire claim because all claim lines or services listed in a claim will be in relation to the per diem or case rate procedure. The second priority note “this calculation will be used to reprice the current line” reprices only claims lines that have specific code values that match the codes defined under the qualifications. Under this priority note, the calculation container associated to a qualifying or matching contractual term would apply to the matching claim line only. For example, when a claim contains only various inpatient services, only the qualifying claim lines will be subject to repricing under an inpatient service section, the other non-qualifying claim lines will not be repriced. The third priority note “this calculation will be used to reprice the claim line as a group” will apply a calculation to a group of claim lines. When a claim line qualifies under a term that includes the third priority note, the repricing engine continues to check other claim lines. If the repricing engine matches additional claim lines under the same term, the claim lines are grouped together and repriced one under the term's associated calculation.
The second set of priority notes, (4), (5) and (6) define the priority of the terms within each pre-defined section. Under each priority note, the repricing engine will determine whether a claim line qualifies under more than one term listed under a section. When a claim line qualifies under a term listed in a section, the repricing engine automatically checks the other terms listed in the section. When the claim lines qualifies under one than one term, the repricing engine will, according to the (4) and (5) priority notes, calculate a reimbursement amount for each matching or qualifying term. When a matching term includes the fourth priority note “ . . . this price will be used if it is the smallest amount,” the repricing engine begins to compare the reimbursement amount for each matching term. The repricing engine then will reprice the entire claim, claim line or group of lines (depending upon the first set of priority notes) under the term with the fourth priority note when the reimbursement amount for this term is the smallest amount when compared to the other reimbursement amounts. Similarly, the repricing engine will reprice under a term associated to the fifth priority note “ . . . this price will be used if it is the largest amount,” when the reimbursement amount for this term is the largest amount when compared to the other reimbursement amounts. If a matching term is associated to the sixth priority note “ . . . this price will be used if it is the last term to qualify,” the repricing engine does not need to calculate the reimbursement amounts for each qualifying or matching term. The repricing engine only needs to determine which matching term is the last term in the section and then determine the reimbursement amount for such last term.
As mentioned above, the seventh priority note “no more terms will be examined for this claim/line if it qualifies under these terms” is assigned to terms in which the complete box 176b illustrated in
For further explanation of the priority notes, reference is made to
As illustrated in
In order to ensure that each claim is processed uniformly under any given rate sheet the contract platform attaches priority conditions to the available predefined sections, mentioned above.
Starting with step 250, the method may begin by excluding any claim codes from the claim that are substantially equal to any codes listed in the exclusion sections of the rate sheet, step 252. These codes are temporarily excluded from the repricing of the entire claim, and are added back to the claim after the claim has been repriced, step 286. Following step 252, the method then continues to determine the nature of the service, for instance the amount of days and/or the quality of care, step 254. This provides the method with the ability to process the claim under the correct amount of days. Next in step 256, the method analyzes the claim under the Case Rate section. The method sequentially compares the claim codes and determines if any of the claim codes substantially equal any of the codes defined in the contractual terms listed in the case rate section. If a claim code falls under the case rate section of the rate sheet the method determines the type of service, whether the claim code qualifies as an outpatient or inpatient, step 258. The method then determines which term(s) apply, step 260, by determining the priority of the terms. Since terms defined under the case rates section are applied to the entire claim, the method, based upon the qualifying term(s), will reprice the entire claim, step 262.
Following step 256, if the claim codes do not match the codes defined under the terms of the case rate section, then the method determines if the claim line qualifies under the Per Diem section, step 264. If a claim line (containing a claim code) is substantially equal to the codes listed under the Per Diem section, the method determines whether the claim codes qualify as outpatient or inpatient, step 266. Next in step 268, the method determines which term(s) within the Per Diem sections apply and then reprices the claim line based upon the applicable term(s), step 270. If the claim line does not equal any of the codes, step 264, the method will continue to check the other claim lines, step 272, until the entire claim has been reviewed.
When the entire claim has been checked, and none of the claim lines, contain codes that substantially equal the Per Diem rate sheet codes, the method continues to sequentially compare the claim lines to the terms defined under the Service section, step 274. If a claim line contains a claim code which falls under the Service sections, the method determines which type of services, inpatient or outpatient, apply, step 276, and then determines which term(s) apply, step 278. Based upon the priority notes and any priority conditions the method reprices the claim line under the applicable term(s), step 280. Next, the method determines if there are any remaining claim lines, step 282, if so the method returns to step 274, and determines if the claim line can be repriced under the service code. If, following step 274, a claim line does not match any service code the method will error, step. 284, because the claim code did not match any code on the rate sheet. Under this circumstance, the claim would probably be forwarded to a mailbox according to the routing rules, previously mentioned.
Following steps 262, 270 and 282, the method adds the excluded lines back to the repriced claim total, step 286. The method continues thereafter to determine if the repriced claim exceeds any stop loss, step 288, defined by the rate sheet. If so, the method reprices the entire amount according to the stop loss, step 290. If the stop loss is not met and following the stop loss repricing, step 290, the method may return, step 292.
H. Claim. Repricing ExampleReferring now to
When the claim is repriced, the repricing engine, following the processing flow of
Generally the method, determining the nature of the services, will sequentially search all contractual terms listed under the inpatient per diem section and determine which term(s) apply, step 268, also shown in a sub-processing flow diagram of
More specifically, and in reference to repricing the completed claim 70 under the Rate Sheet 200, the method determines if the first claim line 72a qualifies under the Medical contract term, the first contractual term, step 268a. Since the claim code, listed in column 74a of the first claim line 72a, of ‘120’ equals a qualification code within the range of the pre-defined Medical revenue codes, the method determines that the claim line qualifies under this contractual term. The method will identify the Medical term as a matching term and will determine any priority conditions. The priority conditions for the Medical term include the priority notes attached thereto. The method continues by determining if additional contractual terms are listed under the Per Diem section, step 268c. Since the Surgical term is also listed under this section, the method will determine if the claim line also qualifies under the Surgical term, return to step 268a. Even though the claim code equals a qualification code within the range of the pre-defined Surgical revenue codes, the claim does not include any CPT4 Procedure codes and therefore the claim line does not qualify under the Surgical term. Since there are no more contractual terms listed under the Per Diem section, the method continue to eliminate any matching terms which are excluded by priority conditions, step 268d. The priority conditions attached to the Medical term include the priority notes: “This calculation will be used to reprice the current line” and “when the claim qualifies for more than one term, this price will be used if it is the last term to qualify.” Since the claim only qualified under one term, the method will have no terms to eliminate and will reprice the claim under the Medical term, step 270a. Under the Rate Sheet 200, the claim line would be repriced at $750.00 a day, multiplied by the four units or days for a total of $3,000. Returning to step 288,
Under this processing flow of
Even if the claim was unbundled into four separate claims, one claim for each claim line, the repricing engine will identify the four separate claims as originating from the same provided service. By searching the patient, days of care provided, the nature of the care, and the services performed the repricing engine will identify the four unbundled claims as a single claim, and reprice the group of claims as a single claim. In the alternative, under various reasons, a claim once entered may need to be unbundled into separate claims. As such, the repricing engine, can unbundle the claim into separate claims, separate the claim codes accordingly and reprice the unbundled claims.
A second completed claim 310, illustrated in
The contracts platform permits virtually all contracts to be interactive, meaning that the information is shared and used between the contracts and between the other platforms and engines. This allows the platforms to be changed, customized or new platforms may be added without damaging the integrity of the shared or stored information. As such, as the industry or Insurer defines or re-defines the calculation categories or sections, the platforms may be changed or altered accordingly without damaging or effecting the information.
I. Additional Embodiments of the Present InventionAs mentioned above, the platforms may be designed to accept claims over various communication mediums. If utilized by third party administrators or by employers, the ability to maintain a database to accept and reprice claims may be difficult, time consuming and expensive. As such, the need exists to provide a single data center maintaining and managing numerous networks. Referring to
The data center is also accessible by the network's administrators, through various wireline 338 or wireless 339 communication mediums. The network's administrators would access their networks and receive the submitted reimbursement claims along with corresponding reimbursement worksheet so that payments to the submitter may be made. Other outside networks 342, such as Network XX, may be maintained and managed outside of the data center by the outside network's administrators. However, through various links the data center may be provided with access to the outside network 342. This would permit a provider 334 to submit a claim, to be reimbursed against the outside network 342. The data center receiving the claim would access the outside network 342 and reprice the claim against the rate sheets contained thereon. In this instance any proprietary information in relation to the rate sheets is maintained by the administrator of Network XX.
Moreover, the data center may be accessible to patients 340 through various mediums. Patients with submitted claims may be able to track the repayment or the repricing of claims submitted on their behalf. The data center may further be capable of maintaining cost histories of providers and PPOs. Insurers attempting to maintain, negotiate and create new networks of PPOs may be able to access these histories to determine possible risk allocation levels and to locate specific PPOs that meet their qualifications.
From the foregoing and as mentioned above, it will be observed that numerous variations and modifications may be effected without departing from the spirit and scope of the novel concept of the invention. It is to be understood that no limitation with respect to the specific methods and apparatus illustrated herein is intended or should be inferred. It is, of course, intended to cover by the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the scope of the claims.
Claims
1. A computer implemented method for repricing a claim for reimbursement under a contract comprising:
- converting the claim by the repricing engine into a series of claim lines, each claim line containing a claim code and each claim line having an initial amount associated therewith;
- comparing by the repricing engine each claim code, of the series of claim lines, against a rate sheet of the contract, the rate sheet including multiple predefined sections and multiple priority conditions for determining a sequence of comparing each claim code against the multiple predefined sections of the rate sheet; and
- determining by the repricing engine a reprice amount under the contract for the claim based on the comparison in accordance with the determined sequence.
2. The computer implemented method of claim 1, further comprising:
- comparing by the repricing engine each claim code, of the series of claim lines, against a first predetermined section of the contract containing exclusion codes;
- determining if any of the claim codes match any of the exclusion codes;
- excluding matching claim codes from determining a reprice amount under the contract.
3. The computer implemented method of claim 2, further comprising:
- comparing by the repricing engine each non-excluded claim code, of the series of claim lines, against a second predetermined section of the contract containing case rate codes;
- for each non-excluded claim code substantially matching a case rate code, determining by the repricing engine which contractual terms of the matching case rate code apply; and
- applying by the repricing engine the applicable case rate contractual terms to the claim for reimbursement to determine the reprice amount under the contract for the claim.
4. The computer implemented method of claim 3, further comprising:
- comparing by the repricing engine each non-excluded, non-matching claim code, of the series of claim lines, against a third predetermined section of the contract containing per diem codes when it is determined that no non-excluded claim code substantially matches a case rate code;
- for each non-excluded claim code substantially matching a per diem code, determining by the repricing engine which contractual terms of the matching per diem code apply; and
- applying by the repricing engine the applicable per diem contractual terms to each claim line of each matching non-excluded claim code to determine a reprice amount for each claim line.
5. The computer implemented method of claim 4, further comprising:
- comparing by the repricing engine remaining claim codes, of the series of claim lines, against a fourth predetermined section of the contract containing service codes when it is determined that no non-excluded claim code substantially matches a case rate code or a per diem code;
- for each remaining claim code substantially matching a service code, determining by the repricing engine which contractual terms of the matching service code apply; and
- applying by the repricing engine the applicable service contractual terms to each claim line of each matching remaining claim code to determine a reprice amount for each claim line.
6. The computer implemented method of claim 5, further comprising:
- adding by the repricing engine the repriced amounts for each claim line and the initial amounts for each claim line associated with an excluded claim code to determine a preliminary repriced claim total;
- comparing by the repricing engine the preliminary repriced claim total with a stop loss total of the rate sheet; and
- assigning by the repricing engine the preliminary repriced claim total as a final repriced claim total when the preliminary repriced claim total does not exceed the stop loss total.
7. The computer implemented method of claim 6, further comprising:
- assigning to the claim by the repricing engine a revised repriced claim total when the preliminary repriced claim total exceeds the stop loss total, wherein the revised repriced claim total is a predetermined percentage of the preliminary repriced claim total.
8. The computer implemented method of claim 1 further including:
- selecting by the repricing engine a governing contract from multiple contracts, wherein each of the multiple contracts includes a unique contract identifier code by comparing by a claim identifier code of the claim for reimbursement against the unique contract identifier code for each of the multiple contracts, and when the claim identifier code is substantially equal to a contract identifier code, identifying the one of the multiple contracts associated with the substantially equal contract identifier code as the governing contract, wherein the repricing of the claim for reimbursement is repriced only against the governing contract.
9. The computer implemented method of claim 8 wherein the step of repricing the claim further includes:
- when at least two of the multiple contracts are identified as governing contracts, repricing by the repricing engine the claim for reimbursement against each of the identified multiple governing contract and creating a list of multiple governing repriced amounts.
10. The computer implemented method of claim 9 further comprising:
- determining by the repricing engine a lowest governing repriced amount from the list of governing repriced amounts, wherein the lowest governing repriced amount is the repriced amount of the claim.
11. The computer implemented method of claim 10 further comprising: storing by the computer the repriced amount of the claim and storing the claim as a repriced claim.
12. The computer implemented method of claim 11 wherein prior to determining the reimbursement amount for a claim the method including: comparing the claim identifier code, of said claim, against the claim identifier codes, of all stored repriced claims;
- when the claim identifier code, of said claim is substantially equal to the claim identifier codes, of a stored repriced claim, combining the claim lines of said claim with the claim line of said repriced claim creating a bundled claim;
- determining by the repricing engine a repriced amount of the bundled claim, instead of determining a repriced amount of said claim; and
- rewriting the repriced amount of the stored repriced claim with the repriced amount of the bundled claim and rewriting the stored claim with the bundled claim.
13. A system for repricing a claim for reimbursement under a contract, the system comprising:
- a contract platform for creating a rate sheet in accordance with terms of the contract, the rate sheet including at least the following predefined sections against which a claim for reimbursement is compared for repricing an exclusion section, a case rate section, a per diem section, a services section, and a stop loss section and further including, wherein each of the predetermined sections includes one or more contract codes which are associated with one or more qualification terms and repricing calculation rates of the contract; and
- a repricing engine for comparing a claim code of each claim line of the claim for reimbursement to the rate sheet to reprice the claim.
14. The system of claim 13, wherein the repricing engine comprises:
- programming code for applying the terms of the contract to the claim in accordance with priority conditions defined in the rate sheet for determining a sequence of comparing each claim code against the multiple predefined sections therein.
15. The system of claim 14, wherein the repricing engine comprises:
- programming code for comparing each claim code, of the series of claim lines, against at least one exclusion code in the exclusion section, determining if any of the claim codes match the at least one exclusion code; and excluding matching claim codes from determining a reprice amount under the contract.
16. The system of claim 15, wherein the repricing engine comprises:
- programming code for comparing each non-excluded claim code, of the series of claim lines, against at least one case rate code in the case rate section and for each non-excluded claim code substantially matching at least one case rate code, determining which contractual terms of the matching case rate code apply and applying the applicable case rate contractual terms to the claim for reimbursement to determine the reprice amount under the contract for the claim.
17. The system of claim 16, wherein the repricing engine comprises:
- programming code for comparing each non-excluded, non-matching claim code, of the series of claim lines, against at least one per diem code in the per diem section when it is determined that no non-excluded claim code substantially matches the at least one case rate code and for each non-excluded claim code substantially matching the at least one per diem code, determining by which contractual terms of the matching per diem code apply and applying by the applicable per diem contractual terms to each claim line of each matching non-excluded claim code to determine a reprice amount for each claim line.
18. The system of claim 17, wherein the repricing engine comprises:
- programming code for comparing remaining claim codes, of the series of claim lines, against at least one services code of the services section when it is determined that no non-excluded claim code substantially matches the at least one case rate code or the at least one per diem code and for each remaining claim code substantially matching the at least one service code, determining which contractual terms of the matching service code apply and applying the applicable service contractual terms to each claim line of each matching remaining claim code to determine a reprice amount for each claim line.
19. The system of claim 18, wherein the repricing engine comprises:
- programming code for adding the reprice amounts for each claim line and an initial amount for each claim line associated with an excluded claim code to determine a preliminary repriced claim total and comparing the preliminary repriced claim total with a stop loss total of the rate sheet and assigning the preliminary repriced claim total as a final repriced claim total when the preliminary repriced claim total does not exceed the stop loss total.
20. The system of claim 19, wherein the repricing engine comprises:
- programming code for assigning to the claim a revised repriced claim total when the preliminary repriced claim total exceeds the stop loss total, wherein the revised repriced claim total is a predetermined percentage of the preliminary repriced claim total.
Type: Application
Filed: Nov 13, 2013
Publication Date: Mar 6, 2014
Applicant: TriZetto Corporation (Denver, CO)
Inventors: Mark Lesswing (St. Charles, IL), Dale Hoerle (Naperville, IL)
Application Number: 14/079,627
International Classification: G06F 19/00 (20060101);