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  2. Current Procedural Terminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Current_Procedural_Terminology

    The CPT code set describes medical, surgical, and diagnostic services and is designed to communicate uniform information about medical services and procedures among physicians, coders, patients, accreditation organizations, and payers for administrative, financial, and analytical purposes.

  3. Medical billing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_billing

    Achieving a high clean claims rate is a key metric for measuring the efficiency of the billing cycle. Creation of the claim is where medical billing most directly overlaps with medical coding because billers take the ICD/CPT codes used by the medical coders and creates the claim. Step 6: Monitoring payor Adjudication [4]

  4. Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Healthcare_Common...

    HCPCS includes three levels of codes: Level I consists of the American Medical Association's Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) and is numeric.; Level II codes are alphanumeric and primarily include non-physician services such as ambulance services and prosthetic devices, and represent items and supplies and non-physician services, not covered by CPT-4 codes (Level I).

  5. List of abbreviations used in medical prescriptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_abbreviations_used...

    This is a list of abbreviations used in medical prescriptions, including hospital orders (the patient-directed part of which is referred to as sig codes).This list does not include abbreviations for pharmaceuticals or drug name suffixes such as CD, CR, ER, XT (See Time release technology § List of abbreviations for those).

  6. Chargemaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chargemaster

    The chargemaster may be alternatively referred to as the "charge master", "hospital chargemaster", or the "charge description master" (CDM). [4] [5] It is a comprehensive listing of items billable to a hospital patient or a patient's health insurance provider. [3] [6] It is described as "the central mechanism of the revenue cycle" of a hospital ...

  7. Here’s How Many Hours You’d Have To Work To Pay the ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/many-hours-d-pay-average-150018286.html

    This means that you would need to work just over 397 hours at a $33.44 hourly rate to pay back the average hospital bill. That’s nearly 400 hours just to pay off the bill, or almost 10 weeks of ...

  8. This NJ woman spent 6 years fighting a $225K hospital bill ...

    www.aol.com/nj-woman-spent-6-years-112753076.html

    Bando left the hospital with a nearly $225,000 bill after receiving a pacemaker and spending two nights at the facility in 2016. Gross, the President and CEO of MedWise Insurance Advocacy, has ...

  9. Clinical documentation improvement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinical_documentation...

    Clinical documentation improvement (CDI), also known as "clinical documentation integrity", is the best practices, processes, technology, people, and joint effort between providers and billers that advocates the completeness, precision, and validity of provider documentation inherent to transaction code sets (e.g. ICD-10-CM, ICD-10-PCS, CPT, HCPCS) sanctioned by the Health Insurance ...