Health Informatics: Week 4
CHAPTER
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8 Third-Party Payers
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Learning Outcomes
When you finish this chapter, you will be able to:
8.1 Compare the major features of PPO, HMO, and
POS health plans.
8.2 Identify the two parts of CDHPs.
8.3 Discuss the organization and regulation of employer-
sponsored group health plans and self-insured
plans.
8.4 Explain the purpose of Medicare Parts A, B, C, and
D.
8.5 Describe the fee structures that are used to set
charges.
8-2
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Learning Outcomes (Continued)
When you finish this chapter, you will be able to:
8.6 Identify the three methods most payers use to pay
physicians.
8.7 Maintain insurance carrier information in the
PM/EHR.
8-3
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Key Terms
• allowed charge
• balance billing
• Blue Cross and Blue
Shield Association
(BCBS)
• capitation (cap) rate
• Civilian Health and
Medical Program of the
Department of Veterans
Affairs (CHAMPVA)
• consumer-driven
(directed) health plan
(CDHP)
8-4
• disability compensation
programs
• discounted fee-for-
service
• dual-eligible
• Employment Retirement
Income Security Act of
1974 (ERISA)
• Federal Employees
Health Benefits (FEHB)
• fee schedule
• flexible savings account
(FSA)
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Key Terms (Continued)
• group health plan (GHP)
• health maintenance
organization (HMO)
• health reimbursement
account (HRA)
• health savings account
(HSA)
• high-deductible health
plan (HDHP)
• individual health plan
(IHP)
• Medicaid
8-5
• Medicare
• Medicare Part A,
Hospital Insurance (HI)
• Medicare Part B,
Supplementary Medical
Insurance (SMI)
• Medicare Part C,
Medicare Advantage
• Medicare Part D
• Medicare Physician Fee
Schedule (MPFS)
• Medigap
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Key Terms (Continued)
• Medi-Medi beneficiary
• Original Medicare Plan
• point-of-service (POS)
plan
• preferred provider
organization (PPO)
• primary care physician
(PCP)
• relative value scale
(RVS)
• resource-based relative
value scale (RBRVS)
8-6
• self-insured health plans
• third-party payer
• TRICARE
• usual, customary, and
reasonable (UCR)
• usual fees
• workers’ compensation
insurance
• write off
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8.1 Types of Health Plans 8-7
• Third-party payer—private or government
organization that insures or pays for health care
on behalf of beneficiaries
• Preferred provider organization (PPO)—
managed care network of health care providers
who agree to perform services for plan members
at discounted rates
– The policyholder pays an annual premium and a
yearly deductible.
– A PPO may offer either a low deductible with a higher
premium or a high deductible with a lower premium.
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8.1 Types of Health Plans (Continued) 8-8
• PPO features (continued):
– Members typically pay a copayment at the time of
service, and coinsurance may also be charged.
– Patients may see out-of-network doctors without a
referral or preauthorization; the amount they have to
pay will be higher.
• Health maintenance organization (HMO)—
managed care system in which providers offer
health care to members for fixed periodic
payments
– This type of health plan has the most stringent
guidelines and the narrowest choice of providers.
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8.1 Types of Health Plans (Continued) 8-9
• HMO features (continued):
– A Primary care physician (PCP) is a physician in a
managed care organization who directs all aspects of
a patient’s care; members are assigned to a PCP.
– Members must use their HMO’s network except in
emergencies or pay a penalty.
– HMOs are organized around one of three business
models: the staff model, the group or network model,
and the independent practice association model.
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8.1 Types of Health Plans (Continued) 8-10
• Point-of-service (POS) plan—managed care
plan that permits patients to receive medial
services from nonnetwork providers
– A POS plan is a hybrid of HMO and PPO networks.
– Members may choose from a primary or secondary
network.
– This kind of plan charges annual premiums and
copayments for office visits.
• Indemnity or fee-for-service plans require
premium, deductible, and coinsurance
payments.
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8.2 Consumer-Driven Health Plans 8-11
• Consumer-driven (directed) health plan
(CDHP)—medical insurance that combines a
high-deductible health plan with one or more
tax-preferred savings accounts that the patient
directs
• High-deductible health plan (HDHP)—health
plan that combines high deductible insurance
and a funding option to pay for patients’ out-of-
pocket expenses up to the deductible
– First part of a CDHP
– Annual deductible over $1,000
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8.2 Consumer-Driven Health Plans
(Continued) 8-12
• The second part of a CDHP involves one of
three types of funding options:
– Health reimbursement account (HRA)—CDHP
funding option where an employer sets aside an
annual amount for health care costs
– Health savings account (HSA)—CDHP funding
option under which funds are set aside to pay for
certain health care costs
– Flexible savings account (FSA)—CDHP funding
option that has employer and employee contributions
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8.3 Private Insurance Payers and Blue
Cross and Blue Shield 8-13
• Group health plan (GHP)—plan of an employer
or employee organization to provide health care
to employees, former employees, and/or their
families
– Human resource departments manage the health
care benefits.
– Riders, or options, are often offered for vision and
dental services.
– During open enrollment periods, employees choose
the plans they prefer for the coming benefit period.
– This kind of health plan must follow federal and state
laws.
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8.3 Private Insurance Payers and Blue
Cross and Blue Shield (Continued) 8-14
• Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB)—
health care program that covers federal
employees
• Self-insured health plans—health insurance
plans paid for directly by the organization, which
sets up a fund from which to pay
– These do not pay premiums to insurance carriers or
managed care organizations.
– These set up their own provider networks or lease the
use of managed care organizations’ networks.
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8.3 Private Insurance Payers and Blue
Cross and Blue Shield (Continued) 8-15
• Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974 (ERISA)—law providing incentives and
protection for companies with employee health
and pension plans
– The law regulates self-insured health plans.
• Individual health plan (IHP)—medical
insurance plan purchased by an individual
• Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association
(BCBS)—licensing agency of Blue Cross and
Blue Shield plans
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8.4 Government-Sponsored Insurance
Programs, Workers’ Compensation,
and Disability Plans
8-16
• Medicare—federal health insurance program for
people sixty-five or older and some people with
disabilities
• Medicare Part A, Hospital Insurance (HI)—
program that pays for hospitalization, care in a
skilled nursing facility, home health care, and
hospice care
• Medicare Part B, Supplementary Medical
Insurance (SMI)—program that pays for
physician services, outpatient hospital services,
durable medical equipment, and other services
and supplies
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8.4 Government-Sponsored Insurance
Programs, Workers’ Compensation,
and Disability Plans (Continued)
8-17
• Original Medicare Plan—Medicare fee-for-
service plan
• Medigap—plan offered by a private insurance
carrier to supplement Medicare coverage
• Medicare Part C, Medicare Advantage—
managed care health plan under the Medicare
program
• Medicare Part D—Medicare prescription drug
reimbursement plans
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8.4 Government-Sponsored Insurance
Programs, Workers’ Compensation,
and Disability Plans (Continued)
8-18
• Medicaid—federal and state assistance
program that pays for health care services for
people who cannot afford them
• Medi-Medi beneficiaries—people eligible for
both Medicare and Medicaid
• Dual-eligible—Medicare-Medicaid beneficiary
• TRICARE—government health program serving
dependents of active-duty service members,
military retirees and their families, some former
spouses, and survivors of deceased military
members
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8.4 Government-Sponsored Insurance
Programs, Workers’ Compensation,
and Disability Plans (Continued)
8-19
• Civilian Health and Medical Program of the
Department of Veterans Affairs
(CHAMPVA)—health care plan for families of
veterans with 100 percent service-related
disabilities and the surviving spouses and
children of veterans who die from service-related
disabilities
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8.4 Government-Sponsored Insurance
Programs, Workers’ Compensation,
and Disability Plans (Continued)
8-20
• Workers’ compensation insurance—state or
federal plan that covers medical care and other
benefits for employees who suffer accidental
injury or become ill as a result of employment
• Disability compensation programs—programs
that provide partial reimbursement for lost
income when a disability prevents an individual
from working
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8.5 Setting Fees 8-21
• Fee schedule—document that specifies the
amount the provider bills for services
• Usual fees—normal fees charged by a provider
• Most payers use one of three methods to set the
fees that their plan will pay physicians:
– Usual, customary, and reasonable (UCR)—fees set
by comparing usual fees, customary fees, and
reasonable fees
– Relative value scale (RVS)—system of assigning
unit values to medical services based on their
required skill and time
– Resource-based relative value scale (RBRVS)—
relative value scale for establishing Medicare charges
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8.5 Setting Fees (Continued) 8-22
• Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS)—
RBRVS-based allowed fees that are the basis
for Medicare reimbursements
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8.6 Third-Party Payment Methods 8-23
• Payers use one of three main methods of paying
providers:
– Allowed charges
– Contracted fee schedules
– Capitation
• Allowed charge—maximum charge a plan pays
for a service or procedure
• Balance billing—collecting the difference
between a provider’s usual fee and a payer’s
lower allowed charge
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8.6 Third-Party Payment Methods
(Continued) 8-24
• Write off—to deduct an amount from a patient’s
account
• Discounted fee-for-service—payment
schedule for services based on a reduced
percentage of usual charges
• Capitation (cap) rate—periodic prepayment to
a provider for specified services to each plan
member
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8.7 Maintaining Insurance Information in
the PM/EHR 8-25
• Setting up insurance carriers correctly in the
PM/EHR is essential to getting claims paid in a
timely manner.
• To maintain insurance carrier information in
MCPR:
– Access the information by selecting Insurance on the
Lists menu.
– Select Carriers (to enter, edit, or delete carriers) or
Classes (for reporting) on the submenu that appears.
– Select the Carriers option; the Insurance Carrier List
dialog box is displayed.
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8.7 Maintaining Insurance Information in
the PM/EHR (Continued) 8-26
• Maintaining carrier information (continued):
– Use the Edit, New, and Delete buttons to change,
create, and delete insurance carriers.
– Use the Print Grid button to print the information.
– Close the dialog box using the Close button.