Insurance Company Terminology

Posted in Insurance by admin on September 3, 2010 No Comments yet

Are you an expert in medical billing and coding? I have so many questions!?

I'm looking into getting Training for medical billing and coding. medicalbillingcourse.com claims it does not need to train in the coding to billing. They are completely different. Some will learn medical terminology and anatomy, others not. The only thing that nobody talks about is what the job is like day after day … What is the actual work like? Do you sit and watch codes in piles of books? How much contact with doctors you? Do you work with people of billing? You call the Insurance Company and get put on hold forever? Do you deal with customers irrational? How work computer there? Is there a program for some encoders use and is it a nightmere DOS and must be updated to Windows? What is the actual difference between a biller and coder? Do you really know both? Please do not just post a website for an online school. Thank you.

A biller is to stop with patients directly, you need excellent communication skills to deal with people who are most often not unhappy with the charges and recovered from their health fund gives them. You deal with accounts and indemnity fund health and take payments. Most insurance claims are made electronically at the point of service. An encoder must make the treatment or procedure in the code and send data to the department concerned, the health insurance, etc. You work independently and have no dealings with the public. I worked in a medical center, we had a small day hospital. I had a huge manual to help the hospital coding. Everything had to be accurate. The data had to be sent directly to Medicare. An encoder is totally different from a biller in my experience.

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