A three-digit code used by hospitals and skilled nursing facilities to identify a specific accommodation or ancillary charge on a hospital or skilled nursing facility bill to a third-party payer.
See Also: revenue code.
The Rantings of the barely human.
A three-digit code used by hospitals and skilled nursing facilities to identify a specific accommodation or ancillary charge on a hospital or skilled nursing facility bill to a third-party payer.
See Also: revenue code.
A ledger, ledger card, financial accounting record, or patient account ledger is a formal record of all transactions made on an individual’s financial record, listing debits, credits, and balance; this term may be computerised, or in a medical practise using a manual bookkeeping system, this term is referred to as a ledger, ledger card, financial accounting record, or patient account ledger.
A managed competition component that serves as both a provider and an insurer (payer) of health care services. AHPs compete with one another to provide the most cost-effective benefits package while also providing the highest quality of care. AHPs have preventive programmes and place an emphasis on wellness. These health plans are owned, operated, or contracted with by providers.
Also called Accountable health partnership (AHP), integrated delivery system (IDS), integrated health system (IHS), integrated health delivery system (IHDS), community accountable healthcare network (CAHN), integrated service networks (ISN), health purchasing alliance (HPA), community care network (CCN), and organised delivery systems.
Miscellaneous Medi-Cal accounting transactions as a result of cost settlements, state audits, or refund checks received by the fiscal intermediary.
1. Total amount of money owed by patients to a business for professional services rendered by a provider or medical group. 2. Money owed to a hospital facility from patients, insurance companies, managed care plans, and government programs.Also See day sheet.
The Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care, also known as the Accreditation Association or AAAHC , was formed in 1979 to assist ambulatory health care organizations improve the quality of care provided to patients. AAAHC is the leader in ambulatory health care accreditation and accredits more than 2500 organizations in a wide variety of ambulatory health care settings including ambulatory and office-based surgery centers, managed care organizations, and Indian and student health centers. With a single focus on the ambulatory care community, the Accreditation Association offers organizations a cost-effective, flexible, and collaborative approach to accreditation. The Accreditation Association’s mission is to maintain its position as the preeminent leader in developing standards to advance and promote patient safety, quality, value, and measurement of performance for ambulatory health care through peer-based accreditation processes, education, and research.
Duration of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) recognition of the validity of an accrediting organization’s determination that a Medicare+Choice organization (M+CO) is “fully accredited.”
Some states use the findings of private accreditation organizations, in part or in whole, to supplement or substitute for state oversight of some quality-related standards. This is referred to as “deemed compliance” with a standard.
State requirement that managed care plans must be accredited to participate in the Medicaid managed care program.
To have a seal of approval. Being accredited means that a facility or health care organization has met certain quality standards. These standards are set by private, nationally recognized groups that check on the quality of care at health care facilities and organizations. Organizations that accredit Medicare Managed Care Plans include the National Committee for Quality Assurance, The Joint Commission, and the American Accreditation HealthCare Commission/Utilization Review Accreditation Commission (URAC).