Skipping this step may lead to angry patients and lost reimbursement. You know that you need to have a Medicare patient sign an advance beneficiary notice (ABN) when your carrier won't cover a procedure or service your podiatrist is going to perform. But what about non-Medicare patients -- should you use an ABN? Follow this expert guidance to ensure you get paid for every service your podiatrist performs while avoiding patient problems by sending bills the patient wasn't expecting. Don't Skip ABNs for Private Payers You should, in fact, use some form of waiver or ABN-inspired document for patients who do not have Medicare coverage but you know the insurance they do have won't cover a service or procedure. Doing so not only increases your chances of collecting from the patient but is also a good patient relations move. "I've done this on occasion," says Elizabeth Hollingshead, CPC, CMC, corporate billing/coding manager of Northwest Columbus Urology Inc. in Marysville, Ohio. "It's more of a way to notify the patient ahead of time that they might be responsible for the charges. They can't claim ignorance if they've signed it before hand." "It is good patient relations, giving them pre-notification that a service may not be covered due to 'medical necessity' (meaning they do not pay for the service based on the patient's diagnosis and complaints), payer perceived experimental status of a procedure that is a mainstream and accepted standard of care, or non coverage in the policy," says Barbara J. Cobuzzi, MBA, CPC, CENTC, CPCH, CPC-P, CPC-I, CHCC, president of CRN Healthcare Solutions, a consulting firm inTinton Falls, N.J. Additionally: Warning: Avoid Relying Solely on Global Financial Policies You should include information about patients' financial responsibility in the financial policy you have every patient read and sign when he first visits your practice. You'll give the patient a copy and also keep the signed copy on hand in your office. Many practices have their patients sign financial responsibility documents that specify that the patient is responsible for any co-pays, co-insurance, deductible, and noncovered experimental amounts. Caution: "Even though a global financial policy includes this it is still a best practice too have an informed patient for the 'questionable' procedure (questionable from the third party payer's perspective) via a waiver or private payer ABN for that procedure and date of service," Cobuzzi says. Good practice: "Globally include in your financial policy that the patient is responsible not only copayments and deductibles but also for what the payer deems experimental as well," Cobuzzi advises. Be specific and state that "the patient will be responsible for all non-covered services," she adds. Include all of these conditions of patient payment responsibility in your practice's global financial policy "as well as be included in the private payer waiver or ABN," Cobuzzi says. Follow Payer-Specific Guidelines When Available Sometimes you'll even receive specific instructions from your payer telling you when you should use an ABN for services. Example: Remember: