Question...
I think I know the answer to this, but I would like to confirm for someone else in the office.
If a patient comes into the office (specialist) and has a procedure done that is normally non-covered by insurance, is it still correct billing to send to the patient's insurance and get a denial for the procedure or just bill the patient since it is knowingly non-covered?
Would love if someone could give me a heads up to this, so that we are billing it accordingly.
Thanks,
Amy
I think I know the answer to this, but I would like to confirm for someone else in the office.
If a patient comes into the office (specialist) and has a procedure done that is normally non-covered by insurance, is it still correct billing to send to the patient's insurance and get a denial for the procedure or just bill the patient since it is knowingly non-covered?
Would love if someone could give me a heads up to this, so that we are billing it accordingly.
Thanks,
Amy