Neurology revenue cycle management measures how well a practice turns visits, diagnostic studies, procedures, and medication services into collected revenue. The specialty has complex payer rules, high-value testing, and repeat care plans, so broad collection totals are not enough. Useful reporting separates E/M visits, EEG, EMG, nerve conduction, sleep studies, drug claims, authorizations, denials, and underpayments.
TL;DR: Neurology RCM should measure clean claim rate, AR days, denial causes, authorization performance, diagnostic test yield, and underpayment risk by service type.
- Clean claim rate attribute: value shows how often neurology claims pass edits first time.
- AR days attribute: value shows how quickly payer and patient balances convert to cash.
- Denial rate attribute: value should be split by authorization, medical necessity, units, and modifiers.
- Diagnostic yield attribute: value compares testing volume, payment, denial, and underpayment.
- Patient balance attribute: value tracks deductible and coinsurance collection after adjudication.
Clean Claim Rate Attribute
Clean claim rate shows whether neurology charges are ready for payer review before submission. A strong clean claim process catches missing authorization, invalid diagnosis pairing, wrong units, payer ID errors, and unsupported modifiers. Because diagnostic testing and drug claims can be high value, a small claim error can create a meaningful cash delay. Clean claim tracking should be reviewed by service family, not only at the practice level.
AR Days Attribute
AR days show how long receivables stay open. Neurology AR should be segmented because office visits, EEG, EMG, sleep testing, and drug claims move at different speeds. A blended AR number can hide stalled authorizations, payer review delays, or patient balance friction. Practices that need stronger collection discipline can connect this reporting to revenue cycle management services for healthcare groups.
Denial Rate Attribute
Denial rate is most useful when grouped by root cause. Neurology teams should watch authorization denials, medical necessity denials, report-related denials, modifier 25 denials, unit mismatches, and drug policy denials. A monthly denial meeting should identify which failures can be fixed at scheduling, which require documentation changes, and which need payer-specific coding edits.
Diagnostic Testing Attribute
EEG, EMG, nerve conduction, and sleep study claims deserve their own performance view. Reports should compare volume, reimbursement, denial rate, underpayment, and average days to payment. The practice can then see whether testing is profitable, delayed by authorization, or losing revenue through avoidable units and documentation errors. This level of detail supports claims follow-up by service line.
Patient Balance Attribute
Neurology patients may carry deductibles, coinsurance, and balances after diagnostic testing or repeated care. Patient statements, payment plans, eligibility checks, and front-desk estimates affect cash flow. Patient balance reporting should separate expected responsibility from payer denials, so the team does not chase the wrong party.
MMBS Performance Attribute
MMBS keeps neurology practices within 28 to 32 AR days by connecting charge review, payer follow-up, denial prevention, and underpayment analysis. That structure gives practice leaders a clearer view of what is being billed, what is being paid, and where revenue is getting stuck.