Billing Workflow

Pulmonology Billing Process for Respiratory Claims

A pulmonology billing process for eligibility, authorization, respiratory documentation, CPT and ICD-10 coding, claim submission, posting, and denial follow-up.

Pulmonology Billing Process for Respiratory Claims
01

Pulmonology billing starts with coverage, referral, and authorization checks

02

Respiratory documentation should support symptoms, test orders, and interpretation

03

Coding review should confirm CPT, ICD-10, modifiers, units, and report status

04

ERA posting should separate denials, underpayments, and patient balances

Overview

Why Pulmonology Billing Process Teams Need a Better Workflow

This guide breaks the work into the coding, documentation, payer, and collections details that most directly shape reimbursement outcomes for Pulmonology teams.

Why Pulmonology Billing Process Teams Need a Better Workflow
Challenges

Common Pulmonology Billing Process Challenges We Solve

Every Pulmonology Billing Process team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage.

Pulmonology billing starts with coverage, referral, and authorization checks

The workflow has to support this issue before claim submission, or it turns into avoidable rework after the payer responds.

Respiratory documentation should support symptoms, test orders, and interpretation

When this area is inconsistent, denial rate, payment timing, and staff follow-up effort all get worse at the same time.

Coding review should confirm CPT, ICD-10, modifiers, units, and report status

Tight documentation and coding controls here usually improve both reimbursement accuracy and operational speed.

ERA posting should separate denials, underpayments, and patient balances

This is one of the first places revenue leakage shows up when specialty billing habits are not standardized.

Services

Complete Pulmonology Billing Process Resources

Support spans the full revenue cycle.

CPT Codes

Claim Denials

Revenue Cycle

Outsourcing

Coding Guide

Pulmonology Billing Hub

Coverage

Serving Pulmonology Billing Teams Nationwide

We support independent practices and growing provider organizations.

Pulmonology private practices

Pulmonology multisite groups

Pulmonology billing managers

Pulmonology owners and operators

Guide

The Complete Guide to Pulmonology Billing Process

The pulmonology billing process turns respiratory visits, diagnostic tests, procedures, and treatment plans into clean claim submission. Pulmonology practices manage COPD, asthma, sleep apnea, pulmonary fibrosis, oxygen qualification, PFT reports, bronchoscopy procedures, and recurring medication decisions. The workflow works best when eligibility, authorization, documentation, coding, and collections are linked before claims reach the clearinghouse.

TL;DR: Pulmonology billing starts with eligibility and authorization, continues through respiratory documentation and code review, then ends with payment posting and denial follow-up by root cause.

  • Eligibility attribute: active coverage value confirms payer, referral, deductible, and pulmonary benefit rules.
  • Authorization attribute: approval value must match sleep test, oxygen, procedure, date, diagnosis, and provider.
  • Documentation attribute: note value must support visit level, test order, report interpretation, and treatment plan.
  • Claim attribute: submission value includes CPT, ICD-10, modifiers, units, NPI, and place of service.
  • Payment attribute: ERA value should be reconciled to contract rate and denial reason.

Eligibility Attribute

Eligibility checks should confirm active coverage, referral rules, deductible status, payer policy, and patient responsibility. Pulmonology services may involve specialist visits, facility testing, DME, oxygen, or sleep medicine pathways. If the front desk misses referral or benefit rules, the billing team inherits a preventable denial.

Authorization Attribute

Authorization tracking matters for sleep studies, oxygen equipment, advanced imaging referrals, certain procedures, and payer-specific testing limits. The approval record should match the CPT code, diagnosis, provider, location, and date range. Missing or mismatched approval data is a common source of CO-197 authorization denials.

Documentation Attribute

Pulmonology notes should connect respiratory symptoms, diagnosis, exam findings, test orders, interpretation, medication changes, and follow-up plan. PFT and sleep reports should be finalized before billing. Bronchoscopy notes should identify procedure details, findings, and specimen collection. Documentation quality directly affects medical coding accuracy.

Claim Submission Attribute

Before claim release, the billing team should check CPT selection, ICD-10 specificity, modifier 25 support, units, payer ID, authorization number, and report status. Clearinghouse rejection trends should be reviewed weekly because repeated missing fields often point to a front-end or coding workflow issue.

MMBS Process Control

MMBS keeps pulmonology billing inside 28 to 32 AR days by linking front-end checks, report-ready coding, claim edits, payment posting, and denial follow-up into one process. This gives respiratory practices cleaner revenue cycle management reporting.

Common Pulmonology Billing Process References

Step Action Target Timing
1 Verify eligibility, referral, and pulmonary benefits Before visit
2 Check authorization for sleep, oxygen, or procedures Before service
3 Capture respiratory documentation and reports At encounter
4 Review CPT, ICD-10, modifiers, and units Before claim release
5 Submit claim and clear rejections Within 1 to 2 business days
6 Post ERA and route denials by cause Daily
Common Questions

Pulmonology Billing Process FAQ

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

Pulmonology billing combines specialist visits, respiratory testing, procedure reports, oxygen qualification, sleep medicine criteria, and payer authorization rules.

Authorization should be checked before sleep studies, oxygen-related services, bronchoscopy when required, and any respiratory test or procedure the payer flags for review.

Reports prove what was performed and interpreted. Spirometry, PFT, sleep, and procedure claims are weaker when billed before the final report is signed.

Pulmonology denials should be reviewed at least weekly by root cause, with high-value procedure, oxygen, and sleep denials worked sooner.

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