Pulmonology revenue cycle management measures how well a practice turns respiratory visits, diagnostic testing, procedures, sleep services, and oxygen workflows into collected revenue. Broad collection totals are not enough because PFT, bronchoscopy, sleep, oxygen, patient balances, and E/M visits move on different timelines. Useful reporting separates service families and payer causes.
TL;DR: Pulmonology RCM should measure clean claim rate, AR days, denial causes, authorization performance, respiratory testing yield, sleep payment, and oxygen documentation risk.
- Clean claim rate attribute: value shows how often pulmonology 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, reports, and frequency limits.
- Testing yield attribute: value compares PFT 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 pulmonary charges are ready for payer review before submission. A strong process catches missing authorizations, invalid diagnosis pairing, incomplete reports, unit issues, and unsupported modifiers. Tracking should be split by E/M, PFT, bronchoscopy, sleep, and oxygen-related workflows.
AR Days Attribute
AR days show how long receivables stay open. Pulmonology AR should be segmented because office visits, PFT, sleep studies, procedures, oxygen-related balances, and patient responsibility move at different speeds. Practices can connect this reporting to revenue cycle management services.
Denial Rate Attribute
Denial reports should group authorization, medical necessity, report status, frequency, oxygen criteria, modifier, and payer policy issues. A monthly review should identify which failures belong to scheduling, documentation, coding, or payer follow-up.
Testing Yield Attribute
PFT and sleep claims deserve a separate performance view. Reports should compare volume, reimbursement, denial rate, underpayment, and average days to payment. This helps leaders see whether testing revenue is healthy or delayed by documentation and payer rules.
MMBS Performance Attribute
MMBS keeps pulmonology practices within 28 to 32 AR days by connecting charge review, authorization tracking, payment posting, denial prevention, and underpayment analysis. The result is clearer reporting and faster revenue recovery.