Denial Patterns in Behavioral Health
Behavioral health claims face unique denial challenges that differ from medical specialties. The combination of session-based authorization limits, strict time documentation requirements, and payer-specific coverage policies creates denial patterns that require specialized prevention strategies. Behavioral health denial rates average 8% to 12% industry-wide, higher than the medical specialty average of 6% to 8%.
Denial Reason 1: Authorization Issues (CARC 197)
CARC 197 (precertification/authorization not obtained) is the most costly behavioral health denial because it is almost always non-recoverable. If authorization was not in place at the time of the session, the claim will be denied regardless of clinical merit. This happens when initial authorization is not obtained before treatment begins, when sessions exceed the authorized count, or when re-authorization is not submitted before the current authorization expires.
Prevention requires an authorization tracking system that alerts staff when a patient is approaching their session limit (at 2 sessions remaining) and when the authorization expiration date is within 3 weeks. Manual tracking on spreadsheets breaks down at practices with more than 50 active patients. Automated alerts through the practice management system are more reliable.
Denial Reason 2: Medical Necessity (CARC 50)
Payers deny behavioral health claims for medical necessity when the documentation does not support continued treatment. This happens most often after the initial authorization period, when the payer reviews the treatment plan and progress notes and determines that the patient has not shown sufficient clinical change to justify additional sessions. It also occurs when the diagnosis code does not support the type of therapy billed.
Strong treatment plans with measurable goals and regular progress documentation are the best defense against medical necessity denials. Goals should be specific and measurable: “Reduce PHQ-9 score from 18 to below 10 within 12 sessions” is defensible. “Improve mood and functioning” is not. Progress notes should reference these goals and document incremental change.
Denial Reason 3: Session Frequency Limits (CARC 119)
CARC 119 (benefit maximum reached) applies when the patient has used all covered sessions within the benefit period. Many commercial plans cap outpatient behavioral health at 20 to 30 sessions per calendar year. Some plans apply separate limits for individual and group therapy. Exceeding these limits results in automatic denial.
Track session counts per patient per benefit year. When a patient approaches the annual limit, discuss options: applying for a medical necessity exception, transitioning to less frequent sessions, utilizing group therapy (which often has a separate limit), or converting to self-pay for sessions beyond the covered amount.
Denial Reason 4: Provider Credential Issues (CARC 185)
CARC 185 (provider not eligible) occurs when the rendering provider is not credentialed with the patient payer or when the provider credential type is not covered under the plan. Some plans cover psychiatrists and psychologists but do not cover LCSWs or LPCs. Others require supervisory arrangements for provisionally licensed providers. Credentialing verification must happen before treating a patient under their insurance.
Denial Reason 5: Time Documentation Disputes (CARC 16)
CARC 16 (missing or incomplete information) frequently applies to behavioral health claims where the session note does not include adequate time documentation. If the note says “45-minute session” but the CPT code billed is 90837 (53+ minutes), the payer will deny for insufficient time support. Start and stop times are the strongest form of time documentation. “Approximately 50 minutes” is weaker and more likely to be challenged on audit.