Geriatric Medicine Revenue Cycle Overview
Geriatric medicine revenue cycle management differs from other specialties because of the heavy reliance on non-encounter revenue codes and the near-total dependence on Medicare as the primary payer. A typical geriatric practice generates revenue from four streams: standard E/M visits (50% to 60% of total revenue), Annual Wellness Visits (10% to 15%), chronic care management and related codes (15% to 25%), and transitional care management (5% to 10%). Optimizing all four streams simultaneously is the key to geriatric practice financial sustainability because Medicare fee-for-service E/M rates alone are insufficient to support the practice infrastructure required for comprehensive geriatric care.
AWV Completion Rate
Track the percentage of Medicare patients who complete an Annual Wellness Visit each year. The benchmark is 60% to 80% of the Medicare panel. Below 50% indicates that AWV scheduling is not being proactively managed. At $130 average reimbursement per subsequent AWV (G0439) and a panel of 1,000 Medicare patients, increasing AWV completion from 50% to 70% adds $26,000 in annual revenue. The AWV also serves as the entry point for advance care planning (99497) and cognitive screening, both of which generate additional revenue. Track AWV completion by provider and by month to identify scheduling gaps and seasonal patterns.
CCM Enrollment Rate
Track the percentage of eligible patients enrolled in CCM. The eligibility requirement (two or more chronic conditions expected to last 12 months) applies to 60% to 80% of a typical geriatric panel. The enrollment target is 15% to 25% of eligible patients in the first year, scaling to 30% to 40% by year three. At $45 average monthly reimbursement for 99490 and 200 enrolled patients, CCM generates $108,000 annually. The primary barrier to enrollment is patient cost-sharing ($8 to $12 per month) and staff time for consent and documentation. Calculate the cost-per-patient of CCM delivery (care coordinator time, documentation, phone calls) and compare it to the per-patient revenue to verify positive margin.
TCM Capture Rate
Track the percentage of hospital discharges that result in a billed TCM code. The benchmark is 60% to 75% of all discharges. Below 50% indicates missed discharge notifications or inability to meet the timing requirements. At $220 average reimbursement per TCM claim and 10 discharges per month, a 70% capture rate generates $18,480 annually compared to $13,200 at 50% capture. The $5,280 difference justifies investment in discharge notification systems (ADT feeds, hospital liaison relationships). Track TCM by reason for missed capture: notification too late, patient not reachable within 2 days, face-to-face visit not completed within window, or documentation not completed.
Revenue Per Patient Per Year
Calculate total annual revenue per active patient by combining all revenue streams. A fully optimized geriatric practice generates $800 to $1,200 per patient per year when AWV, CCM, TCM, advance care planning, and standard E/M visits are all captured. An underoptimized practice generates $400 to $600 per patient per year when only standard E/M visits are billed. The gap between these two ranges represents the financial opportunity in geriatric billing optimization. For a practice with 1,000 active patients, moving from $500 to $900 per patient per year adds $400,000 in annual revenue without adding a single new patient.
Medicare Reimbursement Trends
Track Medicare reimbursement rate changes annually. The Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) conversion factor determines the dollar value of each RVU. Recent years have seen flat or declining conversion factors, offset by RVU increases for some geriatric-specific codes. AWV reimbursement has been stable. CCM reimbursement has increased modestly. E/M codes were revalued upward in 2021. Monitor the annual MPFS final rule (published each November, effective January 1) for rate changes affecting geriatric codes. Plan for revenue adjustments 60 to 90 days before the new rates take effect.
Value-Based Payment Impact
Geriatric practices participating in MIPS or ACO models have additional revenue at risk. MIPS adjustments can increase or decrease Medicare payments by up to 9%. Geriatric practices that report quality measures related to fall prevention, dementia care planning, advance care planning, and medication management tend to score well on quality metrics because these activities are core geriatric practice functions. Calculate the MIPS adjustment impact on total revenue and compare it to the cost of quality reporting. For most geriatric practices, positive MIPS adjustments add 2% to 4% to Medicare revenue, which translates to $15,000 to $40,000 annually for a practice with $750,000 to $1,000,000 in Medicare revenue.