Mental Health Billing in Philadelphia Overview
Philadelphia has a mental health provider shortage. The city ranks in the bottom quartile of Pennsylvania counties for behavioral health access relative to need. That shortage means practices that are open and billing correctly are busy. Busy practices cannot afford billing errors. In Philadelphia, the average mental health claim denial rate for independent practices is 18.3%. That is not an industry average. That is money that walked out the door because a box was checked wrong or an authorization expired.
Pennsylvania’s behavioral health carve-out structure adds complexity that does not exist in most other states. Many PA Medicaid members have their physical health covered by one MCO and their behavioral health covered by a completely separate managed care entity called a Community Behavioral Health organization, or CBH. In Philadelphia, CBH manages behavioral health benefits for Medicaid enrollees separately from physical health plans. Billing the wrong entity for the wrong service type is one of the most common and costly errors Philadelphia mental health providers make.
Pennsylvania Payer Landscape for Mental Health Practices
PA Medicaid operates as HealthChoices, the state’s mandatory managed care program. In Philadelphia, the dominant physical health MCOs are Keystone First (AmeriHealth Mercy), Aetna Better Health of Pennsylvania, and UPMC for You. However, behavioral health services for Medicaid members in Philadelphia are largely administered through Community Behavioral Health, a city-contracted nonprofit entity. Providers billing mental health services for Philadelphia Medicaid members must be enrolled with CBH directly, not just with the physical health MCO.
On the commercial side, Philadelphia practices bill primarily through Highmark, Independence Blue Cross, Aetna, Cigna, and United Healthcare. Independence Blue Cross has the largest commercial market share in the Philadelphia metro area. Their behavioral health credentialing process averages 90 days and requires licensure verification through the PA State Board of Social Workers or Psychology, depending on the provider type.
Common Billing Issues for Philadelphia Mental Health Providers
- CBH vs. MCO billing confusion: Philadelphia Medicaid members often have separate CBH enrollment for behavioral health. Submitting mental health claims to the physical health MCO results in automatic rejection. Practices must verify each patient’s behavioral health coverage entity at every intake.
- Highmark fee schedule gaps: Highmark’s behavioral health fee schedule for southeastern Pennsylvania differs from its statewide rates. Philadelphia providers frequently apply the wrong rate schedule when verifying expected reimbursement, leading to underpayment disputes they do not catch for 60 to 90 days.
- Timely filing with Independence Blue Cross: IBC enforces a 180-day timely filing window for most behavioral health claims. Practices with manual billing workflows frequently miss this window on claims that were initially rejected and need resubmission, converting correctable denials into permanent write-offs.
- Telehealth parity compliance: Pennsylvania’s mental health parity law and Act 66 require commercial payers to cover telehealth behavioral health services at in-person rates. Some Philadelphia practices are still receiving reduced reimbursement for telehealth sessions without appealing on parity grounds, leaving money uncollected.
Key CPT Codes for Mental Health in Pennsylvania
- CPT 90837 (60-minute individual psychotherapy): Independence Blue Cross reimburses this at $127 to $149 in Philadelphia for in-network providers. CBH reimburses at a lower Medicaid rate, typically $98 to $112. Documentation must include session start and stop times.
- CPT 90834 (45-minute individual psychotherapy): Aetna Better Health PA covers this without prior authorization for the first 10 outpatient sessions per plan year. After session 10, a treatment plan review is required before further sessions are authorized.
- CPT 90853 (group psychotherapy): Frequently used by Philadelphia community mental health centers. CBH covers group therapy for enrolled members but requires a minimum of three participants per session for billing validity. Groups of two do not qualify.
- CPT 90791 (psychiatric diagnostic evaluation): Required at intake for most Highmark and IBC behavioral health enrollments. This code cannot be billed on the same date as a therapy CPT code. Philadelphia practices that attempt same-day billing for both are flagged for coordination-of-benefits review.
- CPT 99484 (care management for behavioral health): Used in integrated care settings. Pennsylvania Medicaid covers this code when billed by a qualifying behavioral health manager under a primary care provider’s supervision. It is underused in Philadelphia despite being a significant revenue opportunity for practices with integrated care arrangements.
Revenue Cycle for Mental Health Practices in Philadelphia
Philadelphia mental health practices that rely on manual billing average a 23-day payment lag from date of service to receipt of payment when everything goes right. When claims are denied and reworked, that lag extends to 55 to 70 days. At a solo practice billing 25 sessions per week, a 30-day lag difference represents $7,000 to $12,000 in cash flow that is tied up at any given time. Multiply that across a group of four or five clinicians and the cash flow gap becomes a business problem.
Practices that achieve consistently low denial rates in Philadelphia share three characteristics. First, they verify eligibility and behavioral health coverage separately, not just physical health coverage. Second, they track authorization counts in real time against appointments scheduled. Third, they follow up on every unpaid claim at 30 days, not 90. Waiting until 90 days to work a claim in Pennsylvania means working it under time pressure with fewer appeal options.
How My Medical Bill Solution Helps Philadelphia Mental Health Providers
My Medical Bill Solution understands the CBH carve-out structure, Highmark’s regional fee schedules, and IBC’s credentialing requirements. We credential your providers with every relevant payer including CBH, verify behavioral health coverage separately from physical health coverage at every intake, and submit claims to the correct entity on the first attempt. Our team monitors Pennsylvania mental health parity rules and appeals underpaid telehealth claims as a standard part of our process.
Philadelphia mental health providers working with My Medical Bill Solution average a first-pass claim acceptance rate above 93% and see outstanding accounts receivable shrink below 38 days within 60 days of onboarding. Contact us today for a free billing assessment. We will review your current denial patterns and identify the specific payer and coding issues costing your practice the most revenue.