Occupational Medicine Medical Billing Overview
If your practice focuses on occupational medicine, you are working at the intersection of clinical care, employer relationships, and workers’ compensation systems, and that intersection creates billing complexity that most general billing services are not equipped to handle. Your patients come to you through employer referrals, workers’ compensation carriers, and sometimes their own health insurance, and each of those payment sources has completely different billing rules, documentation requirements, and reimbursement structures. You need a billing partner who understands all of them.
Workers’ compensation billing alone operates outside the standard Medicare and commercial payer framework. Each state has its own workers’ compensation fee schedule, its own claim forms, and its own rules for what documentation is required to support a claim. Meanwhile, your employer-sponsored occupational health services, including pre-employment physicals, drug screens, and return-to-work evaluations, may be billed directly to employers rather than through any insurance system at all. Managing these multiple billing channels simultaneously requires a specialized approach that protects your revenue across all of them.
Common Billing Challenges in Occupational Medicine
- Workers’ compensation claim routing errors: When a patient presents for a work-related injury, the claim must be routed to the workers’ compensation carrier, not the patient’s health insurance. Billing the wrong payer creates a reimbursement delay that can run 60 to 90 days while the claim is redirected. Your intake process needs to identify the correct payer at the first point of contact, every time.
- Employer direct billing without formal contracts: Many occupational medicine practices bill employers directly for pre-employment physicals, fitness-for-duty evaluations, and onsite services. Without a formal billing agreement that defines charges, payment terms, and dispute resolution, these accounts become difficult to collect from and create A/R problems that health insurance billing does not prepare you for.
- Drug screen coding and documentation gaps: Urine drug screens ordered as part of employment physicals or return-to-work evaluations require specific documentation linking the test to its clinical or employment purpose. Without that documentation, medical necessity denials follow when the test is billed through a health plan rather than an employer or workers’ compensation carrier.
- Work status report and disability evaluation coding: Services such as impairment ratings and disability evaluations are coded differently than standard clinical E/M visits. Billing these services under standard office visit codes, such as 99213 or 99214, rather than under the appropriate workers’ compensation evaluation codes results in systematic underpayment for services that require significantly more physician time and documentation.
Key CPT Codes for Occupational Medicine Billing
- 99455: Work-related or medical disability examination by the treating physician, including completion of necessary documentation and report; the primary code for occupational medicine disability evaluations
- 99213: Office or other outpatient visit, established patient, low medical decision making; used for return-to-work follow-up visits and minor occupational injury management
- 99080: Special reports such as insurance forms, more than the information conveyed in the usual medical communications or standard reporting form; billable for employer-required documentation reports beyond the standard clinical note
- 80307: Drug test, presumptive, instrument-assisted; used for employment drug screening panels billed to employers or workers’ compensation carriers
- 99204: Office or other outpatient visit, new patient, moderate medical decision making; appropriate for initial evaluation of new patients presenting with occupational injuries or illnesses
Revenue Cycle Considerations for Occupational Medicine
Your revenue cycle is more fragmented than most specialties because your payer mix includes workers’ compensation carriers, state-specific fee schedules, employer accounts, and traditional health insurance, all running simultaneously. Commercial health insurance claims for occupational medicine, when routed through BCBS, UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, or Cigna, typically resolve in 30 to 45 days when submitted correctly. A/R days for workers’ compensation claims average 45 to 75 days, which is significantly longer than commercial insurance, and each state has different rules about when a payer can be considered in default. Knowing those rules in your specific states of operation is the difference between collecting on old claims and writing them off.
Employer-direct accounts, when not managed with formal invoicing and collections processes, can quietly accumulate unpaid balances that never enter your formal A/R system. Setting up clear billing agreements with employer accounts, issuing invoices on a defined schedule, and following up on overdue balances protects that portion of your revenue that falls entirely outside the insurance billing framework.
How My Medical Bill Solution Helps Occupational Medicine Practices
Your practice does important work, and every service you provide deserves to be paid correctly. My Medical Bill Solution brings experience with workers’ compensation billing across multiple state fee schedules, employer direct billing management, and standard commercial payer claims to your account. We route each claim to the correct payer from the first submission, track workers’ compensation claims through their longer payment cycles, and manage employer accounts with formal invoicing and follow-up.
We also ensure your drug screen and disability evaluation services are coded to the level of service your physicians actually provide, not downgraded to generic office visit codes that undervalue your work. When you are ready for a billing process that matches the complexity of occupational medicine, contact My Medical Bill Solution to schedule your practice assessment.