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Experian Health’s Contract Manager and Contract Analysis product has been ranked #1 in the 2026 Best in KLAS: Software & Services report, for the fourth consecutive year. Adam Gale, CEO of KLAS Research, says, “The Best in KLAS awards recognize the vendors who consistently deliver excellence through partnership with healthcare organizations. Winning this award means customers trust you to help them succeed in our rapidly changing healthcare landscape. This means helping them to improve patient care, achieve better outcomes, and find true ROI. We’re honored to amplify the voice of providers and payers at KLAS, and to celebrate those vendors who turn feedback into action.” Contract Manager, paired with Contract Analysis, empowers healthcare providers by continuously auditing payer contract performance. This solution identifies underpayments, supports recovery efforts, and delivers actionable insights that providers can use to negotiate stronger, more sustainable payer contracts, ultimately supporting long-term financial stability. Rob Stucker, VP of Product Management at Experian Health, says, “We’re proud that Contract Manager and Contract Analysis has once again been recognized as #1 in the 2026 Best in KLAS Software & Services report for the fourth consecutive year. This recognition reflects the meaningful impact our solution delivers by uncovering underpayments, accelerating revenue recovery and equipping provider organizations with the data they need to negotiate contracts from a position of strength. We’re committed to supporting our clients with innovative tools that simplify healthcare.” Learn more about how Contract Manager and Contract Analysis can help your healthcare organization validate reimbursement accuracy, recover underpayments and boost revenue. Learn more Contact us

Published: February 4, 2026 by Experian Health

Experian Health is very pleased to announce that we’ve been recognized as a Consistent High Performer for Contract Management & Analysis Software in the 2025 KLAS report.

Published: December 18, 2025 by Experian Health

Highlights: Payer contract management software helps reduce revenue lost through denied claims and underpayments – two of the biggest pain points for providers – by validating reimbursements, supporting compliance and flagging policy changes in real time. Named "Best in KLAS" three years in a row, Experian Health's contract management tools optimize payer contracts and improve financial performance without adding staff. Experian Health's Contract Manager enabled OrthoTennessee to achieve an 86% success rate on appeals, saving time and recovering thousands of dollars. Claim denials and underpayments continue to cut into provider revenue, making them top pain points for healthcare chief financial officers. In Experian Health's 2024 State of Claims survey, 73% of providers reported an uptick in denials over the previous year, while 77% were seeing more frequent payer policy changes. When contract terms aren't up to date or properly understood, these changes can lead to costly surprises. Many healthcare organizations are turning to claims management automation to improve front-end operations and prevent downstream denials. But could they be overlooking another digital tool? Implementing payer contract management software is a practical way to strengthen early revenue cycle performance and ward off discrepancies that lead to denials. This software helps hospitals and health systems recover hundreds of thousands of dollars annually by auditing payer contracts and identifying underpayments. The role of payer software in enhancing contract efficiency Payer contracts set the terms for how providers get paid. These agreements cover details like claim submission timelines, reimbursement schedules, covered services, reimbursement rates, dispute procedures, contract duration and renegotiation terms. When managed well, they ensure providers are reimbursed accurately and promptly. However, monitoring complex payer contracts is becoming increasingly challenging for providers. According to the State of Claims survey, 43% of providers are very or extremely concerned about receiving full reimbursement. Frequent changes to pre-authorization rules and other payer policies are the main reason for this. Many contracts renew automatically or are amended with little notice, making oversight difficult. "Depending on how the contract is written, providers may receive very little notice of these changes," says Tricia Ibrahim, Director of Product Management, Contract Manager Suite. "Without a way to systematically and efficiently monitor these agreements throughout the contract term, there is simply no way for a provider to ensure they're paid properly." Payer contract management software addresses this by streamlining contract workflows and standardizing how agreements are handled. Built-in modelling tools allow providers to simulate different claim scenarios so they can negotiate terms from a stronger, well-informed position. Dashboards offer real-time insights that help staff ensure compliance, prevent denials and secure proper reimbursement. Key benefits of healthcare payer software for managing contracts A big part of the challenge for providers is that they are often juggling multiple contracts with multiple payers, including private insurers, Medicare, Medicaid and third-party administrators. Each has its own rules, rates and timelines. Without an automated way to track everything, it's easy for revenue to slip away. Payer contract management software helps by: Centralizing all contracts in one place Tracking critical dates like renewals and amendments Flagging changes in reimbursement terms Linking payer terms directly to claims workflows Identifying underpayments by comparing actual and expected reimbursements. This amounts to more than just good record-keeping: these tools offer instant feedback to reduce errors that could trigger denials. Teams save significant time because they no longer need to review contracts or chase down missing payments manually. Frances Thomas, Manager of Payer Strategy at OrthoTennessee, uses Experian Health's payer contract management software to negotiate more favorable settlements and terms with payers. "The system gives us the information we need to be successful," she says. "They can't really argue with you on that." Watch the webinar: See how OrthoTennessee achieved an 86% successful appeals rate with Contract Manager. Optimizing payer contracts with advanced contract management tools A first step in reducing denials and boosting revenue should be ensuring the revenue cycle team thoroughly understands their payer contracts. Contract management systems support this by rooting out ambiguous language, complex reimbursement terms or overly strict coding requirements. By analyzing contracts in detail, these tools identify hidden pitfalls that might go unnoticed until revenue is at risk. Experian Health's Contract Manager and Contract Analysis solution optimizes this process by checking claims before submission, then validating expected reimbursement against allowed amounts. Rates and authorization rules are populated automatically to reduce manual input, while contract mapping and real-time alerts help teams stay compliant. Providers also benefit from extra support through Experian Health's team of contract analysts, who are on hand to review contract terms, fee schedules and payment policies to ensure nothing is overlooked. This end-to-end visibility and guidance is why Experian Health's payer software has been named "Best in KLAS" for three consecutive years. One major benefit for OrthoTennessee was being able to handle claims in bulk. Thomas says, "We had over 600 claims for one day in the wrong network. I was able to take that bulk of claims and handle those. Otherwise, I was going to have to sit there and go claim by claim. It's a huge time saver to work smarter, not harder." Listen in to hear how another Experian Health client, Boston Children's Hospital, used Contract Manager to resolve underpayments and work with payers to resolve issues and errors, resulting in increased revenue. Learn more about how payer contract management software optimizes revenue, ensures compliance and streamlines payer contracts. Learn more Contact us

Published: June 26, 2025 by Experian Health

What happens when payers and providers interpret contract terms differently? Or revenue cycle teams miss critical details buried in the fine print? Contracts between healthcare providers and payers are supposed to make each party's responsibilities crystal clear. In reality, that isn't always the case. Hospitals face costly consequences if they fail to comply with payer policies, yet often struggle to monitor payment accuracy when it comes to being paid on time and in full. That's why good contract management matters. Ensuring both parties are reading from the same page protects providers from unmet expectations and revenue loss. As Timothy Daye, Director of Managed Care Contracting at Duke Health Integrated Practice, puts it, “It's about getting paid correctly per your contracts, so you don't leave money on the table.” With increasing pressure to manage costs, hospitals are rethinking how they manage contracts. This article looks at why a more strategic approach – built on contract management software – is essential. Why hospitals need a contract management system Medical plans receive around three billion claims each year, according to the latest CAQH index report. At that scale, even small discrepancies in contract terms can have a major financial impact for providers seeking reimbursement. In Experian Health's 2024 State of Claims survey, 73% of providers said claim denials were increasing, while 77% were seeing more frequent amendments to payer policies. These changes can catch providers off guard, especially when contract terms aren't clearly documented or regularly updated. For hospitals, the challenges in managing payer contracts include: Complex negotiations: Providers handle thousands of contracts with multiple plans and provisions, all subject to changing regulations. Without proper oversight, managing these negotiations can be time-consuming and overwhelming. Limited data analysis and outdated processes: Effective contract management depends on accurate, up-to-date data. Yet many organizations still rely on poorly defined manual systems that lack the analytics and real-time insights needed to evaluate contract performance, forecast revenue or support strategic decision-making. Conflicts over claim denials: Underpayments and denials are among providers' biggest challenges, with payers reportedly initially denying 15% of all claims. Disputes over claims, payments, and contract interpretations strain relationships and disrupt revenue cycle performance. A robust contract management system, using purpose-built software, brings structure to the negotiations and helps build effective and transparent working relationships with payers. Some of the benefits include: 1. More accurate reimbursements and fewer underpayments Automated oversight of payer contracts makes it easier to find discrepancies between the amounts billed and the rates agreed in payer contracts. Contract management software helps providers avoid missing out on reimbursements because of buried contract clauses and supports contract-based appeals to recover underpayments. 2. Better terms and stronger relationships with payers Contract management software for hospitals allows revenue teams to evaluate contract results and use that information to assess proposed terms for new contracts. This puts providers on a stronger footing in negotiations and allows them to agree to more favorable terms. More effective communications and quicker dispute resolution also improve provider-payer relationships. 3. Faster, more efficient workflows at scale Finally, automated workflows combine more accurate data to process claims faster, leading to a more predictable revenue cycle. They also lower administrative costs and allow staff more time to prioritize other patient-facing and revenue-building activities. Key features of hospital contract management software Not all solutions offer the automation, data or expert support to make the above benefits a reality. Experian Health's Contract Manager delivers all three. Here's how it works: A team of contract analysts assesses the organization's contract terms, fee schedules and payment policies to clarify what's required and when. Accurate rates and authorization rules are populated automatically to minimize pricing errors and reduce manual effort. Contract mapping and claim valuation logic reduces the risk of audits and penalties, while automated alerts help providers ensure their contracts comply with current healthcare regulations. Configurable online dashboards give staff immediate access to reimbursement reports, so they can compare expected and allowed amounts and monitor performance. Unlike manual systems, contract management software can be easily scaled for organizations of any size. Because it integrates seamlessly with existing hospital information and practice management systems, Contract Manager can audit claims for a medical group or a large health system with one solution. When paired with Contract Analysis, healthcare providers get added negotiating power by getting the data needed to assure terms that optimize reimbursement.  Discover how Experian Health's Best in KLAS Contract Manager solution helped Boston Children's Hospital resolve underpayments, work with payers to resolve issues and errors, and more. Choose the right hospital contract management software Managing payer agreements may not be the most visible part of the revenue cycle, but its impact is significant. Minor contract discrepancies can quietly erode margins. As providers work to control costs while maintaining care quality, hospital contract management software has become critical in securing fair reimbursement rates and auditing payer contract performance with confidence. Providers should choose a solution that allows them to verify payment accuracy, resolve disputes faster and prevent lost revenue through unnecessary claim denials. The solution should also deliver real-time visibility into contract compliance and reimbursement trends so revenue cycle teams can stay ahead of policy changes and protect margins. Experian Health's Contract Manager and Contract Analysis solution continuously audits payer contract performance and applies current reimbursement rules for Medicare and other payers, for the most precise pricing. It ensures staff have accurate data to hand to conduct contract-based appeals and communicate clearly with payers. For these reasons, Contract Manager was named Best in KLAS in 2025. It's a proven choice for hospitals seeking to reduce revenue leakage and strengthen payer relationships at scale. Find out more about how Experian Health's hospital contract management software helps providers take control of reimbursement and protect their long-term financial health. Learn more Contact us

Published: April 30, 2025 by Experian Health

Experian Health is very pleased to announce that we've ranked #1 in the 2025 Best in KLAS: Software & Services report, for our Contract Manager and Contract Analysis product, for the third consecutive year. Contract Manager, when paired with Contract Analysis, empowers healthcare providers by ensuring payers comply with contract terms, identifying and recovering underpayments, and arming them with real claims data to negotiate contracts. This enables providers to negotiate more favorable terms and maintain financial stability.  Clarissa Riggins, Chief Product Officer at Experian Health, says, “In the ever-evolving healthcare landscape, our Contract Manager solution has once again been recognized as the #1 Revenue Cycle Management tool by KLAS for the third consecutive year. This prestigious ranking underscores the significant value our solution delivers to our clients by identifying underpayments and facilitating revenue recovery. We are honored to continue supporting our clients with innovative solutions that drive financial success and operational efficiency.”  Learn more about how Contract Manager and Contract Analysis can help your healthcare organization validate reimbursement accuracy, recover underpayments and boost revenue.   Learn more Contact us

Published: February 5, 2025 by Experian Health

Many healthcare providers believe pairing “revenue cycle” with a qualifier like “predictable” is an oxymoron. From healthcare staffing shortages that slow down reimbursement tasks to increasing payer denials, financial regularity can seem like an unattainable goal for these organizations.  The American Hospital Association (AHA) reports over one-half of U.S. hospitals had financial losses in 2022. Another AHA survey shows that 84% of these organizations say the cost of complying with complicated payer policies is climbing. Providers throw an excessive amount of time and staff at chasing revenue, but reimbursement complexities make for anything but smooth financial sailing. How can healthcare providers even out the ebbs and flows of the revenue cycle? Experian Health's suite of revenue cycle management (RCM) solutions can help. Revenue cycle predictability during the life of a claim When it comes to finances, U.S. healthcare providers rarely have an easy go of it. Today, the average life of a claim is anything but average. From registration to collections, hospitals established a new normal over the past decade: Widening gaps between service delivery and reimbursement. How can providers tackle this untenable situation? The answer is two-fold: with technology and at each stage of the life of a claim. Here are three ways healthcare providers can use technology to create reimbursement predictability at each stage of a claim's life. 1. Establish payment accountability at patient registration with price transparency Reimbursement problems begin at patient registration. Healthcare price transparency demands patients understand the cost of care. According to Experian Health's State of Patient Access survey, 81% of patients agreed that an accurate estimate helps them better prepare to pay for their care costs. However, only 31% of patients received a cost estimate before care. There are three significant impacts of this troubling trend: Nearly 40% of patients say they put off needed care due to cost. The number rises to 61% if the patient is uninsured. Patients can't afford to pay for needed care. Currently, 41% of U.S. adults have medical debt. An Experian Health study showed four in 10 patients spend more than they can afford on healthcare treatment. Uncompensated care causes a significant drop in healthcare provider income, which has amounted to almost $745 billion, according to the AHA. Experian Health offers several data-driven solutions to improve price transparency. These tools make it easier for patients to handle their financial responsibilities while helping providers find solutions to help ease their burdens.Patient Financial Advisor creates more accurate service estimates for patients before their procedure. The mobile-first platform offers patients a detailed cost breakdown on their preferred digital device. Patient Estimates is a web-based platform offering real-time service estimates. Blessing Health System uses the tool to provide patient estimates that are up to 90% accurate. The provider increased collections by 58% and credits the software with a 1,200% return on their investment. Patient Access Curator automatically initiates communication with payers to improve coordination of benefits and maximize return. It also automatically identifies missing or incorrect Medicare Beneficiary Identifier (MBI) numbers or errors in patient contact details. This solution also helps providers understand the patient's ability and propensity to pay, allowing these organizations to predict revenue streams after service delivery. Behind the scenes, Experian Health also automates insurance eligibility verification to unlock hidden reimbursements. This software roadmaps the correct coverage, connects to more than 900 payers and verifies insurance coverage at the time of service to improve cash flow and ease patient payment burdens. 2. Reduce claim denials by decreasing manual paperwork errors Claim denials are one of the biggest impediments to revenue cycle predictability. Providers are stuck in an endless cycle of inaccurate payer submissions, rejected claims, and rebilling, creating a chaotic chase for payment long after the service. Today, 35% of healthcare organizations report $50 million or higher in lost revenue due to claims denials. Even worse, Experian Health's State of Claims 2022 report showed that 30% of providers say denials are increasing by up to 15%. According to that data, the top three reasons for claim denials are: Missing or incomplete prior authorizations. Failure to verify provider eligibility. Coding inaccuracies. Experian Health's Claim Scrubber software levels out provider cash flow, creating predictability amidst the chaos. The solution reviews complete claims for errors, generating actionable edits before submission. Claim Scrubber also reviews approved reimbursement rates to prevent undercharging. Transactions process within three seconds and providers reduce the need to rework claims. Experian Health's AI Advantage solution uses the power of artificial intelligence (AI) to evaluate every claim for its propensity to turn into a denial. Instead of submitting claims and hoping the payer will accept them, this solution takes the guesswork out of reimbursement for a more rational, predictable process. The software automatically scans for payer updates to reimbursement requirements that significantly contribute to claims denials. Hospitals like Schneck Medical Center use this tool to streamline the revenue cycle by preventing denials. After just six months, the provider’s denied claims reduced by an average of 4.6% each month. Claim corrections that took up to 15 minutes manually are now processed in less than five. 3. Increase collections efficiency with automation Patients trust their healthcare providers to take care of them. Providers also rely on patients to pay their bills. It's a mutually beneficial arrangement. However, it's also a problem forcing providers to walk a delicate tightrope between caring for a sick patient while still chasing payment for their services. Unfortunately, the increasing cost of healthcare leaves patients on the hook for more than $88 billion in debt. The volume of healthcare payments in arrears is staggering, causing a substantial drain on provider cash on hand. However, technology offers healthcare providers a way to improve the patient collections process. For example, Coverage Discovery impacts the revenue cycle at every stage of the claim: Before providing care, the software scans patient data to determine reimbursement coverage options from Medicaid, Medicare, and commercial insurance. It scans for active insurance 30, 60, and 90 days after care delivery. The tool scans patient data before determining whether the account moves to bad debt collections. A more robust understanding of patient payment options at every stage of claims management allows healthcare providers to forecast reimbursements more accurately, increasing the predictability of the revenue cycle. Collections Optimization Manager provides organizations with actionable insights, so that providers can segment and prioritize accounts by proprensity to pay. This solution increases patient collections by leveraging Experian's data driven segmentation models, and helps providers screen out bankruptcies, deceased accounts, Medicaid and other charity eligibility ahead of time. Experian Health's AI Advantage – Denial Triage prioritizes rejected claims based on their yield potential, automating workflows for claims managers so they focus first on the patients more likely to pay. This tool segments denials based on their potential value to help even out the revenue cycle with a faster rate of financial return. Denial Triage expedites A/R by increasing revenue collection per person per hour. Revenue cycles can be more predictable, but the complexities of reimbursement require technology to achieve this goal. Experian Health offers a comprehensive line of revenue cycle management solutions to help healthcare providers maximize collections and improve RCM. Find out why Experian Health ranks Best in KLAS for 2024 in the categories of Claims Management & Clearinghouse and Revenue Cycle: Contract Management, or contact us for a more predictable revenue cycle, better cash flow, and a healthier organization.

Published: May 13, 2024 by Experian Health

Navigating an increasingly complex reimbursement landscape remains challenging for today’s healthcare providers, with too many claims still underpaid, delayed or outright denied. In fact, nearly 70% of providers said the problem of denied claims had worsened during 2021. Naturally, relationships with payers suffer, adding friction to the process. To this end, revenue cycle leaders are relying on claims management software to create more visibility into complex contract and claims management processes. These data tools can resolve or prevent the snags that often interfere with claims processing and billing workflows, which allow providers to streamline claims processing, improve communication with payers and accelerate a patient’s payment lifecycle. The path through that bureaucratic jungle requires high-quality information at every step. Accurate patient data, error-free clinical documentation, up-to-the-minute payer policy updates, and verified billing software and claims edits are all essential to help reduce denials and ensure faster-flowing payments.  With so many options on the market, providers should look for healthcare claims management software that provides support in four critical areas. 1. Simplified contract management Managing and understanding the tangled web of payer contracts, insurance rules and regulations can be time-consuming and overly complex. Keeping up with ever-changing reimbursement methodologies is resource-intensive for teams that are already suffering from staffing shortages. A system like Contract Manager and Contract Analysis can ease the pressure by streamlining workflows and showing revenue cycle management teams how payers are performing against agreed-upon terms. Contract Analysis seamlessly integrates with Contract Manager to provide all the data needed to make informed decisions about whether potential contract terms are in line with business goals – before any commitments are made. 2. Claims management software should help with error-free claims submissions In a perfect world, all claims would be completely accurate every time. But errors inevitably do creep in, leading to confusion, delays, and non-payments. Healthcare providers lose massive sums of money each year due to inaccurate claim submissions, denials, corrections, and rebilling. A good claims management strategy ensures that claims are error-free before they’re submitted. Claim Scrubber is an automated solution that reviews every line of each pre-claim and verifies that it is coded with the correct information before being sent to your claim’s clearinghouse. The result? Fewer undercharges and denials, optimized staff time and better cash flow. 3. Visibility of submitted claims With multiple steps, stakeholders, and milestones, keeping track of what’s happening with a claim can be cumbersome. Regardless of the workplace setting – individual hospital, large physician practice or a multi-facility Centralized Business Office – revenue cycle leaders need streamlined workflows, custom provider and payer edits, and superb customer support. ClaimSource is a solution that ensures all hospital and physician claims are clean before submission to government or commercial payers and creates custom workflows for easy prioritization and organization. With ClaimSource, providers can manage the entire claims cycle, from eligibility validation, claims editing, claims submission to the payers, claim submission reconciliation, remit retrieval, and reporting, in a single online application. 4. Claims management software should help prevent claims denials Denial rates vary widely between issuers. One 2020 study of HealthCare.gov issuers found that 1% to 57% of in-network claims were denied, while over 70% of major medical issuers had a claims denial rate of over 10%. Many reported denying one-third or more of all in-network claims. A tool such as Enhanced Claim Status makes it easy to respond early and accurately to denied, zero-pay, pending or returned-to-provider transactions before the Electronic Remittance Advice (ERA) and Explanation of Benefits (EOB) get processed. By removing the need for manual follow-up tasks and automatically submitting status updates based on each payer’s adjudication timeframe, providers can improve productivity and get paid the correct amounts faster. The claims management process is fraught with challenges. But with the right tools, data and analytics, these hurdles can be overcome. By integrating pre-claim (encounters) and post-claim (837) claims management software into the revenue cycle workflow, it's easy to review every line of every encounter. In this way, providers can verify that each claim is coded properly and contains the correct information before the claim is invoiced and submitted for reimbursement. Simply getting paid may not yet be as easy as providers would prefer, but technologies like Contract Manager and Contract Analysis, with their reliable customer support, can certainly oil the wheels. Find out more about how Experian Health’s Claims Management solutions with global payer edits and custom provider edits can help providers streamline the payment process and improve efficiencies, simplify the process and ensure speedy and accurate reimbursements.

Published: May 2, 2022 by Experian Health

A recent Black Book survey of more than 500 healthcare networks revealed that hospitals in the U.S. have been painstakingly slow in adopting healthcare revenue cycle management (RCM) solutions. At the start of 2018, nearly 26 percent of hospitals had no viable solution in place, and 82 percent of them planned to make value-based reimbursement decisions without one.   For most hospitals, one of the biggest challenges in implementing RCM solutions is finding talent with the right skill set to handle RCM software difficulties. It’s a problem that even the largest healthcare delivery networks face and one that UCLA Health hospitals had to overcome. UCLA Health System Faculty Practice Group (UCLA FPG) employs more than 2,500 physicians with more than 220 primary and specialty practices.   Keeping up with payer contracts   In 2007, more than $4 million in revenue went uncollected at UCLA FPG. The group’s RCM pain points were typical of those in the industry. For example, the group was unable to keep track of over- and underpayments, which made it difficult to adhere to payer contracts. It was also difficult to manage appeals and track recovery as the volume of payer contracts grew and became increasingly more complex.   The difficulty UCLA FPG had in gathering and exporting information, in addition to the complexity and volume of contracts, left it with little negotiating power when dealing with payers. UCLA FPG's numbers continued to fluctuate until implementing Epic alongside Experian Health's Contract Manager.   Using this web-based solution, UCLA FPG has been able to automate and improve its revenue cycle due to the solution’s ability to continually monitor and update every payer contract. This has also helped the healthcare group stay compliant with all payer agreements by making it possible to catch errors faster.   Director of Revenue Integrity Measha Ford states: “We are able to catch Medicare overpayments faster with the contract management system. We recently integrated all our Medicare contracts into the system to have a lower risk of compliance issues since we only have 60 days to refund Medicare back once we identify an overpayment. Having this system, having that ability to load the contracts into the system to catch these potential risks, is very helpful.”   The UCLA network now has fewer administrative write-offs every year, faster AR collections, and reduced denials.   Experian Health's team maintains contract terms, fee schedules, and payment policies and makes sure every claim processed follows UCLA's contract terms. Online dashboards and reports help monitor reimbursement and reduce payment discrepancies through interactive graphs that expose source claim data and practice management system-specific data attributes.   Analyzing contracts before signing up   In addition to tracking and managing contracts, the group also knows exactly how a new contract or redefined contract terms will affect its bottom line. It has intel on real-world “what if” scenarios to provide insight into how various contract terms affect cash flow for the precise mix of services the group provides. It's also able to avoid unfavorable contract terms, as they are easily spotted through analysis.   Are health plans complying with your contract terms? Learn more about how we can help you find lost revenue with data-driven insight.  

Published: April 16, 2019 by Experian Health

In an ideal healthcare world, third-party payers would always make payments accurately and on time. Unfortunately, human error is unavoidable, so missed payments and underpayments happen. Identifying and correcting these inaccurate payments often falls to healthcare providers, and without a strategy to make sure payers are complying with your contract terms, these errors are bound to cause stress and volatility to your revenue cycle. There are, of course, external causes of underpayment that a provider can't necessarily control, such as payers misinterpreting contract terms or incorrectly calculating a payment. Providers, however, can counteract this by limiting internal mistakes like incorrect billing or failure to provide appropriate documentation. Still, it’s easy to let incorrect or late payments slip through the cracks, especially without a robust contract management system. Experian Health's Contract Manager and Contract Analysis tools can help providers make sure they're reimbursed quickly and accurately. How Contract Manager and Contract Analysis eliminate payment problems Experian Health's Contract Manager for Hospitals and Health Systems verifies the amounts owed for all applicable claims, monitors payer compliance, and models the financial implications of proposed contracts. And because Contract Manager’s data processing and storage is completely remote, providers get 24/7 web-based access with no capital investments required and no added cost for software or data updates. Contract Manager helped Timothy Daye, director of managed care contracting and reimbursement at Duke Private Diagnostic Clinic, part of the Duke University School of Medicine, identify underpayments and discover ways to avoid them in the future. “In addition to identifying underpayments,” Daye said, “there’s tremendous value in identifying billing issues that may result in underpayments and also identifying process improvements that can be implemented to eliminate the underpayments in the first place.” Contract Manager alone can identify and prevent late payments and underpayments, but when providers pair it with its companion solution, Experian Health's Contract Analysis, they can find added data and negotiating power to set contract terms that optimize third-party reimbursement. Because you don’t have a crystal ball to predict how all of the hundreds of variables in third-party contracts will affect payment, you need a contingency plan. That's where Contract Analysis comes in. By spotting unfavorable contract terms and offering real-world “what if” scenarios, Contract Analysis tells you exactly how proposed contracts with payers might affect your revenue cycle. You’ll know before signing on the dotted line how each part of the contract will play out. The Contract Manager and Contract Analysis combination allows you to audit payer contract performance to ensure compliance and maximize revenue. You could, for example, use it to check the accuracy of a reimbursement by comparing the expected payment to the actual payment, or you could recover from underpayments by finding lost revenue with data-driven insight. Contract Manager and Contract Analysis can also help you identify unusual causes of underpayments. For instance, when Daye and his team were working on a recent anesthesia project, they had to correct a non-standard billing situation. “The payer was taking a reduction by billing the QS modifier, which is outside of the norm of standard billing protocol,” Daye says. “We changed that process through the appeal with the payer by showing documentation that the QS modifier was informational only and doesn't warrant a reduction in payment." Had Daye and his team not been able to identify this system issue, they’d still be scrambling to determine why the payment was lower than they were expecting. However, by using Contract Manager and Contract Analysis, Daye was able to pinpoint an outside-the-norm situation and correct the payment discrepancy as quickly as possible. What makes the combo unique The Contract Manager and Contract Analysis combination is essential for any healthcare provider wanting to ensure it receives payments that are accurate and on time. By using proprietary valuation logic, these tools will give you more precise insight into your contracts, giving you a solid foundation to protect against any payment problems. Experian Health reimbursement specialists even offer complete contract maintenance to make things easier. Whether it's a coding typo or a misinterpreted contract item, there will always be some factor that could cause a payment error. And while you can’t control some of these unforeseen hiccups, you can use Experian Health's Contract Manager and Contract Analysis solutions to correct them in the most reliable, efficient way possible.

Published: June 26, 2018 by Experian Health

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