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Why patient eligibility verification matters

Published: December 19, 2024 by Experian Health

Why-patient-eligibility-verification-matters

Patient eligibility verification is a critical part of the healthcare revenue cycle. It can help prevent errors with claim submissions, reduce denials, boost the bottom line, and help patients understand what their insurance will cover. However, checking insurance eligibility isn’t always efficient or accurate, thanks to outdated systems and complicated manual processes.

Ever-evolving payer requirements and new regulations, like the No Surprises Act, add even more complications during insurance eligibility checks. In 2024, providers also treated more patients than they did five years ago, making it harder to keep up with patient eligibility verification. This growing volume of patients have more complex health issues and may struggle to afford medical bills, putting a more pressing urgency on providers to run accurate eligibility checks before service.

Having the right health insurance eligibility verification solution can make or break a provider’s revenue cycle and allow staff to stay focused on patient care instead of digging for insurance information and correcting errors. This article takes a closer look at why patient eligibility matters, common challenges providers face and strategies to improve insurance eligibility checks, reduce payment delays and minimize denials.

What is patient eligibility verification?

Patient eligibility verification is an administrative process providers use to check whether or not patients have active medical insurance. It’s typically completed before service occurs to confirm coverage for treatment and care. Sometimes called a health insurance lookup, the eligibility check verifies different aspects of a patient’s coverage, including insurance status, coverage details and medical service benefits. During patient eligibility verification, billing information is also confirmed.

Why is it critical for healthcare providers?

Patient eligibility verification offers providers a first line of defense to protect revenue cycles against revenue leakage. It can help healthcare organizations with accurate billing, reduce claims denials and avoid footing the bill for uncompensated care. When eligibility checks are conducted diligently, providers see improved cash flow, staff efficiency is gained, the risk of bad debt is lower, and patients are empowered with accurate upfront estimates.

The importance of patient eligibility verification

Claim denial rates are growing and show no signs of slowing down. Experian Health’s State of Claims 2024 survey reports that nearly three-quarters of respondents saw a rise in denials, with four in ten saying claims are denied 10% of the time. Eligibility issues, along with missing or inaccurate data, are a top reason for denials, according to 15% of providers surveyed.

A reliable eligibility verification process is crucial to minimizing the claim denials, rework and billing errors that arise from inaccurate insurance information. It also lets patients know their financial responsibility upfront so there are no surprises when the bill comes. This trust and transparency fosters positive patient-provider relationships while ensuring patients get the care they need and providers get paid.

Common challenges in patient eligibility verification

Findings from Experian Health’s State of Patient Access and State of Claims surveys point to several common challenges in patient eligibility verification.

Evolving payer policies and pre-authorization requirements

Insurance provider prior authorization requirements change often, making it hard for providers to keep pace. More than 75% of providers report an increasing amount of payer policy changes, and secondary eligibility checks take time and impact efficiency. When a necessary authorization is missed due to manual verification or rushed eligibility checks, it can result in denial, delayed payment and extra work – especially when care is urgent.

Incomplete or outdated insurance information

Insurance details in the provider’s system don’t always match the payer’s record. This can happen for a wide range of reasons, including job switches, insurance plan changes or patients not being aware of or forgetting to mention secondary coverage. When these changes aren’t caught before service, they can lead to rejected claims, billing delays and extra work for staff. More than four in ten providers report adding at least 10 minutes of staff time per incomplete eligibility check.

Inadequate technology to verify eligibility

Staff must often wrangle a wide range of disjointed solutions, processes and logins during eligibility checks. While more than 70% of providers feel their organization runs insurance verification checks efficiently and accurately, nearly 60% of providers still use at least two different tools to gather the necessary patient information for claim submission. This can make navigating patient eligibility verification tedious and error-prone, and leads to staff burnout, denied claims and patient dissatisfaction.

Strategies to improve patient eligibility verification

In today’s changing health insurance landscape, providers need to pay more attention than ever to their patient eligibility verification processes. Accurate and timely insurance verification streamlines the claims process, clarifies how bills will be covered (or not) ahead of time and helps patients prepare to pay their bills.

Adopting the following strategies to improve patient eligibility verifications can help providers reduce the risk of denied claims, improve the revenue cycle and create positive patient experiences.

Automate eligibility verification processes

Verifying coverage early in the billing process increases the chance of submitting clean claims the first time. However, it can be tedious for providers to navigate outdated methods like online portals, file batching, automated systems and stay on top of ever-changing payer policies. Automated eligibility verification software helps providers optimize intricate insurance checks, access verified and comprehensive resources to confirm eligibility (with solutions like the MBI Lookup tool), and improve efficiency.

Automatically track changing payer policy requirements

With payer requirements undergoing constant updates, providers need to have access to solutions that keep up in real-time. Eligibility Verification, for example, seamlessly connects to more than 900 payers and features advanced patient matching tools. It can also be used with Experian Health’s automated prior authorization tool, which tracks national payer requirements and flags providers when mandatory pre-authorization information is missing.

Offer upfront, accurate cost estimates

Patients want to know their financial responsibility up front. When armed with accurate estimates that help patients understand their coverage, co-pays and deductibles, more than 80% of patients say it helps them prepare financially. Eligibility tools allow providers to create more accurate estimates based on actual insurance coverage. This helps patients know what they’re responsible for out-of-pocket and reduces surprise billing.

Patient eligibility verification is more critical than ever in ensuring smooth and efficient revenue cycle management. With rising patient volumes, evolving regulations and other challenges impacting revenue cycles, providers need to maintain accurate insurance eligibility checks to reduce costly errors, streamline workflows and improve claims success rates. More importantly, accurate eligibility checks empower healthcare staff to focus on delivering quality care, while helping patients better understand and manage their financial responsibilities.

Find out more about how Experian Health’s insurance eligibility verification solution helps revenue cycle managers prioritize reimbursements with automated eligibility checks.

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This can result in unpaid medical bills, leaving billing teams chasing patient collections or writing off bad debt. During the prior authorization process, providers submit a rationale for a proposed treatment to the payer. The request is approved or denied based on certain criteria, including payer policies and medical necessity. The payer may reject a prior authorization request if the treatment or service isn't covered under the patient's insurance plan, if it's not considered medically necessary or if a more affordable alternative is available. Simple paperwork errors, like missed deadlines or incomplete documentation when submitting a prior authorization, may also result in a denial. Challenges of manual prior authorization processes Despite the importance of prior authorizations in the revenue cycle, tedious manual prior authorization processes present challenges for many healthcare providers. 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Reduces risk of denials: Through automation, electronic prior authorization software ensures the accuracy and completeness of submissions by automatically checking with payers and vendors to validate that the authorization is on file. Payers and providers also get a shared view of account information, reducing the need for prolonged discussions about the status of authorization and rework requests. Key features to look for in prior authorization software When implementing prior authorization software, look for a solution that offers a wide range of features to automate and streamline the prior authorization process. 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Learn more about how Experian Health's electronic prior authorization software, Authorizations, uses automation to achieve greater consistency and efficiency for healthcare organizations. Learn more Contact us

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