Written By; David Hewitt, RVP of Sales – East

What are the basics for a Recovery Audit provider?

At minimum your Recovery Audit firm should be checking all the following boxes.

  • Working offsite/Remote access
  • Online claims delivery
  • Data files (AP, Vendor Master, PO, Receipt)
  • Data security
  • Healthcare experience
  • No initial investment to get started

What are the attributes of a Best-in-Class Recovery Audit firm?

It is not enough to settle for a firm that simply checks the boxes.  The following list outlines the attributes you should look for in a best-in-class Recovery Audit provider to ensure the best results and the highest levels of partnership.

  • Strong data security — ¬Provider should demonstrate strong security measures including encrypted data, SSAE16 Secured Data Centers, HIPAA Trained
  • Industry expertise and benchmarking — Healthcare is a unique industry, and your Recovery Audit provider should demonstrate deep expertise.
    A few of the insights they should provide are as follows:

    • What are your healthcare peers doing to address issues like yours?
    • How do you compare to other healthcare systems?
    • Best practices to patch gaps leading to financial leakage
    • Proven industry methods for driving cost-saving efficiencies
  • Insights and visibility — Provider should offer meaningful root-cause analysis and recommendations.
    Some of the key insights should include:

    • A listing of which suppliers (and staff) are not complying with processes
    • A clear understanding of why and where dollars are falling out of the process
    • Strong recommendations for how to positively impact the problem
    • A focus on corrections and not collections
  • Cost-savings opportunities — As a result of the audit, you should gain a clear outline of where to save dollars in your annual spend that are not simply related to recovery.
  • An up-to-date scope.  Your best audit results will come from a scope that hovers around 90-days and provides real-time feed back.
  • RNI, INR Reconciliation — Your audit should support the RNI (receipt not invoiced) and INR (invoiced not received) reconciliation.  This is critical for healthcare.
  • Additional services — Ensure your provider has other solutions beyond Recovery Audit otherwise they will not be incentivized to help you fix your problems.
  • A healthy vendor database — Provider should have an up-to-date database of suppliers to help clean your vendor file and to aid in outreach to suppliers.
  • A strong partner ecosystem — Provider should be connected to other industry providers to help gain a wider view into how to fix your network’s larger issues.
  • A client portal — Claims should be delivered through an online portal with claim upload capabilities, drill down capabilities, in-depth reporting, communication, ease of use and 100% claim administration.
  • A full-time staff — Your auditors should be a team of full-time employees that are paid a salary or hourly wage to ensure they are consistently auditing all ranks of your vendor file and AP transactions history without competing incentives or prejudice.

For more information regarding the benefits of using a Recovery Audit to help boost your hospital’s bottom-line or to drive new insights and visibility into your cost-cycle, contact SpendMend today.

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