Guest guest Posted January 5, 2006 Report Share Posted January 5, 2006 I’ve also heard that we are not supposed to compare our fees, but I wonder if that is truly illegal or if that is just some form of “urban legend” that gets passed on down the line. Really, why would it matter if we did get together & set our fees higher? Companies still don’t have to pay it. Also, why are doctors different than, say, car dealers or barbers, where prices are readily known? Also, patients know our fees so why does it matter if another doctor knows them too? I am also not a lawyer but I have never understood that one. Re: plea for advice If you want to get more detailed, Ingenix sells a cusotmized fee survey that is specific to your geographic area; it costs $300. It tells you the 50th percentile, 75th percentile, etc not just for e+m codes but for all procedure codes. That's a lot of money for a solo start up Alternatively, I found in my hospital library a book published by a similar third party research company that listed the 50th, 75th, 90th fee schedule for all CPT codes adjusted for locality. There are many books like that around. Check with your librarian. postrio wrote: Hi , I have a couple thoughts. One is that you set your fees relative to medicare reimbursement rates because those are published and readily available. Private insurance reimbursement is not as easy to nail down prior to start up. The usual business model is to take all the insurance you can the first year until you are busy. Then you have the luxury of weeding out the poor payers. Insurance reimbursement can be all over the map. Sometimes an insurer will reimburse 125% of Medicare for a given code. What you want to avoid is setting your fee for a 99214 at $104, only to find out that two or three of your insurers give you the full $10! 4 for the visit. That means they would have reimbursed more, but they are not required to give you any more than what's on your fee schedule. Here are the mean fees from the AAFP Practice Profile Survey! May 2004 for the Pacific region, level 1-5: New: 62, 97, 137, 191, 242. Established: 35, 57, 78, 118, 174. Those are about 10% higher than national averages. If you want to get more detailed, Ingenix sells a cusotmized fee survey that is specific to your geographic area; it costs $300. It tells you the 50th percentile, 75th percentile, etc not just for e+m codes but for all procedure codes. That's a lot of money for a solo start up, however if you are going to do your own billing, it might be worth it to know you are not under charging. You might go in on it with someone else in your zip code. As for call, contact solo doctors in your area to find out about call groups. There will likely be more than one that would love to share call with one more doctor. samanthasanfran wrote: I'll be opening my doors in 8 weeks and am starting to tackle some of the nitty gritty aspects of setup. I'd really appreciate reading people's thought on the following questions: What's the benefit of charging more than the insurance companies will pay? (Why bother?) What do you do about call coverage? (I'm single and would really like to be able to go out on a date every once in a while without taking my patient panel with me, if at all possible.) What organizations do you belong to and why (medical, business, networking groups, chamber of commerce)? Thanks in advance to all who reply, Malm, M.D. San Francisco, CA Yahoo! DSL Something to write home about. Ju! st $16.99/mo. or less Yahoo! DSL Something to write home about. Just $16.99/mo. or less Yahoo! DSL Something to write home about. Just $16.99/mo. or less Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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