Payment collection controls

Darryl Rhames, CFE, CICA (drrhames@hotmail.com) is Director of Compliance Auditing at the University Health System in San Antonio, TX.

Payment collections are the beginning of the revenue cycle. Some may view this as a no brainer or immaterial subject matter. However, have you ever taken a look at your total cash, credit card, and check collections? Have you compared that monetary value versus how much you bill out, due to not collecting co-pays or not being set up to collect payments when patients can pay right now?

What if you went to a grocery store and they told you, “Don’t worry about paying for the groceries at this time; we’ll bill you for them.” What percentage of people would take the goods and make sure they settle the bill later? No way are grocery stores doing that! They want their money as soon as you are ready to check out. They ensure they collect money on every transaction. Why shouldn’t you do the same at your facility or at least be set up to do the same? Could you imagine what collecting on every transaction would mean for your company? Think of what processes you could improve, the investments you could make, the repair or renovations you could complete, the impact to patient care, etc.

Now are payment collections starting to become more important to you? Well, in healthcare, cash is still very relevant as a payment method. Yeah, I know. Cash…really…that is a dying tender. Is that a true statement? Not at all. It depends on where you are that determines how widely cash is used as a major form of tender. Credit or debit card usage normally surpasses cash, but does that mean you shouldn’t accept cash? Of course not. I have never heard of a service fee for accepting cash. MasterCard, Visa, American Express, and Discover don’t get a cut of a cash payment. Ironically, it costs less to accept cash. So, it was decided to accommodate all forms of payment at every hospital campus and clinic.

This document is only available to members. Please log in or become a member.


Would you like to read this entire article?

If you already subscribe to this publication, just log in. If not, let us send you an email with a link that will allow you to read the entire article for free. Just complete the following form.

* required field