
How Medical Providers Should Handle EOBs
Every insurance payment comes with an Explanation of Benefits (EOB), a document detailing how a claim was processed. While many medical offices focus solely on posting the payment, the information within an EOB goes far beyond the check amount. EOBs display the locations of payments that have been lowered, rejected, or impacted by billing problems. They can also highlight
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Break Down of Florida House Bill 837 for Medical Providers
After Florida House Bill 837 became law in 2023, it changed how insurance claims and personal injury cases are treated. The law’s main goals are to lower the cost of going to court and limit some types of harm. In these situations, it also changes how medical costs are looked at. More checks are now
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How the PIP Suit Process Works for Medical Providers
Personal Injury Protection insurance helps pay medical providers who treat people after car accidents. Most claims go through without problems. Still, issues can come up when payments are reduced, delayed, or denied. Sometimes basic follow-ups and billing efforts are not enough. In such cases, providers may end up dealing with a PIP lawsuit. Many doctors
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How Orthopedists Can Recover More Insurance Revenue
It’s not always easy to do orthopedic work. After surgery, tests, and rehab, the same person can come back for follow-ups. That makes billing feel heavier than normal, and to be honest, it takes more work to keep everything straight. It’s possible that your payments are less than you thought they would be. Some claims
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Why Attorney-Provider Agreements Help in PIP Cases
Medical providers treating car accident patients often depend on Personal Injury Protection reimbursements to keep their revenue cycle steady. PIP coverage helps patients start care quickly while insurers review accident-related claims. The process does not always go as planned. Insurance carriers may reduce payments, delay them, or deny claims altogether. Unresolved claims add extra work
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Why Many Providers Are Underpaid in PIP Medical Claims
Personal Injury Protection (PIP) insurance is meant to pay for medical treatment after an auto accident without delay. In no fault states, patients can receive care right away, and providers bill the insurer directly for the services they deliver. Things do not always work that smoothly. Many providers start noticing that PIP claims get reduced, delayed, or
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Why Medical Providers Should Sign a POA for Insurance Claims
If you treat auto accident patients, you already know how much you rely on insurance payments to keep things running. Most claims go through fine. Then a few don’t. Payments come in lower than expected. Some get delayed. Others get held up over “missing” documentation. Sound familiar? Now think about what it takes to fix that. Someone
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