Educational needs of medical practitioners about medical billing: a scoping review of the literature
- PMID: 34266457
- PMCID: PMC8280598
- DOI: 10.1186/s12960-021-00631-x
Educational needs of medical practitioners about medical billing: a scoping review of the literature
Abstract
Introduction: The World Health Organization has suggested the solution to health system waste caused by incorrect billing and fraud is policing and prosecution. However, a growing body of evidence suggests leakage may not always be fraudulent or corrupt, with researchers suggesting medical practitioners may sometimes struggle to understand increasingly complex legal requirements around health financing and billing transactions, which may be improved through education. To explore this phenomenon further, we undertook a scoping review of the literature to identify the medical billing education needs of medical practitioners and whether those needs are being met.
Methods: Eligible records included English language materials published between 1 January 2000 and 4 May 2020. Searches were conducted on MEDLINE, PubMed, Google Scholar, CINAHL, LexisNexis and Heinonline.
Results: We identified 74 records as directly relevant to the search criteria. Despite undertaking a comprehensive, English language search, with no country restrictions, studies meeting the inclusion criteria were limited to three countries (Australia, Canada, US), indicating a need for further work internationally. The literature suggests the education needs of medical practitioners in relation to medical billing compliance are not being met and medical practitioners desire more education on this topic. Evidence suggests education may be effective in improving medical billing compliance and reducing waste in health systems. There is broad agreement amongst medical education stakeholders in multiple jurisdictions that medical billing should be viewed as a core competency of medical education, though there is an apparent inertia to include this competency in medical education curricula. Penalties for non-compliant medical billing are serious and medical practitioners are at risk of random audits and investigations for breaches of sometimes incomprehensible, and highly interpretive regulations they may never have been taught.
Conclusion: Despite acknowledged significance of waste in health systems due to poor practitioner knowledge of billing practices, there has been very little research to date on education interventions to improve health system efficiency at a practitioner level.
Keywords: Health care fraud and non-compliance; Health insurance; Health system literacy; Legal liability of medical practitioners; Medical billing education.
© 2021. The Author(s).
Conflict of interest statement
Margaret Faux is the CEO of a medical billing company, which also provides online education on medical billing. Margaret Faux’s law firm provides free legal information on Australian medical billing.
References
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- Medicare billing, law and practice: complex, incomprehensible and beginning to unravel: Margaret Faux, Jonathan Wardle and Jon Adams (2019) 27 JLM 66. - PubMed
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- Government of the Netherlands. Billing mistakes and fraud in the care sector. https://www.government.nl/topics/billing-mistakes-andfraud-in-the-care-s.... Accessed 17 Sept 2016.
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- Dutch Healthcare Authority. Hotline. https://www.nza.nl/contact/meldpunt. Accessed 20 June 2021.
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