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MZ Medical Billing

Home Health Medical Billing Services

Running a home health agency means caring for patients in their homes. Your nurses, therapists, and aides provide home health care services every day, including skilled nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and personal care. But receiving accurate payment for these services is complicated and highly regulated.

Medicare has strict compliance rules, Medicaid home health programs vary by state, and documentation requirements are extensive. A single mistake can delay payment or lead to a denial for weeks of care already provided.

Home health billing is very different from traditional medical billing. Under Medicare, agencies are paid through 30-day payment periods using the Patient-Driven Groupings Model (PDGM), not simple per-visit billing. Reimbursement depends on accurate OASIS assessments, case-mix groupings, timing categories, and documented patient conditions. Agencies must also meet homebound status requirements, physician certification and recertification rules, and face-to-face encounter documentation standards.

In addition, agencies must track visit utilization to avoid Low Utilization Payment Adjustments (LUPA), submit timely Notice of Admission (NOA) filings, and maintain compliance with audits, ADR requests, and payer reviews. For Medicaid home health care services, many states also require Electronic Visit Verification (EVV), adding another layer of compliance.

When any part of this process is incorrect, documentation, coding, OASIS data, or timing, claims are denied, underpaid, or even recouped after payment.

MZ Medical Billing Services supports home health care agencies by managing the full billing process, from documentation review and OASIS coordination to claim submission, denial management, and appeals. Our team understands Medicare home health billing guidelines, Medicaid requirements, and payer-specific rules, helping agencies reduce denials, improve cash flow, and get paid correctly for every patient under their care.

Home health agencies and home care nurses and therapists working with MZ Medical Billing, including those providing skilled nursing and therapy services under PDGM with OASIS requirements as well as non-medical home care, consistently achieve 95-98% claim approval rates, 94-96% first-pass resolution, and average A/R of 27-30 days across Medicare, Medicaid home health programs, MCOs, and commercial payers, helping agencies reduce denials, improve cash flow, and get paid faster for the home health care services they deliver.

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98%
Claim Approval Rate

97%
First pass Ratio

<30
Days in AR

96%
Collection Ratio

Why Home Health Billing Is Different?

Understanding 30-Day Payment Periods Under PDGM

Home health doesn’t get paid per visit like other healthcare. Medicare pays a set amount for a 30-day period under the Patient-Driven Groupings Model (PDGM), regardless of how many visits occur. Payment depends on admission source, timing (early vs late), clinical group, functional level, and comorbidity adjustment, rather than therapy visits alone.

If OASIS assessments contain errors or missing information, the case-mix score may be incorrect. This can lead to underpayment for complex patients or trigger Medicare audits for overpayment. Either way, revenue is affected.

Our billing team works with clinical staff to verify OASIS accuracy before claims are submitted. We check that assessment data matches care plans and visit patterns, preventing payment errors and audit issues.

Proving Homebound Status for Every Patient

Medicare only pays for home health when patients are homebound, meaning leaving home requires considerable effort due to medical conditions. Patients who regularly leave for activities or appointments are not homebound, and Medicare will not cover their care.

Documentation must describe why leaving home is difficult, medical equipment needed, assistance required, distance limitations, or symptoms that worsen with exertion. Notes that simply state “patient is homebound” are not sufficient.

We review records to confirm homebound status is properly described. When documentation is weak, we alert clinical teams before submitting claims, preventing denials and protecting revenue.

Managing Recertification and Timing Requirements

Home health 30-day periods require physician certification and recertification every 60 days. Missing deadlines, absent signatures, or verbal orders without timely written confirmation can result in denied payment for the entire period, even if care was delivered correctly.

Our team tracks recertification deadlines, follows up with physicians when needed, and verifies all required signatures and documentation before submitting claims. This prevents costly timing denials.

Submitting Notices of Admission (NOA) and Final Claims

Billing begins with submitting a Notice of Admission (NOA) at the start of each 30-day period, which triggers initial payment. The final claim is submitted at the end of the period to collect remaining payment and any adjustments.

Timing and data accuracy are critical. Late NOAs delay payment. Submitting final claims too early or too late, or with mismatched data compared to NOAs, triggers denials.

Our team handles the NOA and final claim process. We submit NOAs promptly, track period end dates, and submit final claims with data that matches OASIS assessments, care plans, and visit records, which helps optimize cash flow.

Calculating Case-Mix Accurately

Case-mix scores determine Medicare payment for each 30-day period. Scores are based on patient clinical characteristics, functional status, and service needs documented in OASIS assessments.

Under-documenting complexity leads to lower payment. Over-documenting without clinical support triggers audits and recoupment. Our specialists review OASIS data and HIPPS codes before claim submission, checking that case-mix scores reflect patient characteristics. When discrepancies arise, we work with clinical teams to correct them.

Medicaid Compliance and Audit Management

Medicaid home health coverage varies by state. Some states pay per visit, while others use managed care plans with specific authorization requirements, and coverage limits differ widely. In addition, even when care is provided correctly, Medicare and Medicaid may request Additional Documentation Requests (ADRs) or conduct audits.

Our team tracks Medicaid home health policies across all 50 states, verifies coverage, obtains required authorizations, and codes claims according to each state’s rules. In states with Electronic Visit Verification (EVV) requirements, we follow these rules before submitting claims. We also monitor documentation for potential audit issues and address problems before submission, reducing the risk of denials, recoupments, or delayed payment.

Common Home Health Revenue Codes and HIPPS Codes We Handle

Our certified home health billing specialists know all home health codes and payment systems. We make sure every episode is coded correctly for accurate payment.

Home Health Revenue Codes

Revenue codes identify the type of service provided on home health claims. Under episode-based payment, revenue code 0023 is used. Under Low Utilization Payment Adjustments (LUPA)—applied to episodes with 1–4 visits -specific revenue codes are used per discipline:

  • 0571 – Skilled Nursing (per visit under LUPA)
  • 0572 – Physical Therapy (per visit under LUPA)
  • 0573 – Occupational Therapy (per visit under LUPA)
  • 0574 – Speech-Language Pathology (per visit under LUPA)
  • 0575 – Medical Social Services (per visit under LUPA)
  • 0576 – Home Health Aide (per visit under LUPA)
  • 0579 – Other Services (non-routine medical supplies under LUPA)
  • 0023 – Skilled Nursing or other services under episode payment

HIPPS Codes for Case-Mix Payment

HIPPS (Health Insurance Prospective Payment System) codes are five-character alphanumeric codes generated from OASIS assessment data. They determine episode payment amounts under PDGM, reflecting:

  • Clinical severity
  • Functional status
  • Service utilization level
  • Timing within the 30-day period (early vs. late)
  • Admission source and comorbidity adjustments

HIPPS code format: 1XXXX

  • First character (1) = Home health
  • Second and third = Clinical and functional severity
  • Fourth = Service utilization level
  • Fifth = Timing/episode placement

Examples:

  • 1AF1A – Early episode, low clinical and functional severity, low utilization
  • 1EH3K – Late episode, high clinical and functional severity, high utilization
  • 1CD2F – Early episode, medium clinical/functional severity, medium utilization

HIPPS codes are automatically generated from OASIS data, but our team verifies:

  • OASIS data is complete and accurate
  • HIPPS code matches patient characteristics
  • Timing indicators (early/late) are correct
  • Case-mix score aligns with documented conditions

Private Duty Nursing Codes

Private duty nursing is billed hourly or per 15-minute increments:

  • S9123 – RN care, in-home, per hour
  • S9124 – LPN/LVN care, in-home, per hour
  • T1000 – Licensed private duty nursing, up to 15 minutes
  • T1001 – Nursing assessment/evaluation
  • T1002 – RN services, up to 15 minutes
  • T1003 – LPN/LVN services, up to 15 minutes

Documentation must reflect actual time and skill level. Some payers also require prior authorization for private duty nursing.

Home Health PPS Payment Categories

LUPA (Low Utilization Payment Adjustment) – Applied to episodes with 1–4 visits. First visit per discipline typically receives higher payment than subsequent visits.

PEP (Partial Episode Payment) – Used when a patient transfers to another agency or changes coverage mid-period; payment is prorated based on days in the episode.

Outlier Payments – Additional payment for episodes with unusually high costs compared to the base 30-day payment. The cost threshold varies by region and fiscal year, but generally applies when costs exceed about $2,000–$3,000 above the standard episode payment.

Hospice Revenue Codes

Hospice is paid per diem based on level of care:

  • 0651 – Routine Home Care
  • 0652 – Continuous Home Care (hourly, minimum 8 hours/day)
  • 0655 – Inpatient Respite Care
  • 0656 – General Inpatient Care
  • 0657 – Physician Services
  • 0659 – Other Hospice Services

We track daily level-of-care changes and submit accurate revenue codes for each day.

Home Infusion Therapy Codes

Home infusion billing requires coordination between nursing services and pharmacy/drug components:

  • S9325–S9379 – Infusion therapy medications and supplies
  • S5035–S5036 – Routine home infusion services
  • 99601–99602 – Infusion or specialty drug administration (per visit)
  • 96365–96368 – Intravenous infusion (initial and subsequent)
  • 96372 – Therapeutic injection, subcutaneous or intramuscular
  • 96374 – Therapeutic injection, intravenous push
  • 96375 – Additional sequential IV push

Keeping Current With Payment Methodology

Our team tracks all CMS, state Medicaid, and payer updates, including:

  • Revenue code changes
  • HIPPS code updates
  • PDGM revisions, including case-mix weights, timing, and comorbidity adjustments

This expertise helps agencies receive accurate payment for every type of home health service, reduces denials, and minimizes audit risk.

Our Complete Home Health Agency and Home Health Care Billing Services

MZ Medical Billing provides comprehensive revenue cycle management (RCM) and medical billing services for home health agencies and home health care providers, covering every step from documentation review to claim submission and payment. Our specialists handle Medicare, Medicaid, managed care, and commercial payer requirements, making certain your agency receives correct payment for every home health care episode.

OASIS Assessment Review for Home Health Agency Billing

We work closely with your clinical team on OASIS assessments. While we do not perform clinical evaluations, we review assessment data for home health care billing accuracy and completeness. This includes verifying that assessment timing within the 30-day home health agency episode is correct, all required fields are filled, and the information supports the case-mix score and HIPPS code. Any missing or inconsistent data that could cause denials or payment errors is identified and flagged for correction before claims are submitted. This coordination reduces mistakes and protects home health agency revenue.

Physician Certification and Recertification Tracking for Home Health Care Services

Tracking physician certifications and recertifications is a key part of home health care billing. Our team monitors deadlines and alerts staff when certifications or recertifications are due. Each certification is checked for all required elements, including diagnosis, prognosis, treatment plan, and physician signature within the required timeframe. Missing or incomplete certifications are followed up promptly, helping home health agencies avoid claim denials and lost payment.

Notice of Admission (NOA) and Final Claim Submission for Home Health Agency Billing

Under PDGM, NOAs trigger initial payment for each 30-day home health care episode. We submit NOAs at the start of each episode, verifying that a valid OASIS assessment is on file, physician certification is complete, and patient demographic and insurance information is correct. Final claims are submitted at the end of the episode, reconciling visit and assessment data with NOA submissions. We check that visit patterns match the home health care plan, case-mix adjustments and therapy thresholds are applied, and partial episode payments (PEP) for transfers or coverage changes are calculated accurately. This process makes certain home health agencies receive full payment for every episode.

Low Utilization Payment Adjustment (LUPA) Management

LUPA applies to home health care episodes with fewer than five visits, where payment is made per visit rather than the standard episode rate. The first visit of each discipline typically receives higher payment than subsequent visits. Our team identifies LUPA episodes, applies the correct revenue codes, and submits claims for proper per-visit payment for home health agency services.

Partial Episode Payment (PEP) Handling

When patients transfer between home health agencies or coverage changes mid-episode, PEP calculations determine prorated payment for the portion of care delivered. We calculate PEP amounts precisely, coordinate with other agencies if necessary, and submit claims for the portion of care provided, protecting revenue from home health care services.

Outlier Payment Calculations

Episodes with exceptionally high costs may qualify for outlier payments, which provide additional reimbursement above the standard 30-day home health care episode rate. Identifying outlier episodes requires detailed cost documentation. Our team flags potential outlier episodes and submits claims with supporting cost information, capturing additional revenue for resource-intensive cases. Episodes with costs roughly $2,000–$3,000 above standard payment often qualify, allowing home health agencies to receive the full payment due.

Denial Management and Appeals for Home Health Care Claims

Home health care claims face frequent denials due to documentation gaps, timing issues, or medical necessity questions. Our team reviews each denial, gathers additional documentation and clinical notes, and files appeals with strong supporting evidence, including proof of homebound status or skilled care. This approach produces high overturn rates and recovered revenue for home health agencies.

Accounts Receivable (A/R) Management for Home Health Agencies

We actively monitor all outstanding home health care claims and follow up with Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), managed care organizations (MCOs), and commercial payers. Our persistent follow-up reduces payment delays and helps home health agencies achieve A/R averages of 27–30 days, improving cash flow.

Pediatric Home Health Care Billing

We handle specialized billing for pediatric home health care services, including skilled nursing for medically complex children, pediatric therapy, and private duty nursing. Our team works with state-specific Medicaid benefits, authorizations, and commercial insurance, helping home health agencies receive payment for pediatric care provided to children and families.

Home Infusion Therapy Billing for Home Health Agencies

Home infusion services, such as antibiotics, nutrition support, or chemotherapy, require billing for both nursing visits and pharmacy products. We coordinate documentation between clinical and pharmacy records and submit complete claims for home health care infusion services, supporting agency revenue while patients receive critical treatments.

Hospice Billing for Home Health Care

Hospice care has unique Medicare requirements with per-diem rates based on the level of care. We manage billing for routine home care, continuous care, general inpatient care, and respite care. Daily level-of-care changes are tracked, eligibility is verified, and claims are submitted with accurate revenue codes. This allows home health agencies to focus on compassionate end-of-life care while receiving correct payment.

Full RCM and Home Health Agency Medical Billing Oversight

MZ Medical Billing provides end-to-end RCM and medical billing services for home health agencies and home health care providers. Our services include documentation review, OASIS verification, physician certification tracking, NOA and final claim submission, LUPA and PEP processing, outlier claims, denial management and appeals, pediatric, infusion, and hospice billing, and A/R monitoring. Our team stays current with CMS, state Medicaid, and payer updates, including PDGM revisions, revenue code changes, and HIPPS code updates, so your home health agency is paid correctly for every home health care service provided.

How We Help Your Home Health Agency Succeed

Increase Revenue Collection Dramatically

Many home health agencies lose significant revenue to billing errors, denied claims, and incorrect payment calculations under PDGM and state Medicaid programs. Agencies often do not track how much money they’re leaving uncollected each month.

MZ Medical Billing captures revenue other billing partners miss. We verify insurance eligibility and payer rules before care begins, check benefit coverage and authorization requirements, calculate case-mix scores and HIPPS codes accurately, and review documentation for completeness before claim submission. Our certified coding team applies home health care–specific coding standards (ICD‑10, HCPCS) and aligns claims with payer requirements. We also handle denial appeals with detailed clinical and billing evidence. For most agencies, these services translate into 30–40% more revenue, allowing your home health care team to hire more staff, serve more patients, and expand agency services.

Reduce Claim Denials by Half

Home health has some of the highest denial rates in healthcare. Denials frequently stem from incomplete documentation, homebound status errors, late or missing physician certifications, OASIS inconsistencies, and payer‑specific requirements.

Our specialized approach prevents many denials before claims are submitted. We validate documentation, confirm certifications, verify OASIS and visit data, check authorization and eligibility status, and align claims with PDGM and payer rules. We also monitor denial trends and payer behavior to adjust workflows over time. This approach reduces denials by 35–50% compared to in‑house billing, meaning fewer rejected claims and faster payment for your home health agency. Fewer denials also reduce administrative workload and contribute to stronger financial performance.

Improve Cash Flow Significantly

Waiting 60–90 days for payments from Medicare, Medicaid, or managed care plans creates cash flow challenges. Staff are paid weekly, but revenue may not arrive for months, making it hard to cover payroll and operating expenses.

We submit Notices of Admission (NOAs) promptly at the start of each 30‑day home health care episode to secure up to 60% of payment early, and we follow up aggressively on final claim submissions. Our team also tracks payer responses in real time and contacts payers regularly to resolve outstanding items. These actions help your home health agency receive payments 25–35% faster, giving you more predictable cash flow to meet payroll, pay vendors on time, and reinvest in growth.

Maintain Compliance with Medicare and Payer Rules

Home health agencies face frequent audits from Medicare, Medicaid, and managed care organizations. Common audit targets include OASIS accuracy, homebound status documentation, physician certification timing, and medical necessity of services.

Our billing team conducts regular internal audits of home health care documentation and billing practices to identify issues before claims are filed. We provide ongoing feedback to clinical and administrative staff about documentation improvements tied to regulatory requirements, and we make sure claims reflect current CMS, state Medicaid, and payer policies. This reduces the risk of audit findings, recoupment demands, and payment suspensions that could disrupt operations.

Free Your Staff to Focus on Patient Care

Billing for home health care services takes significant staff time. Office personnel often spend hours researching denials, chasing payment status with Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) and managed care plans, or responding to development requests.

When you partner with MZ Medical Billing, we take full responsibility for your billing cycle, from eligibility verification and NOA submission to denial resolution and accounts receivable follow‑up. Your internal team can focus on visit coordination, patient care planning, scheduling, and clinical delivery. This improves staff morale, reduces turnover, and supports better care outcomes for your agency’s patients.

Gain Real‑Time Insights and Scalability

We provide reporting that gives your home health agency visibility into key performance indicators: denial trends, payer timeliness, case‑mix distributions, A/R days, and claim clean‑rate performance. These analytics help leaders make operational decisions based on data rather than guesswork.

Our RCM model is scalable and supports agencies of all sizes, including multi‑site operations and changing payer mix requirements. Whether you are expanding services or managing coverage from Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers, we adjust workflows and reporting to match your growth without increasing administrative burden.

MZ Medical Billing Is Compatible with All Home Health Billing & Practice Softwares

Home Health Agency Billing & RCM Services for Practices Across All 50 States

MZ Medical Billing Services provides home health agency billing and Revenue Cycle Management (RCM) services to agencies nationwide, serving clients from Arizona and Nevada to New York and every state in between. We support independent home health agencies, hospital-based home health programs, and multi-location home care organizations, helping them increase reimbursements, reduce denials, and improve cash flow under Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers.

Our certified billing specialists manage the full revenue cycle, including OASIS coordination, physician certification tracking, Notice of Admission (NOA) and final claim submission, case-mix and HIPPS code calculations, LUPA and Partial Episode Payment (PEP) claims, outlier requests, denial management, and accounts receivable recovery. We navigate the Medicare Home Health Prospective Payment System (PDGM) and adapt workflows to state Medicaid variations and managed care requirements.

State Medicaid programs vary widely. For example, Arizona and Nevada require Electronic Visit Verification (EVV) for all home health services, capturing visit type, time, location, and provider details before claims can be reimbursed. New York’s Medicaid program reimburses episodic home health services differently than Medicare and requires specific authorization and documentation for therapy, skilled nursing, and non-medical care. Our team incorporates these state-specific rules into every claim to prevent denials and delays.

With MZ Medical Billing LLC, home health agencies across all 50 states receive accurate claims, compliance with federal and state regulations, and faster reimbursements. Agency directors can focus on quality patient care and clinical outcomes, while we handle billing complexities, state nuances, and revenue cycle management to strengthen financial performance.

Medical Billing Services for Home Health Agencies and Other Specialties

MZ Medical Billing helps home health agencies receive accurate and timely payment for every service they provide. We handle all types of home health services, including skilled nursing visits, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, home health aide services, and medical social work. Each episode is carefully coded and submitted in line with Medicare PDGM, state Medicaid requirements, and commercial payer rules, reducing denials and payment delays.

We also provide comprehensive medical billing and revenue cycle management for a wide range of other healthcare specialties across the United States. This includes hospice agencies, home infusion providers, durable medical equipment suppliers, private duty nursing agencies, pediatric home care programs, palliative care providers, and long-term care facilities. Each specialty has unique billing rules, coding standards, and payer requirements, and our team ensures claims meet all regulatory and documentation standards to maximize reimbursement.

Our services cover agencies in all 50 states, accounting for state-specific Medicaid regulations, Electronic Visit Verification (EVV) requirements, and managed care plan rules. By combining technical expertise with state- and payer-specific knowledge, we help healthcare providers of every specialty focus on patient care while we manage the complexities of medical billing and revenue cycle management.

Find Out How Much Revenue Your Home Health Agency Can Recover

Home health agencies often lose substantial payments due to claim denials, coding errors, or delays in episode reimbursement.

With MZ Medical Billing LLC, certified billing specialists manage every aspect of your home health billing, from OASIS verification and physician certification tracking to final claim submission, case-mix and payment calculations, LUPA/PEP management, denial resolution, and state-specific Medicaid compliance.

Schedule a free consultation today to review your billing process, identify missed revenue opportunities, and see how expert management can improve cash flow while keeping your agency fully compliant with Medicare and Medicaid rules.

FAQS

Home Health Medical Billing FAQs

Why is home health billing so different from other medical billing?

Home health billing uses episode-based payment rather than traditional fee-for-service. Medicare pays a set amount for each 30-day episode of care, regardless of how many visits occur. Payment is determined by OASIS assessment data, which calculates case-mix scores based on patient clinical complexity, functional status, and service needs.

Agencies must also document that patients are homebound, track physician certifications and recertifications within strict timeframes, and submit accurate final claims that reflect the episode, including adjustments for LUPA (Low Utilization Payment Adjustment) and PEP (Partial Episode Payment) when applicable.

Compared to standard medical billing, which usually submits a single claim per service, home health billing has many interdependent components. If any element, documentation, coding, OASIS data, or recertification timing, is incorrect, claims can be denied, underpaid, or subject to recoupment. This complexity is why specialized expertise is critical for agencies to get paid correctly.

What happens if physician certification is late?

Late physician certification causes Medicare to deny payment for the entire episode even if care was appropriate. The certification must be obtained within specific timeframes—generally within 30 days after start of care for initial certification and before the episode starts for recertifications. Missing these deadlines means no payment for all services provided during that episode. Our tracking system monitors certification deadlines and alerts your team before deadlines pass. We follow up with physicians to obtain signatures on time. This prevents devastating late certification denials.

How does case-mix scoring affect payment?

Case-mix scores are calculated from OASIS assessment data about patient clinical conditions, functional abilities, and service needs. Higher scores mean sicker, more complex patients and result in higher episode payments. Lower scores mean healthier patients and lower payments. Accurate case-mix scoring is critical—under-scoring means you’re underpaid for complex patients, over-scoring without clinical support triggers audits and recoupment. We review OASIS data to verify case-mix scores match patient characteristics before submitting claims. This makes sure you receive appropriate payment.

What is homebound status and why does it matter?

Homebound status means leaving home requires considerable effort due to medical condition. Medicare only covers home health for homebound patients. If patients can leave home easily or go out regularly for activities, they aren’t homebound and Medicare denies coverage. Documentation must clearly describe why leaving home is difficult—need for wheelchair, walker, or other assistance; medical equipment required; shortness of breath or pain with exertion; etc. Statements like “patient is homebound” without explanation aren’t enough. We review documentation to verify homebound status is proven clearly before submitting claims.

What are RAPs and why are they important?

Request for Anticipated Payment (RAP) is submitted at episode start to receive 60% of estimated episode payment immediately. This upfront payment improves cash flow so you don’t wait 30+ days for any money. Final claims are submitted at episode end for the remaining 40% plus payment adjustments. Missing RAP deadlines delays payment significantly. We submit RAPs promptly at every episode start to get you fast initial payment. This helps your agency meet payroll and expenses while waiting for final payment.

How do you handle denials for insufficient documentation?

Documentation denials are common in home health. When claims are denied for insufficient documentation, we first review what documentation exists. We contact your clinical team to see if additional notes, assessments, or physician orders can support the claim. We gather all available documentation and file detailed appeals explaining why services were skilled, medically necessary, and appropriate. We often include clinical guidelines and policy references supporting our position. Many documentation denials can be overturned with strong appeals that present the full clinical picture.

Do all state Medicaid programs cover home health the same way?

No, state Medicaid home health programs vary dramatically. Some states have generous benefits covering many services. Others have very limited coverage. Some pay per episode like Medicare. Others pay per visit or per hour. Many use managed care plans with different authorization requirements. Some require prior authorization for all services. Others don’t. Coverage rules, payment rates, and documentation requirements are completely different in each state. Our billing specialists track Medicaid rules in all 50 states and code claims according to each state’s specific requirements.

How do LUPA episodes work?

Low Utilization Payment Adjustment (LUPA) occurs when an episode has fewer than 5 visits. Instead of receiving the full episode payment, you’re paid on a per-visit basis at lower rates. LUPA can happen for legitimate clinical reasons—patient improves quickly, patient hospitalized mid-episode, or patient needs limited services. LUPA claims require different billing with individual visit codes instead of episode codes. We identify LUPA episodes and submit claims correctly to receive proper per-visit payment. We also track LUPA patterns to identify if clinical or scheduling issues are causing avoidable LUPAs.

What is a therapy threshold and how does it affect payment?

Therapy thresholds are specific numbers of therapy visits that trigger higher episode payments. When patients receive 10 or more therapy visits (physical, occupational, or speech therapy combined) during an episode, the case-mix score is adjusted higher, increasing payment. Therapy must be medically necessary and properly documented—you can’t provide extra therapy just to reach thresholds. We track therapy visits and verify threshold payments are calculated correctly. When patients are close to thresholds and therapy is clinically appropriate, we alert clinical teams so scheduling decisions can be made.

How do you prevent Medicare audits of our home health agency?

We prevent audits through proactive compliance monitoring. We conduct regular internal audits of OASIS accuracy, homebound documentation, physician certification timing, visit patterns, and medical necessity. We identify problems before Medicare does and provide feedback for correction. We track your case-mix scores compared to national averages—scores significantly higher than peers trigger Medicare scrutiny. We review documentation to make sure services billed match care provided. We verify no inappropriate patterns like always billing maximum visits or consistently high case-mix scores. This proactive approach keeps your agency compliant and reduces audit risk significantly.