Medical insurance billing is a career broad in scope and wide in rewards. Never has the medical industry needed medical insurance billing services than it does now.
The history of medical insurance billing actually started at the end of World War II when technology, particularly in the field of medicine, experienced an all-out boom. Technology has made everything in medical science easier. However, these advancements are not without their rice. Rising along is the increasing demand for medical insurance billing which has become the doctor's key to getting paid for services rendered.
Most patients these days are insured. That is why when they get healthcare from their doctors, nurses, or other healthcare providers, they do not outright pay them for the service. Instead, they let their insurance companies handle it for them. It is thus left to the doctor to process the claim based on information contained in the patient's medical record, including treatment, diagnosis, and time spent on treating the illness.
Soon however, provided the great number of patients a doctor sees in one day, all these claims work will pile one on top of the other until a snowdrift of paper files is created right on your desk. Being a doctor, you'd rather deal with treating patients than deal with tons of paperwork. And that was how medical insurance billing came to be.
Contrary to popular opinion, medical insurance billing is actually a complicated process. It's not as easy as it's been made to believe. Medical insurance billing encompasses a whole spectrum of duties and responsibilities which needs someone who is experienced, versed, and trained in the areas of medical insurance billing and claims filing.
In medical insurance billing, you can process claims either manually or electronically. With manual, the medical insurance billing professional will type the information into a software program. The computer will then print out the information for the medical insurance billing professional to manually submit to the clearinghouse which would in turn send it to the insurance carrier via US Postal Service.
In electronic claims processing, you simply type in the information into your software program and submit it directly to the insurance carrier with the use of the Internet. Electronic claims processing is of course speedier compared to manual processing but each method has its own set of advantages and disadvantages. Either way, you will need a good software program.
Medical insurance billing software programs are widely available. They can be for free, for shareware, or for purchase. The most important thing you need to remember when buying your software is to make sure that it provides technical support. Technical support will help you get things up and running and in case of trouble, help you get things up and running...again.