Have any of you been noticing your X-rays being denied more
frequently than usual or have you been subject to an insurance audit on
excessive X-rays? It is
When I work with dental teams, I often see the practice
using the Continuing Care system in Dentrix as a way of tracking when a patient
is due for his or her next series of X-rays. Your recare system is the most
powerful system in your practice and it is the lifeblood of your practice. If
you let patients fall through the cracks, you are letting thousands of dollars
walk out the back door and your patients may suffer from unscheduled treatment.
I do not doubt that your team has the best patient care at heart when you use
the Continuing Care system in Dentrix as a way of staying focused on staying
current on your diagnostics for your patients. However, taking X-rays is not based
on the insurance frequency nor your “office policy” on BWX frequency.
Diagnostics is the reason for taking X-rays, not frequency. With
this being said, your clinical documentation needs to reflect this in order to
defend yourself in the case of an insurance denial or insurance company audit. I
recently attended a study club meeting presented by my good friend and
colleague, Teresa Duncan. She stressed
two main points in your clinical documentation.
Since I help dental practices all the time with their custom
clinical note templates, there are two things you need to include in your
template. This can easily added to your clinical note template with a checkbox prompt so you can choose the variable answer for each patient.
- X-rays were reviewed by . . .
- X-rays are needed because of . . .
One office I know has made a new office policy that the
doctor comes into the exam before the hygienist or dental assistant starts to
take the X-rays so they can be properly diagnosed. I have another office that
has changed up its recare appointments so that the X-rays are diagnosed at the
current appointment and then scheduled with the next recare visit so they cover
all their bases.
Now, I am not suggesting that you stop using the Dentrix
Continuing Care system for tracking X-rays. However, I am suggesting that you
add the risk assessment and diagnosis in your clinical note to substantiate the
taking of the X-rays.
If you would like the full report developed by the ADA and
the FDA on this topic, please email me directly and I will send it to you.
Dayna loves her work. She has over 25 years of experience in the dental industry, and she’s passionate about building efficient, consistent, and secure practice management systems. Dayna knows that your entire day revolves around your practice management software—the better you learn to use it, the more productive and stress-free your office will be. In 2016, Dayna founded Novonee ™, The Premier Dentrix Community, to help cultivate Dentrix super-users all over the country. Learn more from Dayna at www.novonee.com and contact Dayna at dayna@novonee.com.