Are duplicate charges creating overpayment recovery nightmares? Duplicate billing is a serious compliance risk. Insurance companies detect duplicates easily. They demand repayment plus interest. Some assess penalties. Yet duplicate charges happen in every practice. Same service billed twice.
This guide explains how to identify and fix duplicate charges in Athenahealth. You’ll discover detection methods for finding duplicates. We reveal prevention strategies to stop duplicates. Learn correction procedures to protect your practice today.
Understanding Duplicate Charges
Duplicate charges are the same service billed multiple times. This happens for the same patient, same date, same code. Both charges submit to insurance. If both pay, it’s overpayment.
Why Duplicates Happen
Multiple causes create duplicate charges. Understanding these prevents future duplicates.
Multiple Staff Entry
Two staff members enter the same charge. The provider and nurse both enter the visit. This happens without communication. Each thinks they’re helping. The system doesn’t always block duplicates.
System Errors
Athenahealth glitches occasionally create duplicates. Charge saves twice with one click. System timeout duplicates entry. These technical errors happen rarely but do occur.
Batch Charge Imports
Importing charges from other systems creates duplicates. If a charge already exists, and you import again. Duplicate appears. This happens with labs and procedures.
How to Identify Duplicates
Finding duplicates requires systematic searching. Use these Athenahealth methods.
Run Duplicate Charge Report
Athenahealth has a built-in duplicate charge report. Go to the Reports menu. Select Financial Reports. Choose the Duplicate Charges report. Set the date range to review. The report shows potential duplicates.
Search by Patient and Date
Search for a specific patient account. Filter charges by service date. Look for the same code billed twice. Same day, same code indicates a duplicate.
Review Batch Reports
After entering batch charges, review the report. Look for duplicate warnings. Athenahealth flags potential duplicates. Address before finalizing batch.
Duplicate Detection Methods
| Detection Method | When to Use | How to Access |
| Duplicate charge report | Weekly monitoring | Reports > Financial > Duplicates |
| Patient account review | Before claim submission | Patient chart > Charges tab |
| Batch import warnings | After importing charges | Review batch results |
| Claim edit rules | Automatic prevention | Settings > Claim edits |
| EOB review | After payment received | Check for duplicate payments |
Fix Identified Duplicates
Once duplicates are found, correct them immediately.
Delete Duplicate Charge
Identify which charge is the duplicate. Keep the first entered charge typically. Delete the duplicate charge. System removes it from the account. Verify deletion in the patient chart.
Void Duplicate Claim
If a duplicate has already been submitted to insurance. Void the duplicate claim. Go to Claims menu. Find duplicate claim. Select the Void option. Document why voiding.
Return Duplicate Payments
If insurance paid both charges, return the duplicate payment immediately. Don’t keep overpayments. Send a check with an explanation letter. Document return in Athenahealth.
Prevent Future Duplicates
Prevention is better than correction. These strategies stop duplicates.
Configure Duplicate Detection
Enable Athenahealth’s duplicate charge detection. Go to Settings. Select Charge Entry Configuration. Turn on duplicate warnings. The system will alert when entering a potential duplicate.
Assign Charge Entry Responsibility
Designate who enters charges. Only assigned staff enter charges. Providers don’t enter charges directly. This eliminates multiple people entering the same charge.
Use Charge Capture Tools
Implement encounter-based charge capture. The system tracks which services need charges. Prevents multiple entries. Shows if the charge has already been entered.
Train Staff on Duplicates
Proper training prevents duplicate charges.
Explain Compliance Risks
Staff must understand the seriousness of duplicates. Explain the overpayment recovery process. Show how duplicates suggest fraud. Make compliance importance clear.
Teach Detection Methods
Train staff to check before entering charges. Show how to search for existing charges. Demonstrate using duplicate reports. Practice finding duplicates.
Create Charge Entry Procedures
Write standard charge entry procedures. Include checking for existing charges. Require verification before entry. Make the following procedures mandatory.
Monitor for Patterns
Regular monitoring catches duplicate problems early.
Weekly Duplicate Reviews
Run duplicate charge report weekly. Review all flagged charges. Investigate each duplicate. Fix immediately. Track trends over time.
Monthly Audit Sampling
Audit random charge samples monthly. Look for duplicates in the sample. If found, expand review. This catches detection system failures.
Track by Staff Member
Track duplicates by who entered them. Some staff may create more duplicates. Provide additional training. Monitor improvement.
Handle Payer Overpayment Requests
Insurance companies find duplicates eventually. A proper response is critical.
Review Overpayment Letter
Read the overpayment notification carefully. Verify they’re correct about the duplicate. Check both claim payments. Confirm the overpayment amount.
Respond Promptly
Don’t ignore overpayment requests. Respond within the stated deadline. Provide the requested documentation. Explain what happened.
Repay Quickly
Return overpayments within 60 days. Don’t wait for multiple requests. Include interest if required. Document repayment. This shows good faith compliance.
System Configuration for Prevention
Athenahealth settings help prevent duplicates.
Enable Warning Messages
Configure the system to warn about potential duplicates. Staff must acknowledge the warning. This forces a conscious decision. Reduces accidental duplicates significantly.
Set Charge Entry Rules
Create rules blocking obvious duplicates. Same code, same date can’t enter twice. The system prevents entry automatically. Override requires supervisor approval.
Use Encounter Templates
Encounter-based charging reduces duplicates. The template shows expected charges. The system knows what’s already entered. Prevents duplicate entry.
Document Everything
Proper documentation protects your practice.
Document Corrections
When deleting duplicates, document why. Note which charge was deleted. Record who made the correction. This creates an audit trail.
Save Overpayment Returns
Keep copies of all overpayment returns. File returned check copies. Save letters sent with payment. Document in the patient account.
Maintain Compliance Records
Keep duplicate charge reports. Save training documentation. Record system configuration changes. This proves compliance efforts.
Conclusion
Identify duplicate charges in Athenahealth using duplicate charge reports and patient account reviews. Fix duplicates by deleting duplicate charges and voiding duplicate claims. Return overpayments immediately. Prevent duplicates through system configuration, assigned charge entry responsibility, and staff training. Monitor weekly for duplicate patterns. Configure warning messages and charge entry rules. Document all corrections and overpayment returns.
FAQs
How do I find duplicate charges in Athenahealth?
Run the Duplicate Charges report in Financial Reports. Search patient accounts for the same code billed twice on the same date. Review batch import results for duplicate warnings.
What should I do if I find a duplicate?
Delete the duplicate charge immediately. If the claim has already been submitted, void it. If payment is received on both, return the duplicate payment with an explanation letter.
How can I prevent duplicate charges?
Enable duplicate detection warnings in Settings. Assign specific staff to charge entry. Use encounter-based charge capture. Configure rules blocking obvious duplicates.
What if insurance requests an overpayment return?
Review their letter carefully. Verify the overpayment is correct. Respond promptly within the deadline. Return payment within 60 days with documentation.
Are duplicate charges considered fraud?
Patterns of duplicates can suggest fraud, even if accidental. Single duplicates corrected quickly show good faith. Regular duplicates without correction raise compliance concerns.