Telehealth Claims Decline

 




Based on FAIR Health’s Monthly Telehealth Regional Tracker, the national decline in private insurance telehealth claims reached 5.4% in April, comprising 5.3% of all medical claims. This reduction can be observed across all four U.S. census regions: the Midwest (4.7%), Northeast (6.3%), South (6.8%), and West (6.4%). On average, patient visits lasted between 20 and 29 minutes, with a median charge of $167.77 and a median allowed amount of $89.70.According to the data collected from privately insured populations, including Medicare Advantage and excluding Medicare fee-for-service and Medicaid, audio-only telehealth experienced a decline in both rural and urban areas nationwide and in every region except the West. Interestingly, in the West, it decreased in rural areas but saw an increase in urban areas.

Across the board, mental health conditions remained the most prevalent telehealth diagnosis, maintaining their top-ranking position nationally and in every region. In March, they accounted for 67.4% of telehealth claim lines nationally, rising to 68.4% in April. This marks the fourth consecutive month of national increases in mental health-related telehealth diagnoses.

Claims for acute respiratory diseases and infections, the second most-common telehealth consultation, fell nationally in April from 3.2% in March to 2.7% in April, the fourth straight national monthly decrease for this diagnosis.


https://www.allzonems.com/telehealth-claims-decline-in-q1-things-to-know/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

2023 Scary ICD-10 Halloween codes For Physician

Medical Coding Strategies to Prevent Payer Denials

Medicare ASC Payment System 2024 Update: New HCPCS Codes & Changes