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The payors for whom the pharmacies processed
the highest volume of claims during the study
period (number of claims > 200) were ranked
according to the average number of days between
date of service of reimbursement , average
difference (loss) to the pharmacy, and percentage
difference between number of claims billed and
number of claims reflecting a difference. Rejected
claims were not evaluated. Also, no adjustments
made to the pharmacy's check for reasons other
than differences described herein were included in
this data. The data is presented in table 2.
Under the category of Percent Differences, two
pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) have a rank of 1
because neither of them was found to have claims
where discrepancies occurred. However, both of
these companies had relatively few claims
examined.
PBMs ranked 4 and 5 had very similar
percentages of difference, but the PBM ranked
number 4 only had 614 claims examined and the
average loss on each one was $29.81. The PBM
ranked 5 had 3,788 claims examined, and the
average loss on each one was $ 2.47. Obviously,
the information presented about the PBM across all
categories should be considered in making a
decision concerning the acceptability of any
particular company's insurance card.
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To estimate the expected total cost in claim
differences for the average pharmacy, three
primary assumptions were made:
" Cost per difference ranged from $14.53 to
$26.83 (i.e., $20.68+ $6.15) based on the 95
percent CI. " Based on information gathered
from the 1999 NCPA-Searle Digest, the average
percentage of third-party claims ranged from 64
percent to 79 percent. An average pharmacy filled
approximately 138.6 prescriptions per day. Thus,
from 88.7 to 109.5 prescriptions a day were paid
by a third party based on a 280 day-year. "
Differences in the paid versus claim amounts
occurred in 0.98 percent of claims based on the
figures presented above.
Based on these assumptions, it was
determined that an average independent pharmacy
can expect to lose approximately $6,623 dollars a
year from differences in claims, or approximately
$0.14 per third-party prescription. Additionally,
the sensitivity analysis revealed the average
"best case" scenario is a loss of $3,537 ($0.14
per prescription), and the average "worst case"
scenario is $8,061 ($0.26 per prescription).
To roughly estimate the loss for a particular
pharmacy based on the above results; we can use
the following equation:
LOSS=$20.68 x
(Claim Difference Rate) x (Third-Party Percentage)
x (Prescriptions Filled Per Year)
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For instance, if an independent pharmacy fills
40,000 prescriptions a year, 70 percent of the
prescriptions will be third-party claims. If the
pharmacy estimates from its records that
approximately 1 percent of the claims are paid a
different amount than that billed, then the
pharmacy will be losing approximately $5,790 a
year of $20.68 x .01 x .70 x 40,000 = $5,790.
CONCLUSIONS
It is important to realize that the percentage
of claim differences plays the most important role
in calculating these expectations. In the example
above, if the pharmacy has a low percentage of
claim differences (e.g., pharmacy 7 at 0.05
percent), then the fictional pharmacy in the
example above may only lose $290 a year.
Therefore, it may not make sense for the pharmacy
to reconcile each claim. However, if the pharmacy
has a high percentage of claim differences (e.g.,
pharmacy 5 at 5.96 percent), then the same
pharmacy may be losing as much as $34,510 a
year!
One final note: At the beginning of the study
period, only two of the seven pharmacists were
reconciling their third-party reimbursement
statements. After participating in the study, six
of seven pharmacists now perform claim
reconciliations every
month.
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