Medical receivables are the amounts owed by third-party payers to healthcare providers. The party owing the money can be commercial insurance companies, HMOs, Medicare and Medicaid, or patients (if there is an outstanding balance after insurance or another payer has paid its portion). Medical receivables are usually payable 60 to 120 days after service is rendered, though some reimbursements lag further behind, creating cash flow issues for healthcare providers, who typically need to pay expenses in a shorter time frame.
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Court Orders Medical Group to Rescind Bills to Patients
17 January 2007
Revenue Management Solutions Acquires Healthcare MedRx
16 January 2007
Keane Completes Revenue Cycle Management Implementation With HealthSouth
16 January 2007
Study: Hospitals will Find $300 million in Revenues in 2007
16 January 2007
New Report Links High Credit Card Debt to Medical Expenses
16 January 2007
Collection Agency Going After Insurance Companies for Medical Bills
15 January 2007
Executive Change: Jerry Baker to Medical Records Online
15 January 2007
State Supreme Court Rules for Collectors in Medical Privacy Case
12 January 2007
Hospital Settles for $423 million in Billing and Collection Case
12 January 2007
RoundTable Healthcare Completes Acquisition of Advantis Medical
12 January 2007
Billing Errors Hampering Collection at Hospital
11 January 2007
Indian BPO Firm Announces Assignment of $700 million in Healthcare Accounts
10 January 2007
Hospitals Turn to Credit Cards to Collect Unpaid Bills
9 January 2007
United Surgical Partners Going Private in $1.8 billion Deal
8 January 2007
Jorge Todeschini Wins Referral Contest
8 January 2007
Lawyer Goes After Hospital and Collection Agency
5 January 2007
Report: State?s Nonprofit Hospitals are Flush with Cash
5 January 2007
Huron Consulting Group Acquires Healthcare Consulting Firm
4 January 2007
What Really Makes Healthcare Collections Unique
4 January 2007
Medical Billing Firms Merge, Acquire Another Billing Firm
3 January 2007