Base: $55,000–$90,000k; bonus/equity: not specifie...
Fully remote
Specialty testing accounts receivable
Denial operations workflows
Research denials/claim issues
Provide analytical and operational support for Specialty Testing accounts receivable and reimbursement to improve denial operations workflows and processes
Job Summary
Provide analytical and operational support for Specialty Testing accounts receivable and reimbursement to improve denial operations workflows and processes.
Learn and navigate multiple laboratory systems and billing platforms; apply system workflows to billing processes to ensure expected outcomes.
Employees regularly scheduled to work 20 or more hours per week are eligible for comprehensive benefits including: Medical, Dental, Vision, Life, STD/LTD, 401(k), Paid Time Off (PTO) or Flexible Time Off (FTO), Tuition Reimbursement and Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
Matching Summary
Provide analytical and operational support for Specialty Testing accounts receivable and reimbursement to improve denial operations workflows and processes.
Salary
Base: $55,000–$90,000K; Bonus/Equity: Not specified; Benefits: Comprehensive benefits package
Skills & Requirements
Must-have
Specialty Testing accounts receivable
denial operations workflows
research denials/claim issues
manage internal override inventory
navigate multiple laboratory systems
data mining and validation
cross-functional stakeholder communication
Nice-to-have
continuous-improvement orientation
self-directed and proactive
fast-paced environment comfort
strong problem-solving mindset
Key Requirements
Bachelor’s degree with 6 years’ healthcare billing experience
Associate degree with 8 years healthcare billing experience
HS diploma or GED with 10 years healthcare billing experience
3+ years MS Excel experience
3+ years denials, appeals, underpayments experience
3+ years Accounts Receivables healthcare billing
3+ years CPT, ICD-10, HCPCS coding experience
3+ years Medicare, Medicaid, commercial payer reimbursement
3+ years prior authorization, medical necessity, payer denial experience