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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Tax Exempt Hospitals Back On IRS, Senate Radar
23 July 2007
Experts Disagree On Medical Debt and Bankruptcy
19 July 2007
Romney Unlikely to Propose Universal Health Care on National Level
17 July 2007
HCA-Owned ARM Firm Branching Out, Expanding
16 July 2007
Zotec to Merge with Susan J. Taylor, Inc. to Maximize Medical Billing Efficiencies
16 July 2007
California AG Blocks Hospital Sale
12 July 2007
Medical Biller Launches Program to Help with Healthcare Bad Debt
5 July 2007
Healthcare Providers Target $250 billion Point-Of-Sale Business
2 July 2007
Apollo Names Healthcare President, Surpasses $3 million-a-Day Mark
2 July 2007
Connecticut?s Health Plan For Uninsured Adults Moves Forward
2 July 2007
Centene Announces Dismissal of Shareholder Class Action Lawsuit
2 July 2007
ACA Survey Shows Penetration of Medical Accounts in the ARM Industry
21 June 2007
Seven Health Insurers Agree to Suspend Private Medicare Plan
21 June 2007
Court Rules for UnitedHealth in Suit Brought by Doctors
19 June 2007
AHA Raises Flags Over New Tax Form for Non-profit Hospitals
19 June 2007
Accuro Healthcare Introduces Next Generation Chargemaster Management Tool
19 June 2007
Majority of Hospitals Slow to Adopt Routine Apology Policy
18 June 2007
Universal Health Services Selects Craneware?s Chargemaster Toolkit
15 June 2007
Syntel Recognized as an Industry Leader in Healthcare IT
15 June 2007
The Outsource Group Acquires Medical Claims Collection Agency
15 June 2007