Medical Billing and Coding Specialist Complete
Hours: 755 / Access Length: 12 Months / Delivery: Online, Self-Paced
Retail Price: $3,525.00
Course Overview:
With the Medical Billing Career Prep program, you will gain the skills you need to enter one of the fastest-growing fields in allied health as a medical billing specialist. In this program, you will gain hands-on, practical experience working with the main coding manuals in the field, the ICD-10-CM and the CPT. In addition; you will be introduced to ICD-10-CM. You will also master the legal, ethical, and regulatory concepts that are central to this field. Upon completion of this program, you will be ready to begin your career in an entry-level position. Students will also be prepared to take the Certified Billing and Coding Specialist (CBCS) national certification exam offered by National Healthcareer Association (NHA).
This course will provide you with key information about medical terminology systems. You will learn the key elements used to build medical terms. This will help you be able to decipher words on your own. You will also review body structure and the main systems of the human body. These include the integumentary, digestive, respiratory, and cardiovascular systems to name a select few. Through these learning experiences, you will learn how to recognize, pronounce. build and spell words related to the body structure.
Participants will be asked to complete exercises at the end of each chapter as well as reference appendices in the back of the textbook to aid in the learning process. Furthermore, practice labs will be included in activities that will obtain credit for lessons with the course.
With the Medical Coding program, you will gain the skills you need to enter one of the fastest-growing fields in allied health as a medical coding specialist. In this program, you will gain hands-on, practical experience working with the main coding manuals in the field. In addition you will be introduced to the new ICD-10-CM diagnosis coding system. You will also master the legal, ethical, and regulatory concepts that are central to this field.
This course prepares the student to take the National Healthcareer Association (NHA) Certified Billing and Coding Specialist (CBCS) certification exam.
Course Outline:
Medical Billing Career Prep Curriculum:
Lesson 1: Role of the Insurance Billing Specialist
In this lesson, you will learn about your new role as an insurance billing specialist, its responsibilities and tasks, career advantages and necessary qualifications.
Lesson 2: Compliance, Privacy, Fraud, and Abuse in Insurance Billing
In this lesson, you will learn about the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), insurance reforms and the HITECH act. You will discuss the differences between fraud, waste, and abuse and describe how regulations pertain to the Insurance Billing Specialist
Lesson 3: Basics of Health Insurance
In this lesson, you will learn about the history and organization of health insurance in the United States and how the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will reform healthcare. You will also follow the administrative life-cycle of a physician-based insurance claim from completion to third-party payer processing and payment.
Lesson 4: The Blue Plans, Private Insurance, & Managed Health Care Plans
In this lesson, you will learn about the differences between a traditional indemnity and a managed care plan, including organization, features and payment mechanisms.
Lesson 5: Medicare, Medicaid, & Other State Programs
In this lesson, you will learn about eligibility, benefits and claim submission for Medicare. Participants will also learn about the history, eligibility, benefits, and claims submission for Medicaid and other state programs.
Lesson 6: TRICARE & Veterans Health Care
In this lesson, you will learn about eligibility, benefits, providers and claim submission guidelines for TRICARE and Veteran's Health Care.
Lesson 7: Workers Compensation
In this lesson, you will learn about the differences between workers' compensation and employers liability insurance, eligibility, waiting periods, types of claims, record keeping, and claim submission.
Lesson 8: Disability Income Insurance & Disability Benefit Programs
In this lesson, you will learn about the benefits and exclusions contained in individual and group disability income insurance, eligibility requirements, procedures for claim submissions.
Lesson 9: Medical Documentation & Electronic Health Records
In this lesson, you will lean about the medical record and its transformation into what is known as the electronic health record. You will explain the importance of documentation and how poor documentation makes it difficult for the Insurance Billing Specialist.
Lesson 10: Diagnostic Coding
In this lesson, you will learn how to code diagnoses and the importance of accurate diagnostic coding. You will have hands-on practice with both ICD-9 and ICD-10 coding conventions and demonstrate your ability to abstract medical conditions from the medical record and accurately assign diagnostic codes.
Lesson 11: Procedural Coding
In this lesson, you will learn the purpose and importance of procedural coding. You will have hands-on practice with CPT coding conventions and demonstrate your ability to abstract information from the medical record and accurately assign procedural codes.
Lesson 12: The Paper Claim (CMS-1500)
In this lesson, you will learn when paper claims are to be used. You will compare the differences between clean, pending, rejected, incomplete, and invalid claims and demonstrate the ability to complete the CMS-1500 claim form accurately for federal, state, and private payer insurance contracts using current basic guidelines.
Lesson 13: The Electronic Claim
In this lesson, you will learn the advantages of electronic claim submission, the methods of interactive computer transactions for transmitting insurance claims and the procedures for transmission.
Lesson 14: Receiving Payments & Insurance Problem Solving
In this lesson, you will learn claim management techniques, solutions for denied and rejected claims, and methods to reduce insurance problems and obtain maximum correct payments.
Lesson 15: Collection Strategies
In this lesson, you will learn about the cash flow cycle in the medical office, including how to explain fees and answer patient questions, offer payment options and how to avoid making patients pay for your mistakes and adding expense and causing a delay in payment.
Lesson 16: Ambulatory Surgery Centers
In this lesson, participants will learn about Outpatient hospital care facilities (as often called ambulatory care) and cover various types of services that do not require an overnight hospital stay. Ambulatory surgery centers, known as ASCs, are health care facilities specifically focused on providing same-day surgical care, including diagnostic and preventive procedures and services.
Lesson 17: Hospital Outpatient & Inpatient Billing
In this lesson, you will learn about the differences in medical billing for a hospital vs. a medical office, the flow of the inpatient hospital stay from billing through receipt of payment and the general guidelines for completion of a paper CMS-1450 (UB-04) and transmission of the electronic claim form.
Lesson 18: Seeking a Job and Attaining Professional Advancement
In this lesson, you will learn about the importance of customer-focused service, pathways to certification, how to search for and successfully apply for a job.
Medical Coding Career Prep Curriculum:
Lesson 1: Reimbursement, HIPAA and Compliance
In this lesson, you will learn about third-party reimbursement issues, such as Medicare, the definition of a participating provider, how to locate information in the Federal Register, the RBRVS system, the framework of Medicare Fraud, and the major components of managed health care. Finally, you will have the opportunity to put this information into practice by completing exercises and class activities.
Lesson 2: An Overview of ICD-10-CM
In this lesson, you will learn about t the ICD-10-CM format and the GEMs file, the Alphabetic Index and the Tabular List, and finally, you will have the opportunity to put this information into practice by using the I-9 to I-10 GEMs file and I-10 to I-9 GEMs file to map codes.
Lesson 3: ICD-10-CM Outpatient Coding and Reporting Guidelines
In this lesson, you will learn about ICD-10-CM Outpatient Coding and Reporting Guidelines. You will have the opportunity to put this information into practice by assigning codes to complete exercises and coding reports.
Lesson 4: Using ICD-10-CM
In this lesson, you will learn about ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, General Coding Guidelines. You will have the opportunity to put this information into practice by assigning codes to complete exercises and coding reports.
Lesson 5: Chapter-Specific Guidelines (ICD-10-CM Chapters 1-10)
In this lesson you will learn how to apply ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting of infectious diseases, neoplasms, endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic diseases, and immunity disorders, diseases of blood and blood-forming organs, mental disorders, diseases of the nervous system and sense organs, diseases of the circulatory system, and diseases of the respiratory system.
Lesson 6: Chapter-Specific Guidelines (ICD-10-CM Chapters 11-14)
In this lesson, you will learn to apply ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting of diseases of the digestive system, diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissue, disease of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissues.
Lesson 7: Chapter-Specific Guidelines (ICD-10-CM Chapters 15-21)
In this lesson you will learn to apply ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting of diseases of the pregnancy, childbirth, and the puerperium, certain conditions originating in the perinatal period, congenital malformations, deformations, and chromosomal abnormalities, symptoms signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings, not elsewhere classified, and injury and poisoning, and certain other consequences of external causes.
Lesson 8: Introduction to CPT and the Level II National Codes (HCPCS)
In this lesson, you will learn about the CPT manual, periodic updates to the manual, and the information that is required to properly code procedures and services. You will be introduced to the CPT manual format and categories of CPT codes, including proper use of modifiers. You will also have an opportunity to practice exercises to gain familiarity with how to locate terms in the CPT index and to identify content in the CPT appendices.
Lesson 9: Modifiers
In this lesson, you will learn about the use of modifiers to indicate delivery of services in nonstandard ways.
Lesson 10: Evaluation and Management (E/M) Services
In this lesson, you will learn about the information required to properly code procedures and services from the Evaluation and Management (E/M) section of the CPT. You will be exposed to the contents of the E/M section as well as the factors and conditions that affect the determination of the level of service. You will also have an opportunity to practice coding E/M services. Finally, you will be introduced to documentation guidelines for E/M services that apply to services delivered under Medicare/Medicaid.
Lesson 11: Anesthesia
In this lesson, you will learn about the methods of sedation and the formula used to determine to code for anesthesia services.
Lesson 12: Surgery Guidelines and General Surgery
In this lesson, you will learn about the Surgery section format, locate the notes and guidelines in the Surgery section, state the use of unlisted procedures, interpret elements of a special report, examine the designation of separate procedures, analyze contents of a surgical package, and determine the contents of the General Subsection.
Lesson 13: Integumentary System
In this lesson, you will learn how to code the procedures and services described in the Surgery Section and Integumentary System subsection of the CPT.
Lesson 14: Musculoskeletal System
In this lesson, you will learn about the Musculoskeletal System, including how the subsection is coded. Additional attention will be paid to fracture types and repair, application of casts and strapping, the General Subheading, and endoscopic procedures. You will have an opportunity to learn about these subdivisions and to practice coding procedures and services categorized in these subdivisions.
Lesson 15: Respiratory System
In this lesson, you will learn about the format of the Respiratory System subsection of the CPT. Special attention will be paid to the surgical procedures coded in this subsection and to procedures coded under additional subheadings of the nose, accessory sinuses, larynx, trachea and bronchi, and lungs and pleura. Students will also have an opportunity to practice coding procedures from the Respiratory System subsection of the CPT.
Lesson 16: Cardiovascular System
In this lesson, you will learn about the coding of procedures affecting the Cardiovascular System. You will cover coding from the Surgery, Medicine, and Radiology sections, as well as the major classes of procedures that apply in each system.
Lesson 17: Hemic, Lymphatic, Mediastinum, and Diaphragm
In this lesson, you will learn about the codes used to report services involving the Hemic and Lymphatic Systems and the Mediastinum and Diaphragm. Subsection formats and subheadings are also discussed. Finally, you will have the opportunity to complete coding exercises that require the student to assign procedural and diagnostic codes.
Lesson 18: Digestive System
In this lesson, you will learn about the codes used to report services associated with the Digestive System. Coding for services involving the digestive system and subsection formats will be discussed. Finally, you will have the opportunity to practice applying the above information by assigning procedural and diagnostic codes for exercises and coding reports.
Lesson 19: Urinary and Male Genital Systems
In this lesson, you will learn about the codes used to report services associated with the Urinary and Male Genital Systems. Coding for services involving the urinary system and male genital system and subsection formats will be discussed. Finally, you will have the opportunity to practice applying the above information by assigning procedural and diagnostic codes for exercises and coding reports.
Lesson 20: Reproductive, Intersex Surgery, Female Genital System, and Maternity Care and Delivery
In this lesson, you will learn about coding procedures of the Reproductive System, Intersex Surgeries, and also those that affect the Female Genital System. Coding practices, critical terms, and services for maternity care and delivery will also be discussed. Furthermore, you will have the opportunity to analyze abortion procedures.
Lesson 21: Endocrine and Nervous Systems
In this lesson, you will learn about the codes used to report services associated with the Endocrine and Nervous systems. Subsection formats and subheadings are also discussed. Finally, you will have the opportunity to complete coding exercises that require you to assign procedural and diagnostic codes.
Lesson 22: Eye, Ocular Adnexa, Auditory, and Operating Microscope
In this lesson, you will learn about codes used to report services associated with the eye, ocular adnexa, auditory, and the operating microscope. Coding for services involving the eye and ocular adnexa and the auditory system is discussed. Finally, you will have the opportunity to complete coding exercises that require the student to assign procedural and diagnostic codes.
Lesson 23: Radiology
In this lesson, you will learn about codes used to report services associated with radiology services. You will be shown radiology terminology, component coding, elements of the global procedure, and appropriate coding of contrast material. Finally, you also will have the opportunity to put this information into practice by assigning codes to complete exercises and coding reports.
Lesson 24: Pathology/Laboratory
In this lesson, you will learn about codes used to report services associated with radiology services. You will be shown radiology terminology, component coding, elements of the global procedure, and appropriate coding of contrast material. Finally, you also will have the opportunity to put this information into practice by assigning codes to complete exercises and coding reports.
Lesson 25: Medicine
In this lesson, you will learn about the codes in the Medicine section of the CPT manual. You will have the opportunity to put this information into practice by completing exercises and coding reports that require the use of codes in the Medicine section.
Lesson 26: Inpatient Coding
In this lesson, you will learn about Inpatient Coding and Reporting while being able to differentiate between inpatient and outpatient coding and will examine the ICD-10-PCS system.
Medical Terminology Career Prep Curriculum:
Lesson 1: Medical Terminology Basics
This lesson will help you be able to Identify the four-word elements used to build medical words. You will also learn how to divide medical words into their component parts and apply the basic rules to define and build medical words. You will learn how to interpret pronunciation marks so you can pronounce medical terms presented in this chapter.
Lesson 2: Body Structures
One of the most important parts of the course is understanding the organization of the body. While each person is unique in their own right, the way we are assembled as humans (in a general sense are nearly the same). For this lesson, upon understanding the different levels, planes, and regions of the body, participants will learn how to properly pronounce terms related to a body structure. Documenting health care activities will conclude this part of the course through the assigned activities provided.
Lesson 3: Integumentary, Digestive and Respiratory Systems
The third lesson of the course begins the comprehensive review of the major parts of the body. In this case, the first three (3) in focus are the integumentary, digestive, and respiratory systems. Better put, this lesson will provide comprehensive details and knowledge to understand medical terms specific to one's skin, digestive, and breathing systems. Anatomy and physiology reviews are included in the reading material so participants can not only comprehend terminology but also view where it is often located in these parts of the body. Additional supplemental materials located in the back of the text are available as additional study aids and reference for this and other core portions of the course.
Lesson 4: Cardiovascular, Blood, Lymphatic and Immune Systems
Continuing the discussion of core body systems, the fourth lesson reviews more specific systems which blood commonly flows through. This includes cardiovascular systems such as the heart, lymphatic systems, and more. Similar to other course lessons that focus on body systems, one will need to comprehend the aforementioned knowledge plus an understanding of various diseases or body issues that may result when malfunctions may occur. As mentioned in the previous lesson, additional supplemental materials located in the back of the text are available as additional study aids and reference for this and other core portions of the course.
Lesson 5: Musculoskeletal, Urinary, and Reproductive Systems
The fifth lesson of the course continues the focus of core body systems that medical professionals must understand in order to properly convey and use terms correctly. This lesson goes into great detail about musculoskeletal, urinary, and reproductive systems. These body systems are often dependent on others working properly and failure of those having issues or deficiencies will likely cause these to do the same or at worse fail. Participants should pay particular focus to the reproductive systems and their respective terms as they only apply to their gender and at times, it can be easy to confuse their respective terminologies. As part of a major reoccurring theme for the course, additional supplemental materials located in the back of the text are available as additional study aids and reference.
Lesson 6: Endocrine Systems
The second to last part of the course focuses on an ever-increasing medical base within the United States and the world - endocrinology. Endocrine systems provide the necessary functionality to help keep equilibrium within one's body and nutrients (e.g. glucose and insulin) to keep that balance in place. Hence, thyroid and diabetes care increasing in need, medical professionals must have a strong grasp of common terminology used in this space so that it can be communicated properly and effectively to patients and other medical personnel. To aid in the learning experiences in this important section of the course, additional supplemental materials located in the back of the text are recommended to be used in conjunction with required reading assignments.
Lesson 7: Nervous System and Special Senses
In the final lesson, participants will learn about one body system and special senses. You will be able to locate the major organs of each and describe their structure and function. You will also better understand how each relates to others in the body. You will also learn how to pronounce, spell, and build words related to all both. You will gain an understanding of diseases, conditions, and procedures related to each one as well. You will learn about pharmacology related to the treatment of disorders in each. One is encouraged to apply cumulative learning experiences to the comprehension of terms learned here as well as additional resources that immediately follow this chapter in the text.
All necessary course materials are included.
Certification(s):
This course prepares the student to take the National Healthcareer Association (NHA) Certified Billing and Coding Specialist (CBCS) certification exam.
System Requirements:
Internet Connectivity Requirements:
- Cable, Fiber, DSL, or LEO Satellite (i.e. Starlink) internet with speeds of at least 10mb/sec download and 5mb/sec upload are recommended for the best experience.
NOTE: While cellular hotspots may allow access to our courses, users may experience connectivity issues by trying to access our learning management system. This is due to the potential high download and upload latency of cellular connections. Therefore, it is not recommended that students use a cellular hotspot as their primary way of accessing their courses.
Hardware Requirements:
- CPU: 1 GHz or higher
- RAM: 4 GB or higher
- Resolution: 1280 x 720 or higher. 1920x1080 resolution is recommended for the best experience.
- Speakers / Headphones
- Microphone for Webinar or Live Online sessions.
Operating System Requirements:
- Windows 7 or higher.
- Mac OSX 10 or higher.
- Latest Chrome OS
- Latest Linux Distributions
NOTE: While we understand that our courses can be viewed on Android and iPhone devices, we do not recommend the use of these devices for our courses. The size of these devices do not provide a good learning environment for students taking online or live online based courses.
Web Browser Requirements:
- Latest Google Chrome is recommended for the best experience.
- Latest Mozilla FireFox
- Latest Microsoft Edge
- Latest Apple Safari
Basic Software Requirements (These are recommendations of software to use):
- Office suite software (Microsoft Office, OpenOffice, or LibreOffice)
- PDF reader program (Adobe Reader, FoxIt)
- Courses may require other software that is described in the above course outline.
** The course outlines displayed on this website are subject to change at any time without prior notice. **