Reimbursement Readiness

Business Tip for all types of wound practices. Hosted by Kathleen D. Schaum and Friends.

  1. MAR 12

    Ep.21 Consolidated Billing

    Episode 21 of Reimbursement Readiness: Business Tips for Wound Practice addresses one of the most common—and costly—sources of claim denials in wound care: Medicare consolidated billing. Kathleen Schaum is joined by reimbursement expert Yesenia Banks, who explains why many wound care stakeholders only learn about consolidated billing after claims are denied or payments are recouped. In this episode, Yesenia breaks down the fundamentals of home health and skilled nursing facility consolidated billing rules, including how payment responsibility is assigned during a defined episode of care and why verifying a patient’s status is critical before billing Medicare. She also walks through key distinctions that affect wound care services—such as what is bundled within the home health PDGM model, what remains separately payable under Medicare Part B, and how negative pressure wound therapy is handled differently depending on the care setting. The discussion also clarifies how consolidated billing functions within the SNF PDPM payment model, including the four CMS billing files used to determine which services are excluded, separately billable, or the responsibility of the facility. The episode closes with practical guidance and CMS resources to help providers avoid denials, compliance risk, and unexpected recoupments. Feedback Survey ------------------------------------------ Home Health Consolidated Billing list: https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/prospective-payment-systems/home-health/coding-and-billing-information Skilled Nursing Facility Consolidated Billing Listhttps://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/prospective-payment-systems/skilled-nursing-facility-snf/consolidated-billing There are four Skilled Nursing Facility Consolidated billing list files: File #1 - Part A Stay (2026 Physician Services)(Physician Professional Services Other than Interpretation of Diagnostic Tests) These codes are not subject to SNFconsolidated billing.File #2 - Part A Stay (2026 Physician)(Professional Component of Services to be Submitted with a 26Modifier) These odes are not subject to SNF consolidated billing.File #3 Part A Stay (Ambulance) These codes are not subject to SNF consolidated billing.File #4 - Part B Stay Only (Therapy) These therapy codes are subject to SNF consolidated billing and must be billed through the SNF.

    13 min
  2. FEB 26

    Ep.20 WISeR Prior Authorization: First-Month Real Life Experience

    Episode 20 of Reimbursement Readiness: Business Tips for Wound Practice delivers a timely field report on the WISER Prior Authorization Program—based on real, early experiences from stakeholders submitting requests in New Jersey, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Texas. Even listeners outside the participating states asked for this update, because the “why” behind approvals and denials is helping teams everywhere tighten documentation for reasonable and medically necessary care. Kathleen Schaum shares what she’s hearing from the first month of implementation—what surprised providers, how teams are adapting workflows, and why some are actually finding WISER beneficial (including faster clarity on coverage before purchasing a CTP). Then Kathleen interviews Kati Kauchel, DNP, FNP-C, CWS, founder of Kindling Consulting, who supports mobile wound care organizations and is actively working with groups submitting WISER requests in Texas and Oklahoma. Together, they unpack what “good” looks like under WISER: deliberate care plans, documentation that tells a clear longitudinal story, and escalation that’s clinically driven—not calendar-driven. You’ll also hear the most common patterns behind non-affirmed decisions—often not the product itself, but gaps in the record (standard of care, readiness criteria, sequencing, missing elements like vascular assessment, A1C/compression compliance, etc.). Kati closes with practical guidance to “pressure test” documentation before submission, including a provider self-assessment tool listeners can download. Episode 20 Handout WISeR Professional Self-Assessment.pdf

    19 min
  3. JAN 22

    Ep.17 2026 OPPS Payment Changes for CTPs Will Not Happen “By Magic”

    As 2026 begins, Kathleen Schaum opens Episode 17 of Reimbursement Readiness: Business Tips for Wound Practice with a candid assessment of the turbulence wound care teams endured in 2025—particularly around cellular and tissue-based products (CTPs). While the 2026 Medicare Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS) Final Rule brought meaningful improvements for hospital-owned outpatient provider-based departments (PBDs), Kathleen is still fielding urgent calls from departments that have not yet aligned their systems to capture those payments correctly. In this episode, Kathleen walks PBD leaders step-by-step through the critical operational refinements required to receive appropriate CTP reimbursement in 2026. She explains how unpackaged payment affects application codes, why charges must be adjusted, which legacy codes must be removed, and how flat-rate CTP product payment changes purchasing strategy. Kathleen also highlights the importance of updating formularies, charge description masters, EHR workflows, coding tools, and billing systems—emphasizing that improved reimbursement will not “happen by magic” without deliberate action. This episode serves as a practical readiness checklist for PBDs using CTPs today. If physicians or qualified healthcare professionals are applying CTPs in your department, this conversation helps you confirm what’s complete, identify what’s missing, and act quickly to avoid lost revenue in 2026. Download the Quick Guide

    15 min
  4. 12/18/2025

    Ep.15 WISeR Model 2026

    In Episode 15, Kathleen Schaum and Amiee Coriano walk Wound Care Today USA subscribers through CMS’s new WISeR Model, a national initiative designed to reduce fraud, waste, and abuse by applying prior authorization and enhanced medical review to select services in traditional Medicare. While the 2026 payment rules for CTPs are now known, this episode underscores a critical point for every revenue cycle: coverage and payment require meeting Medicare’s policy expectations—not simply billing a payable code. Amiee details where the WISeR Model will apply first—beginning with six states and four key places of service—and clarifies the wound care category included in the model: skin substitute grafts / CTPs for treatment of diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) and venous leg ulcers (VLUs). She also explains how WISeR participation works based on MAC jurisdiction, including the third-party participants responsible for administering the model in each state. Finally, the episode breaks down WISeR’s operational impact starting January 1, 2026, including timelines, two pathways for compliance (prior authorization versus prepayment medical review), and how decisions, resubmissions, and peer-to-peer options function within the process. Kathleen and Amiee also highlight key submission methods and point listeners to an accompanying handout with links and resources to help teams prepare workflows and avoid preventable denials. Ep.15 - WISeR Prior Authorization Model Resources

    7 min
  5. 12/11/2025

    Ep.14 2026 Home Health Payment Updates

    Kathleen welcomes Yesenia Banks to break down Medicare’s 2026 Final Rule for Home Health Agencies and DME suppliers, rounding out the series on year-ahead payment policy. Yesenia explains the Patient-Driven Groupings Model (PDGM)—how 30-day periods, admission source/timing, clinical groupings (including wounds), functional status, and comorbidity adjustments combine into case-mix weights and payment. She also clarifies LUPA thresholds, outlier scenarios, and why accurate, specific diagnosis coding remains essential to payment integrity. Turning to 2026 updates, Yesenia notes an overall 1.3% home health payment decrease—smaller than the larger cut originally proposed—and underscores that wound clinical groupings remain among the highest-paid. She details key exclusions from the 30-day PDGM bundle: DME NPWT devices and supplies are billed directly by the DME supplier, while disposable NPWT can be billed separately by the HHA on the same claim under the Better Wound Care at Home Act. Practical guidance helps teams hit visit thresholds, manage labor and supply costs, and protect margins despite recent year-over-year pressure on rates. Finally, Yesenia previews CMS’s move to restart the DMEPOS Competitive Bidding Program, including calculating winning bids at the 75th percentile, streamlined financial documentation, new product categories (CGM and insulin pumps; urological, ostomy, and tracheotomy supplies), and more frequent surveys/re-accreditations (at least every 12 months). The episode closes with links to CMS resources and learning materials so leaders can brief their teams, align documentation, and prepare workflows for January 2026. Ep.14 - 2026 Home Health Payment Update

    15 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Business Tip for all types of wound practices. Hosted by Kathleen D. Schaum and Friends.

More From Wound Care Today USA

You Might Also Like