DC Medicaid: RCM guide for District of Columbia providers.
DC Medicaid is the state Medicaid program for District of Columbia. This RCM guide covers provider enrollment, billing operations, managed care plan structure, and recurring denial patterns relevant to healthcare providers serving DC Medicaid beneficiaries.
About DC Medicaid.
DC Medicaid provides healthcare coverage for eligible District of Columbia residents under federal Medicaid program rules and state-specific implementation. Coverage includes children under EPSDT, low-income adults under Medicaid expansion (where adopted), pregnant women, disabled individuals, and elderly Medicare/Medicaid dual-eligibles.
Provider enrollment
Healthcare providers serving DC Medicaid beneficiaries must enroll with DC Medicaid (typically through CAQH ProView or the state-specific Medicaid Provider Enrollment portal). Enrollment timeline runs 60-120 days from clean application. Out-of-network providers cannot bill DC Medicaid for in-state services.
Managed care structure
DC Medicaid contracts with managed care organizations (MCOs) to deliver services to most beneficiary populations. Each MCO operates its own provider network, prior authorization rules, payment timeline, and quality programs. Providers must credential with each contracted MCO separately, not just with DC Medicaid at the state level.
Billing operations
Most DC Medicaid billing flows through electronic claim submission (X12 837 format) to the appropriate MCO or directly to DC Medicaid for fee-for-service populations. Remittance returns as X12 835 ERA. Patient cost-share (copay, coinsurance) varies by service type and beneficiary category.
Common denial patterns
Frequent DC Medicaid denial reasons include: prior authorization missing or expired, plan-of-record mismatch (patient assigned to different MCO), medical necessity documentation insufficient, timely filing exceeded, and managed care vs FFS routing errors. Reason-code denial analytics catch systemic patterns vs one-off denials.
Specialty-specific DC Medicaid considerations
ABA therapy, behavioral health, FQHC services, and specialty drug billing under DC Medicaid each have distinct workflow requirements. ASP-RCM operates specialty practices across each major Medicaid coverage area in District of Columbia and across the U.S.