Cardiology billing and revenue cycle for Ohio providers.
Ohio operates 606 cardiology billing organizations registered in NPPES, representing 3.3 percent of the U.S. cardiology billing footprint. Ohio is a mid-sized cardiology billing market. Cardiology revenue cycle complexity centers on professional/technical component splits, complex E/M leveling for consults, cardiac device monitoring codes, and prior authorization for advanced cardiac imaging. Ohio cardiology practices that get these mechanics right reliably convert clinical work into clean cash.
What good cardiology billing execution looks like for Ohio providers.
The Ohio cardiology billing market has its own quirks. Here is the operating discipline we install on every Ohio engagement.
- Modifier 26 / TC discipline for diagnostic proceduresCardiology billing carries professional + technical component split on most diagnostic studies (echo, EKG, stress, nuclear). Modifier 26 / TC accuracy at the line level is non-negotiable for clean cardiology claims in Ohio.
- Complex E/M leveling for cardiology consultsCardiology consults often qualify for higher E/M levels under 2021 documentation guidelines via medical decision-making complexity. Ohio cardiology practices that under-level E/M leave significant revenue uncollected.
- Cardiac device monitoring code capturePacemaker, ICD, ILR, and CardioMEMS remote monitoring carry distinct CPT codes (93290, 93294, 93298, etc.) with specific reporting periods. Missed device monitoring billing is a common cardiology revenue leak in Ohio.
- Prior authorization for advanced cardiac imagingOhio commercial payers and Ohio Medicaid require PA for cardiac MRI, cardiac CT, stress nuclear imaging, and many catheterization procedures. AI-supported PA submission compresses cycle time materially.
- Denial prediction tuned for cardiology denial patternsCardiology denials concentrate in medical necessity (especially stress testing and imaging), bundling edits, and modifier 25 / 59 disputes. Reason-code-specific denial prediction catches these patterns pre-submission.
- Outpatient EP and procedural billing accuracyElectrophysiology, ablation, and structural heart procedures carry complex code stacks with bundling rules. Ohio cardiology practices need coders who understand the EP and structural workflows specifically.
FAQ: cardiology billing in Ohio.
How many cardiology billing providers operate in Ohio?
NPPES lists 606 cardiology billing organizations in Ohio, representing 3.3% of the U.S. footprint. Top concentrations are in Columbus (62), Dayton (37), Cincinnati (35).
Does Ohio Medicaid cover cardiology billing services?
Yes. Ohio Medicaid covers cardiology billing services for eligible beneficiaries, with plan-specific authorization rules and rate structures that vary by year.
What commercial payers cover cardiology billing in Ohio?
All major national commercial payers cover cardiology billing in Ohio, including UnitedHealthcare/Optum, Aetna, Cigna/Evernorth, the dominant Ohio Blue Cross Blue Shield plan, and (where active) Humana.
Does ASP-RCM serve cardiology billing providers in Ohio?
Yes. ASP-RCM Solutions provides cardiology billing and revenue cycle services for providers in Ohio and across all 50 states. Senior partners on every account. Request a free 30-day audit.
How do I get started?
Request a free 30-day RCM audit. We assess your current state, identify revenue leakage, and produce a written prioritized recommendations list.