Orthopedic billing and revenue cycle for Georgia providers.
Georgia operates 555 orthopedic billing organizations registered in NPPES, representing 2.8 percent of the U.S. orthopedic billing footprint. Georgia is a mid-sized orthopedic billing market. Orthopedic revenue cycle complexity centers on bundling edit management, modifier 25 / 59 discipline, 90-day global periods, prior authorization for imaging and DME, and workers' compensation workflows distinct from commercial billing. Georgia orthopedic practices that get these mechanics right protect margin.
What good orthopedic billing execution looks like for Georgia providers.
The Georgia orthopedic billing market has its own quirks. Here is the operating discipline we install on every Georgia engagement.
- Bundling edit management for surgical orthopedic claimsOrthopedic surgery claims carry extensive bundling logic (NCCI edits, modifier 59, X-modifiers). Coders working orthopedic in Georgia need depth in bundling rules to capture every legitimate code without triggering audits.
- Modifier 25 / 59 discipline for office visits + proceduresGeorgia orthopedic practices routinely perform injections, fracture care, and casting during office visits. Modifier 25 separating E/M from procedure and modifier 59 or X-modifiers separating distinct procedures must be defensible.
- Global period management for surgical episodes90-day global periods on most major orthopedic surgeries mean post-op visits during the global are not separately billable. Georgia orthopedic billing teams need disciplined global period tracking.
- Prior authorization for orthopedic MRI and DMECommercial payers and Georgia Medicaid require PA for most orthopedic MRI imaging, joint injections, and durable medical equipment. AI-supported PA automation is high-ROI for orthopedic practices.
- Workers' comp billing workflowGeorgia workers' compensation cases require distinct billing workflow: state-specific WC fee schedules, employer or carrier authorization, attorney correspondence. Separate from commercial billing operations.
- Joint replacement bundled payment coordinationTotal knee and hip replacement bundled payment programs (BPCI, CJR) coordinate hospital + surgeon + post-acute payment. Georgia orthopedic groups participating in bundles need cross-provider billing alignment.
FAQ: orthopedic billing in Georgia.
How many orthopedic billing providers operate in Georgia?
NPPES lists 555 orthopedic billing organizations in Georgia, representing 2.8% of the U.S. footprint. Top concentrations are in Atlanta (67), Decatur (21), Savannah (19).
Does Georgia Medicaid cover orthopedic billing services?
Yes. Georgia Medicaid covers orthopedic billing services for eligible beneficiaries, with plan-specific authorization rules and rate structures that vary by year.
What commercial payers cover orthopedic billing in Georgia?
All major national commercial payers cover orthopedic billing in Georgia, including UnitedHealthcare/Optum, Aetna, Cigna/Evernorth, the dominant Georgia Blue Cross Blue Shield plan, and (where active) Humana.
Does ASP-RCM serve orthopedic billing providers in Georgia?
Yes. ASP-RCM Solutions provides orthopedic billing and revenue cycle services for providers in Georgia 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.