Most IM revenue does not come from the visit. It comes from what happens around it. The hospital discharge that needs a TCM coded within fourteen days. The CCM minutes nobody logged. The 99215 that got billed as a 99214 because reading the note takes time. We work the followup.
A typical billing vendor takes five to eight percent of collections. On a clean 99214 they earn seven to ten dollars. On a 99496 they earn fourteen to twenty two. On a 99490 they earn under four. That math drives every decision they make about which claims to chase, which denials to appeal, and which functions to walk away from.
TCM is the obvious casualty. The hospital faxes the discharge summary on Friday. By Tuesday it is sitting in a queue. The patient calls for a followup, the front desk schedules a regular office visit, and three weeks later someone bills it as a 99213. The 99496 window closed on day seven. The 99495 window closed on day fourteen. The revenue is gone and nobody on your billing team is going to mention it because they were not paid to notice.
Same with CCM. The patient has diabetes and hypertension and is sixty eight. They are eligible. The barrier is operational. Somebody has to get the written consent, build the care plan in the EHR, log the twenty minutes a month, and bill 99490. Per patient per month it is sixty dollars. Across two hundred enrolled patients it is one hundred forty four thousand dollars a year. Vendors that quote a percentage do not run CCM programs. The hours do not pencil out for them.
We are structured the other way. The department gets paid to own the cycle, not to skim it.
Pull these numbers from any practice management report. The output is what your panel should be generating in TCM, CCM, and stacked AWVs that most IM practices currently leave on the table.
Based on CMS national average rates. Your real number is usually larger once you add the downcoded 99214s, the missed modifier 25 stacks on AWV plus problem visits, and the patient responsibility your front desk never collected. The 48 hour audit gives you the line by line breakdown from your own data.
What a percentage based billing vendor delivers for an internal medicine practice versus what a managed department delivers. The economics drive the work.
Sixty plus codes in IM scope. Search by number or filter by category. Each card has the fee range, what the code bills for, the denial patterns we see most, and what we look for in the note.
A managed department, not a claim submission service. Every function below runs under the same operations head, with the same KPIs, reporting into Apex.
| Function | What Quilven runs | What typical vendors do |
|---|---|---|
| E/M coding accuracy | Certified coder reviews documentation. 99214 versus 99215 calls made against the note, not by template default. Distribution audited monthly. | Submits whatever the provider clicked. Downcoding stays invisible. |
| Transitional Care Management | Hospital discharge feeds connected. Patient scheduled inside the seven day window. 99495 and 99496 billed with proper documentation linkage. | Not in workflow. Post discharge visits go out as regular 99213 or 99214. |
| Chronic Care Management | Eligible patients identified from the panel. Consent and care plan workflow set up. Monthly billing of 99490 and 99439 with logged time. | Out of scope. The recurring revenue never starts. |
| Advance Care Planning | 99497 and 99498 captured when the conversation happens. Documentation prompts in the EHR. | The conversation gets written into the visit narrative and never makes it onto the claim. |
| AWV optimization | G0438 and G0439 billed correctly. Same day problem visit stacked with modifier 25 when documentation supports it. | AWV billed alone. The stacked E/M gets denied or skipped. |
| Aged AR recovery | Claims over ninety days worked first in the queue. Appeal level two and three pursued when the math justifies it. | Aged claims written off. First appeal sent. Second is uneconomic at five percent. |
| Credentialing | CAQH maintained. PECOS revalidations on calendar. Live master sheet. Target ninety days to billable for new providers. | Status updates by email when asked. Average one hundred twenty to one hundred eighty days. |
| Reporting and analytics | Apex dashboard. Net collection rate, days in AR, denial trends, CCM enrollment, all live. Weekly summary call. | Monthly PDF. Shows what was paid. Shows nothing about what was missed. |
Eight questions. No email required. The result is written for IM, with the specific line items leaking based on your answers.
The questions practice administrators actually ask before signing with a billing company.
Quilven is a managed revenue cycle management company based in Nashville, Tennessee. We provide end to end medical billing services for internal medicine practices, primary care groups, behavioral health practices, and community hospitals across the United States.
The company runs a managed department model rather than a percentage of collections billing service. The structural reason matters. Vendors paid five to eight percent of collections optimize for high dollar, easy to clear claims. They skip the work that does not pay them, which in internal medicine is most of the followup revenue. That includes transitional care management after hospital discharge, chronic care management for eligible Medicare patients, annual wellness visit stacking with modifier 25, denial recovery beyond round one, and aged AR over ninety days.
Internal medicine billing under the Quilven model includes certified coder review on E/M coding (99202 through 99215), hospital discharge feeds integrated into the workflow for TCM capture inside the seven and fourteen day windows, CCM program setup with consent collection and time tracking, AWV optimization for the Medicare cohort, denial appeals to round three or four when the dollar amount and clinical merit support it, aged AR worked first thing in the morning, and provider credentialing managed against a target of ninety days to billable.
The company is HIPAA compliant. Business Associate Agreements are available on request. Quilven works with practices on any EHR platform including eClinicalWorks, NextGen, AdvancedMD, Athenahealth, Epic, Cerner, Greenway, and Practice Fusion.
Line by line, by code, by payer, by month. If your cycle is clean you get outside confirmation. If it is leaking you get a real number from your own data, not an industry average.
Where do we send the findings. Quick three field form. A senior member of the team gets back to you the same business day.
A senior member of the team will text you within the next business hour to confirm next steps. Watch your phone.