Medical Biller -Dialysis Focused
| Verified Pay check_circle | Provided by the employer$22 - $30 per hour |
|---|---|
| Hours | Full-time |
| Location | Naperville, IL 60563 Naperville, Illinois open_in_new |
About this job
Job Description
As a Medical Biller (primarily focusing in Dialysis billing), your work protects access to care by ensuring accurate, compliant reimbursement—so providers can stay focused on patients.
Key responsibilities
- Post physician hospital/rounding charges in eClinicalWorks (eCW) and manage professional fee claim submission
- Support dialysis/institutional billing in Greenway Health, including secondary billing and coordination of benefits
- Submit claims through clearinghouses; manage ERA/EFT and payment posting
- Research rejections, denials, underpayments; prepare appeals and drive A/R follow-up using aging reports
- Review EOBs/remits, payer correspondence, and modifier/payer-specific requirements to maintain compliance
- Partner with providers and staff to resolve documentation or charge-capture gaps
Required qualifications/skills
- 2+ years in medical billing/revenue cycle management; physician billing required; dialysis billing preferred
- Working knowledge of CPT, ICD-10, HCPCS, medical terminology, and Medicare/Medicaid/commercial plans
- Strong Excel skills; detail-focused, organized, and analytical communicator
If you’re ready to take senior-level ownership of outcomes, apply today.
Competitive total compensation at $22–$30/hr (depending on experience), plus Medical, Dental, and Vision coverage; 401(k) with match; Life and Disability insurance; Paid Time Off; Extended Illness Leave.
A Typical WorkdayYou’ll work onsite in Naperville, Monday–Friday (9am–5pm), moving through a focused rhythm: start by triaging priority items from overnight payer responses, then spend mid-morning balancing accuracy with pace as you validate details and resolve exceptions. After lunch, you’ll shift into deeper analysis—spotting trends in payment variances and deciding where your follow-up will drive the most strategic impact. Late afternoon is for crisp communication: quick touchpoints with providers or payers to clear blockers, then documenting decisions so tomorrow starts clean and controlled.