Service
Medical Coding
Codes that match the note — specific enough to pay, defensible enough to audit.
Coding is where clean claims begin
Under-coding leaves money on the table. Over-coding and mismatched diagnosis pairs invite denials and audit exposure. Medflux coding work is built around documentation that already exists in the chart — not “optimizing” codes the note cannot support. We apply CPT, ICD-10-CM, and HCPCS Level II rules with specialty awareness: E/M level selection, procedure packaging, modifiers, and medical necessity linkage.
What is included
Day-to-day coding support or full coding ownership (scoped at onboarding), charge review before submission, modifier and NCCI edit awareness, and periodic coding audits with written findings. We flag documentation patterns that repeatedly force downcodes or denials so clinicians can fix the root issue once instead of fighting the same rejection every month.
Audit and education loop
A coding engagement that only “codes faster” is incomplete. We sample claims, score accuracy themes, and return concrete examples — not abstract scorecards. Where training helps, we keep it short and specialty-specific: what the note needs for a 99214, when a modifier 25 is justified, how global periods affect post-op visits in procedural specialties.
What your practice sees
Cleaner first-pass submission, fewer medical-necessity and coding denials, and a paper trail that stands up if a payer requests records. Providers spend less time in coding chat threads and more time in clinic. Leadership gets visibility into risk areas before they become takebacks.
FAQ
Medical Coding questions
We do not invent clinical detail. If documentation is insufficient for a code, we query or downshift to what the note supports and document why. That protects both revenue integrity and the practice.
Yes. Standalone coding audits are available, with findings prioritized by financial and compliance impact. Many clients start with an audit before deciding on full outsourcing.
Next step
Find out what your practice is leaving on the table.
A free review of your recent claims and denials — plain findings, no pressure theater.