Priority Health clinical edits
"Clinical edits" refers to the evaluation of billed codes in relationship to each other for the purpose of identifying unbundled procedures, surgical coding errors, invalid data relationships, patterns of utilization that deviate from practice standards, and diagnoses or procedures that may be invalid for the age and/or gender of the patient. Priority Health uses clinical editing software to perform its clinical edits.
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Clinical edits are applied to all claims submitted by facilities or professionals, in and out of network, for all Priority Health medical plans, including Medicaid and Medicare, self-funded and fully funded.
- The clinical edit database Priority Health uses is provided to us by software vendor OPTUMInsight® (formerly Ingenix).
- For more about how clinical edits are determined, see Priority Health clinical edits policy information, below.
Check for edits before you bill
To check if a claim will have clinical edits applied to it, logged-in providers will soon be able to use our Edits Checker tool before submitting the claim. Enter the patient and service data and Edits Checker will show you the edits that will be applied to your claim and the rationale for those edits.
Go to Edits Checker now. (Coming soon)
See the edit rationale applied to your claims
When you use the Claims Inquiry tool to review your claims, you can see the clinical edit code and review the rationale behind any clinical edits applied to your claims.
Go to Claims Inquiry now.
Clinical edit denial code lists
Asking for an exception
Priority Health will consider requests for individual claim exceptions to clinical edits. A multi-departmental, interdisciplinary oversight committee makes decisions on whether or not to customize edits based on evidence provided in the claim documentation.
To ask that we review a clinical edit denial, submit a Provider Level I Appeal form with supporting documentation such as operative, procedural, or office notes.
Go to the Provider Level I Appeal form (131KB PDF)
Priority Health clinical edits policy
Clinical editing decisions are based on a combination of Medicare edits (more commonly known as National Correct Coding Initiative or NCCI edits), CMS guidelines, CPT or ICD-9 guidelines, standard clinical practices and recommendations from medical societies.
Providers often assume that if there is no NCCI edit for the code combination they have submitted, then Priority Health should pay both codes. However, the claim may generate a clinical edit from any of the other sources of our clinical edit database.