Medical receivables are the amounts owed by third-party payers to healthcare providers. The party owing the money can be commercial insurance companies, HMOs, Medicare and Medicaid, or patients (if there is an outstanding balance after insurance or another payer has paid its portion). Medical receivables are usually payable 60 to 120 days after service is rendered, though some reimbursements lag further behind, creating cash flow issues for healthcare providers, who typically need to pay expenses in a shorter time frame.

See all Topics

Cracks Appearing In GOP Opposition To Health Care Law

23 January 2013

In Case You Missed It — Healthcare Daily Digest for Wednesday, 23 January

23 January 2013

New HIPAA Rules Are Likely to Catch Many with Their Technological Pants Down

23 January 2013

Accretive Health Sets its Sights on Quality Health Outcomes and Total Cost of Care

22 January 2013

Accretive Health Champions Reducing Healthcare Provider Inefficiencies and Improving Patient Outcomes

22 January 2013

CMS Not Backing Down to AMA on ICD-10 Conversion

22 January 2013

Public ARM Firm Performant to Offer More Shares; Gives Guidance on Q4 2012

22 January 2013

Report: Physician Quality Reporting Penalties Will Cost Providers More than $1 Billion

22 January 2013

Four Key Healthcare Markets Poised to Make it Big in 2013

22 January 2013

In Case You Missed It — Healthcare Daily Digest for Tuesday, 22 January

22 January 2013

Don’t Let Accounts Receivable Choke Your Medical Practice

18 January 2013

Whole Foods CEO Takes Back "Fascism" Comment on Healthcare Reform

18 January 2013

HIPAA Omnibus Package Will Cost Healthcare Debt Collection Agencies Millions

18 January 2013

In Case You Missed It — Healthcare Daily Digest for Friday, 18 January

18 January 2013

The State of Florida Having a Series of Tough Times with Obamacare

18 January 2013

Feds Release HIPAA Omnibus Regulations, Will Cost Providers, Partners up to $225M

18 January 2013

"ObamaCare Not Socialism, it's Fascism," Whole Foods CEO

17 January 2013

In Case You Missed It — Healthcare Daily Digest for Thursday, 17 January

17 January 2013

Medicare Growth Slowing? Not So Fast ...

17 January 2013

More Patients Expected to Fall Between the Medicare/Medicaid Cracks

17 January 2013