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Are there penalties for billing errors?

Are There Penalties for Billing Errors in QME Invoices? Yes. California’s Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) enforces strict accuracy standards for medical-legal billing. Submitting incorrect codes, unsupported modifiers, or incomplete…

QME doctor with injured worker

Are There Penalties for Billing Errors in QME Invoices?

Yes. California’s Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) enforces strict accuracy standards for medical-legal billing. Submitting incorrect codes, unsupported modifiers, or incomplete documentation can trigger payment reductions, audit flags, and—if deemed fraudulent—disciplinary action against your QME certification.

Common Billing Errors and Their Consequences

  • Incorrect Code Selection – Billing ML200 (comprehensive) when only a supplemental review was performed (ML202). Consequence: Payment denied or down-coded to the lower fee.
  • Unsupported Record-Review Modifier – Claiming –B hours without a Bates-page log. Consequence: 10 % fee reduction and request for reimbursement of overpayment.
  • Duplicate Billing – Submitting the same ML202 for both parties. Consequence: Automatic denial; repeated offenses raise audit probability.
  • Late or Missing Proof of Service – Invoice served without a signed POS. Consequence: 0 % payment until corrected; statutory payment clock doesn’t start.

Regulatory Penalties

Under California Code of Regulations, Title 8, §9795(e):

  • 10 % reduction for minor documentation errors.
  • 20 % reduction or complete denial for substantial errors or misrepresentation.
  • Referral to the DWC Audit & Enforcement Unit if patterns suggest intentional overbilling; penalties can include fines and QME suspension.

Best Practices to Avoid Penalties

  1. Use a standardized invoice template with dropdown code lists.
  2. Attach a record-review log whenever you bill –B hours.
  3. Perform a 60-second “POS check”—no proof of service, no invoice goes out.
  4. Run quarterly self-audits comparing billed codes to report types.

For the official penalty provisions and billing rules, see California’s Medical-Legal Fee Schedule (§ 9795).