Frequently Asked Questions Appeals
Can all Medicare claim determinations be appealed?
Medicare claim determinations should only be appealed when a claim
has been denied by Medicare and the beneficiary or provider is disputing
the denial. Full denials appear in the Fiscal Intermediary
Standard System (FISS) status/location (S/LOC) D B9997. Partial
denials will appear in FISS S/LOC P B9997, with the noncovered revenue
code lines available for viewing by accessing FISS Claim Page 02
and pressing the F2 key to display MAP 171D. Use the F6 key
to scroll through and locate the noncovered revenue code lines and
associated denial reason codes.
As a reminder, it is never appropriate to submit appeal requests in
the following situations:
- The claim rejected (FISS S/LOC R B9997)
- The claim was paid in full (FISS S/LOC P B9997)
- The claim was never submitted to Medicare
- The claim is in a suspended status/location (S XXXXX where the Xs are various numbers and/or letters)
(January – March 2008 FAQ)
Will my Remittance Advice tell me if a processed claim can be appealed if I’m disputing the denial?
Yes. Medicare Remittance Advice contain reason codes and/or remarks codes when a claim has been fully or partially denied and is, therefore, appropriate to appeal. The “Claim Adjustment Reason Code” field (RC) and “Remittance Advice Reason Code” field (Rem) are available on the “All Claims” page of the Standard Paper Remittance Advice (SPR) and the “Single Claim” page of the Electronic Remittance Advice (ERA). A “Single Claim” page is available for each claim listed on the ERA.
The codes found in the “RC” and “Rem” fields
can be looked up using the WPC
Web site
to determine if appeal rights are available for the
initial claim determination.
(January – March 2008 FAQ)
Where can we find more information about the Medicare Appeals process?
- The Medicare Claims Processing Manual CMS
Pub. 100-04, Ch 29
- The Cahaba Appeals Web page
- The CMS Medicare
Appeals Process brochure
(January – March 2008 FAQ)
Page last updated: March 11, 2008