Live Webinar | Yesenia Servin | Aug 21, 2026 | 01:00 PM EST | 60 Minutes 64 Days Left
Description
This presentation explains government payers and provider enrollment by organizing the topic into “who, what, when, and how.” It focuses on government-funded healthcare programs that providers may need to enroll with in order to bill for services and stay compliant. Government payers include Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, TriWest, the Veterans Administration, and the Department of Labor. The presentation also distinguishes government payers from commercial payers, which are funded through private dollars such as employers and individuals.
The main purpose of the presentation is to help healthcare professionals understand which payers are involved in provider enrollment, what documentation is required, when enrollment actions must occur, and how to manage the process effectively. Provider enrollment matters because it directly affects compliance, the ability to bill government payers, and the prevention of revenue delays. Providers who may require enrollment include physicians, advanced practice providers, group practices, clinics, hospitals, facilities, and other healthcare organizations.
The “what” section focuses on required information and documentation. Common requirements include NPI, Tax ID or EIN, state license, DEA if applicable, board certification, practice location information, ownership disclosures, billing and rendering provider information, organizational documents, IRS tax letters, ownership charts, lease agreements, bank information, and organizational licenses. A key point is that incomplete or inaccurate information is one of the most common causes of enrollment delays.
The “when” section explains that enrollment is not a one-time process. Providers and organizations must manage new enrollments, onboarding-related enrollment, address changes, ownership changes, providers joining or leaving a group, and revalidation deadlines. The presentation notes that revalidation timelines are commonly every five years for Medicare and Medicaid, while DME may require revalidation every three years.
The “how” section explains best practices for managing enrollment. These include gathering provider information early, submitting applications, tracking status, responding to payer requests, keeping records, using document checklists, monitoring revalidation notices, and communicating with providers. The presentation also highlights compliance risks such as audits, surveys, data verification, PECOS updates, address verification, signature misuse, criminal conviction disclosure, affiliation risks, and revocation consequences.
Overall, this presentation teaches that government payer enrollment is essential for reimbursement, compliance, and operational stability. The main takeaway is that strong tracking systems, accurate documentation, and timely updates help reduce errors, avoid delays, and protect organizations from compliance issues.
Learning Objectives:-
Areas Covered:-
Why Should You Attend:-
Gain clarity on the structure and requirements of government payers, including enrollment procedures, compliance standards, and revalidation timelines. This session equips attendees with practical strategies to maintain eligibility and avoid costly delays in reimbursement.
Who Should Attend:-
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