Experts estimate that insurance companies’ tardiness in paying doctors for legitimate medical claims adds approximately 10 percent in overhead costs for physicians. Insurance companies counter that the tardiness sometimes results from billing errors made by the doctors themselves. Since dealing with these billing errors costs the insurance companies time and money, it is clear that insurance companies do not have a significant economic incentive to delay claim payments to doctors.
Which of the following pieces of information, if true, weakens the conclusion above?
First Of All,we should note what the conclusion is..The conclusion is:
Since dealing with these billing errors costs the insurance companies time and money, it is clear that insurance companies do not have a significant economic incentive to delay claim payments to doctors. ...So we actually need an option which will weaken this argument which means that we need an option which tells us that the insurance companies do have a significant economic incentive in delaying claim payments to doctors...Lets look at the options right then
A. Some doctors who submit accurate bills to insurance companies still receive tardy payments...
Doesn't tell us whether the insurance companies do have any economic incentive for making tardy payments..Not the answer we are looking forB. The cost to the insurance companies to process incorrect bills from doctors’ offices is roughly equivalent to the increased costs that physicians accrue as a result of tardy payments from insurance companies.
This compares the cost of insurance companies from processing incorrect bills from doctors offices to the increased costs that physicians accrue as a result of tardy payments from insurance companies..Didn't tell us about any benefits that they might get from making tardy payments that will result in that exceeding the cost of processing incorrect bills from doctors offices..This is not the answer we are looking C. A rising proportion of medical claims submitted by doctors to insurance companies are deemed illegitimate by those insurance companies.
Actually also do not tell us anything about whether the insurance companies do have any significant economic incentive from making tardy paymentsD. The billing errors made by doctors’ offices are typically very minor, such as the submission of a claim with an outdated patient home address.
Totally irrelevant to the subject matter at handE. The overhead costs incurred by doctors as a result of delayed insurance payments result in an increase in the premiums paid by consumers to health insurance companies that far exceeds any increase in the fees paid to doctors by insurance companies.
Bingo,their tardiness in making payments is actually bringing them some economic benefits which is the increase in the premiums paid to them and these premiums far exceed the increase in the fees paid to doctors by insurance companies..This is the correct answerA KUDOS WOULDN'T HURT IF YOU FIND THIS EXPLANATION HELPFUL!!!I WILL SURELY APPRECIATE IT..