

HealthCell bills for the full spectrum of cardiology services including diagnostic testing (echocardiograms, stress tests, Holter monitoring), interventional procedures (cardiac catheterization, stent placement, ablation), and office-based E/M visits. Our team is trained on both technical and professional component billing. We also manage billing for advanced cardiac imaging including cardiac CT and nuclear stress testing.
Our billers are trained on global surgical periods for interventional cardiology, ensuring that post-procedure E/M visits are correctly billed—whether included in the global or separately reportable. We prevent underbilling and protect your practice from compliance risk. Our team documents and tracks each patient’s global window so nothing falls through the cracks.
Yes. HealthCell manages billing for remote physiologic monitoring (RPM) and cardiac device monitoring, including implantable loop recorders and pacemaker/ICD remote services. We apply the correct CPT and HCPCS codes to capture this revenue reliably. As remote monitoring expands, our team ensures your practice is positioned to capture reimbursement for new and emerging monitoring technologies.
We conduct pre-submission reviews focused on cardiology-specific denial triggers—including medical necessity documentation, modifier accuracy, and diagnostic code linkage. Our denial management team also resolves cardiology rejections quickly to maintain strong cash flow. Cardiology has among the highest average claim values in medicine, making denial prevention a critical priority for practice revenue.
Absolutely. HealthCell scales to support single-provider practices and multi-location cardiology groups alike. We centralize billing operations, standardize coding practices across all sites, and provide consolidated reporting so leadership has full visibility into financial performance. Our team also manages provider credentialing across multiple facilities to prevent enrollment gaps that disrupt billing.
The trusted financial backbone for independent practices—stable collections, fewer denials, and freedom to focus on care.