

HealthCell bills for the full range of dermatology services including skin lesion excisions, biopsies, Mohs surgery, cosmetic procedures, phototherapy, and dermatopathology. Our billers are trained on dermatology-specific CPT codes, modifier usage, and payer guidelines. We also handle billing for newer treatment modalities including laser therapy and photodynamic treatment as payer coverage continues to expand.
Mohs surgery billing requires precise stage-by-stage coding and documentation of tissue margins. HealthCell’s team is trained on Mohs-specific CPT codes (17311–17315) and ensures accurate billing for each stage, reducing denials and maximizing reimbursement. We also coordinate repair coding that often follows Mohs procedures to ensure those services are captured and reimbursed correctly.
Yes. We handle billing for medical dermatology covered by insurance as well as fee-for-service cosmetic procedures. HealthCell helps you maintain clean separation between insurance-covered and self-pay services to ensure accurate billing and patient billing clarity. Our team can also help structure financial policies for cosmetic services that protect your practice and improve the patient experience.
When dermatology practices perform in-office pathology, HealthCell manages both the professional and technical component billing—ensuring the correct specimen handling codes are applied and that your practice captures revenue for diagnostic work performed on-site. We also track pathology coding updates annually to ensure your practice stays current with CMS and payer requirements.
We provide procedure-level revenue analysis, denial rate tracking by payer, and A/R aging reports so dermatology practices can identify underbilled services, renegotiate payer contracts, and optimize their service mix for stronger financial performance. Our reporting tools give practice owners the data they need to make strategic decisions about staffing, scheduling, and service offerings.
The trusted financial backbone for independent practices—stable collections, fewer denials, and freedom to focus on care.