This number reflects the production for the selected time period after any adjustments (insurance write-offs or patient discounts/write-offs) applied in the selected time period, and is not limited to just the appointments that happened within the selected time period. This means adjusted production numbers for a selected time period may be related to past appointments not in the selected time period.
Adjusted Production
- An example of Adjusted Production: You are viewing the production report for September 1. On Sept 1, you apply a patient discount of $20 to an appointment that happened on August 15. This would reflect as -$20 of adjusted production on September 1, even though the appointment itself took place on August 15.
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Adjusted Production can change over time:
- Throughout the day, as insurance write-offs or patient discounts/write-offs are applied, regardless of what appointment date they are applied to
- If an appointment is created for a past date and is then marked as completed
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To avoid changes to Adjusted Production:
- Don’t add appointments in the past.
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An example of Adjusted Production and how it changes:
- You completed an appointment with a procedure that has a negotiated fee of $80 on April 1st.
- You view your production report for April 1st, and the total adjusted production is $80.
- On April 15th, you add a completed appointment that occurred on April 1st, but wasn’t in the system, and the net fees on this appointment are $100.
- On April 15th, you view your production report for April 1st. The total adjusted production is now $180.
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