Third party payment scheme: electronic invoicing (eFact)

As a general practitioner or specialist, you can enter your invoices electronically in the third-party payment scheme for consultations, home visits and technical services.

Invoicing is done via MyCareNet and is drawn up in accordance with the instructions for invoicing on magnetic or electronic media , as laid down by the Riziv. A general practitioner cannot open a global medical file via this circuit (102771). This can be invoiced digitally via the eGMD .

The use of eTar (only for general practitioners) and eFact does not require informed consent from the patient or therapeutic relationship .

For invoicing you need software that has been approved by the NIC or for which the approval procedure is underway .

Advantages

  • Electronic invoicing is simpler and faster than the paper procedure.
  • The payment term is a maximum of fifteen days instead of thirty days for general practitioners and two months for specialists.
    If your electronic invoicing is accepted, you will first receive a payment file and then your payment. This payment will be made a maximum of fifteen days after receipt of your shipment. The following factors also play a role in this: priority rules (receipt date of shipments, statutory payment terms) and the provision of funds by the Riziv.
  • Your invoicing will be processed without sending any papers (summary invoice, certificates, supporting documents, etc.).
  • For patients without increased compensation, the application of the third-party payment scheme is justified via your software .

Request information

With a view to correct billing, you can request the following information when contacting your patient via MyCareNet:

  • patient insurability (automatically checked in many software packages);
  • is your patient entitled to the third-party payment scheme?;
  • the rate that you can invoice per service (eTar) ;
  • a payment obligation provided that the nomenclature rules are respected (e.g. renewal period, prohibited cumuls). CM will check these rules when it checks your invoicing.

Frequently Asked Questions

    Invoicing is possible with software that has been approved by the National Intermutualist College (NIC) or for which the approval procedure is underway. You will find the recognized packages and their functionalities on MyCareNet. They have been extensively tested and checked and have been approved by the NIC. It is advisable to ask fellow doctors about their experiences with software packages.

    This number corresponds to the Unique Contact Point (UCP) . It is determined based on your zip code, as registered with the Riziv.

    A billing file consists of one or more individual invoices, drawn up per patient (see billing record drawing ).

    Yes. You can currently still decide per patient and per consultation whether or not to invoice electronically. This can run in parallel and you can choose the method at any time and any place (e.g. in a different cabinet). However, you may only choose one method per individual provision. One provision may therefore not be submitted in both ways.

    Since electronic invoicing has become possible, the Riziv has established a transition period of a maximum of two years .

    There is no minimum for the number of electronic invoices. We accept a maximum of one billing file per day, from which you will receive a response file. Your software package must make the distinction between the different invoicing and response files.

    The functionality to track payments is integrated into your software package. A shipment cannot be canceled because processing starts immediately upon sending the invoicing file.

    A shipment will be rejected if there are too many errors in an invoice. If the entire invoicing file is rejected, we will send you a rejection file stating the errors. This way you can correct the invoice and resend it.

    A rejected shipment requires contact with your software supplier to determine how to proceed with the billing file. This differs per package.

    The exchange of data takes place at three levels: your software package, the intermutualistic platform MyCareNet and/or eHealth platform, and the health insurance fund systems. Any level can be the cause of a problem. We take all signals seriously. In case of common complaints and where possible, we immediately contact the levels involved. Signals from users help us to detect problems, make adjustments, improve performance, and so on.

    Yes. After the home visit you can enter the performance(s) electronically. Depending on your software package, you must provide different information so that the correct rate is certified.

    You immediately know the correct rate that should be charged to the health insurance fund and the patient. Invoices with a payment obligation are usually accepted because the data has already been checked and confirmed by the health insurance fund via the agreement number stated in the payment obligation.

    The invoice will only be refused if, for example, certain nomenclature rules have not been respected, ceiling codes have been exceeded or there is a cumulation ban.

    A payment letter can contain different invoicing or regularization types (third party payer, eGMD...).

    Like all other health insurance funds, we carry out checks that the Riziv imposes on us. However, the concrete implementation differs per health insurance fund. To ensure that your invoicing runs smoothly, CM detects possible errors as quickly as possible. This way they can be corrected before the shipment is sent and no complicated regularizations have to be made afterwards.

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