Taxes, Salaries, and Sectors

Hospital and Healthcare Sector Accounting: Managing medical inventory and treatment service costs

Illustration for Hospital Accounting
Skip to content
Specialized Sector Accounting Hospitals • RCM • Medical Inventory • Insurance Reconciliations

Hospital and Healthcare Accounting: Managing Medical Inventory and Treatment Costs

Hospital accounting is one of the most complex niches in the financial world. It manages a multi-payer Revenue Cycle (RCM), sensitive medical inventory with critical expiry dates, and the need to calculate service costs per patient or procedure. Without a specialized tracking system, medical facilities can face significant leakage through insurance denials or pharmaceutical waste. This guide provides the practical path for healthcare financial management—Digital Salla.

Hospital accounting design with icons for medical services, insurance, and inventory.
Article Summary: From the patient’s registration to the insurance settlement—how to control healthcare financials?
What will you learn here?
  • Understanding Revenue Cycle Management (RCM) from registration to settlement.
  • Practical methods for medical inventory control and reducing pharmaceutical waste.
  • Accounting for medical insurance: Managing claims, denials, and aging reports.
  • How to calculate treatment costs (Direct Labor + Supplies + Overhead).
  • SVG diagram illustrating the healthcare financial flow.
  • Departmental reporting models and a monthly control checklist.

1) Revenue Cycle Management (RCM): The Heart of Medical Cash Flow

In healthcare, the “sale” is not just an invoice. RCM is the multi-step process of capturing revenue from a patient care episode.

The 4 Primary Stages of RCM
Stage Task Accounting/Control Goal
Registration Insurance verification & eligibility check. Reducing front-end denials before treatment starts.
Coding Translating services into standard codes (CPT/ICD-10). Ensuring accurate billing that matches insurance policies.
Claiming Submission of electronic claims to payers. Accelerating “Days in AR” and reducing lag time.
Settlement Payment receipt, Denial management, & Patient balance. Matching bank deposits with insurance remittance advice.

2) Healthcare Financial Flow: From Patient to Settlement (SVG)

Successful hospital accounting requires a seamless data flow between medical and financial systems.

The Healthcare Revenue & Inventory Flow Diagram showing: Patient visit, Charge capture, Insurance claim, Inventory consumption, and Financial report. 1) Patient Visit Charge Capture 2) Insurance Claim & Coding 3) Inventory Batch & Expiry 4) Reports Dept. P&L
The goal: Integrating medical “charge capture” with financial “claim settlement”.

3) Medical Insurance Reconciliations: Managing Denials

Unlike cash retail, hospitals collect from dozens of insurance companies, each with different contracts. The focus is on Denial Management.

  • Clean Claim Rate: Percentage of claims paid on first submission.
  • Denial Analysis: Categorizing rejections (Lack of authorization, coding errors, non-covered services).
  • Expected vs. Actual: Matching the insurance check with the “Contractual Allowable” rate.

4) Managing Medical Inventory and Supplies (Safety & Control)

Medical inventory is high-value and high-risk due to expiry and sterility.

Recommended for you

Rebates & Claims Settlement - Excel Template

Customer Rebates Template: Calculates rebate accruals by contract/volume, records customer claims, a...

  • Batch & Expiry Tracking: Using a “FEFO” (First-Expired, First-Out) logic to reduce waste.
  • High-Cost Implants: Tracking surgical implants/stents by serial number to match specifically to a patient billing.
  • Sub-Stores Control: Reconciling the main pharmacy with floor/ward sub-stores to prevent undocumented usage.

5) Patient and Service Costing (Activity-Based Logic)

To set prices and analyze profitability, hospitals use Activity-Based Costing (ABC).

  • Direct Costs: Medications, surgical kits, and nursing/physician time per patient.
  • Indirect Costs: OR depreciation, maintenance of imaging equipment, and hospital utilities.
  • Margin per Diagnosis: Analyzing which types of treatments (e.g., Cardiology vs. Orthopedics) are most profitable.

6) Departmental Profitability Reports: Specialized Metrics

Hospital management needs visibility beyond the bottom line.

Metric What does it measure? Accounting Significance
ALOS Average Length of Stay. Efficiency of bed utilization and resource turnover.
AR Days Days in Accounts Receivable. Speed of insurance collection and liquidity health.
Net Collection Rate Actual collection vs. Expected after adjustments. Accuracy of pricing and RCM efficiency.
Case Mix Index Complexity of patient cases. Predicting resource intensity and billing potential.

7) Controlling Medical Waste and Leakage

Profit in hospitals is often lost in the “cracks” between departments.

Check for Charge Leakage: Compare OR logs with patient bills. If a surgery happened but no anesthesia supplies were billed—you have Charge Leakage.

8) Monthly Healthcare Accounting Checklist

Checklist

  • Revenue Reconciliation: Match clinical system “Charge Capture” with financial “Billed Revenue”.
  • Insurance Aging: Review claims older than 90 days and trigger the appeals process.
  • Inventory Count: Full audit of pharmacy and high-value surgical items (FEFO check).
  • Denial Dashboard: Review top 5 reasons for rejection and update front-desk workflows.
  • Accruals: Estimate revenue for patients currently in-house (Work-in-Progress) but not yet discharged.

9) Frequently Asked Questions

What is the biggest risk in hospital accounting?

Insurance rejections (Denials) and pharmaceutical waste/expiry are the primary financial risks.

What is a Contractual Allowance?

It is the difference between the hospital’s standard price and the rate agreed upon with an insurance company.

Why is FEFO better than FIFO for medical supplies?

Because items with the closest expiry date (First-Expired) must be used first, regardless of when they were purchased.

10) Conclusion

Hospital and healthcare accounting requires a deep integration between clinical operations and the ledger. By mastering Revenue Cycle Management (RCM), enforcing strict medical inventory FEFO controls, and analyzing denials and departmental profitability, you turn the medical facility into a sustainable, high-performance institution—Digital Salla.

© Digital Salla Articles — General educational content. Healthcare regulations and insurance laws vary significantly by local jurisdiction (e.g., CCHI in KSA).