DART CHART RELEASES NEW SOFTWARE TO CENTRALIZE MANAGED CARE CONTRACTS

Contact Information

DART Chart

Tracy Hall

(414) 247-3100

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

(Milwaukee, WI, December 2, 2021) DART Chart, the leading managed care software developer, today announces the launch of their SMART Contract Manager software suite.  SMART Contract Manager provides complete visibility and control of managed care contract details across facilities.

“We’re thrilled to share SMART Contract Manager with the skilled nursing community,” said DART Chart CEO John Ansay. “This new software tool ensures that every facility has access to the Managed Care contract details they need to control and comply with payor requirements.”

SMART Contract Manager is the perfect complement to DART Chart’s SMART Case Manager to keep staff on top of critical activities on a real-time basis and helps facilities get the most from their Managed Care payor contracts.  Combined with the EHR integration in SMART Case Manager the full suite provides alerts of upcoming payer submission deadlines, missing prior authorizations and much more.

“Managed Care has changed the power balance in long-term care reimbursement,” notes Ansay.  “Facilities are now more responsible for ensuring they comply with payor requirements – and securing the reimbursement they’ve earned.  SMART Contract Manager and SMART Case Manager give facilities a leg up on contract compliance and control.”

SMART Contract Manager is available as a stand-alone software tool or as an add-on to SMART Case Manager.  Demonstrations are available upon request.

About DART Chart

 In 1997, DART Chart’s founders recognized a paradigm shift in the senior care industry as CMS announced the new Prospective Payment System (PPS) for Skilled Nursing Medicare billing. DART Chart developed some of the earliest software solutions to support this new payment environment. In 2013, with the emergence of Managed Care payment, DART Chart again recognized that contracts’ coverage rules can negatively impact revenue and strain already strapped budgets and offered software tools to support long-term care facilities.