feat: Signal CGM strategic analysis + asset sale package
Adds complete go-to-market analysis for Signal CGM asset sale: Analysis/ - signal-cgm-segment-scoring-v1.md (3-model scoring across 7 segments) - signal-cgm-re-scored-composite-v2.md (50/30/20 composite, MA+Medicaid scope) - signal-cgm-final-ranking-leverage-v3.md (final 4-segment rank + leverage map) Assets/ - signal-cgm-pitch-v1-plain.md (plain language leave-behind) - signal-cgm-pitch-v2-professional.md (professional leave-behind) - master-summary.md (rankings, metrics, next-steps prompt) Key findings: 25.2% CGM improper payment rate; 20% net revenue loss; 63% of denied claims permanently written off; billing company #1 target for pilot; NikoHealth #1 for asset sale. Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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# Signal CGM — Final Composite Ranking and Leverage Analysis v3
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### Asset Sale Primary · Pilot Secondary · MA + Medicaid Payer Scope
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### STTIL Solutions LLC | April 2026
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---
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## Final Composite Ranking — Four Segments, MA + Medicaid Scope
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| Rank | Segment | Asset (×0.50) | Pilot (×0.30) | SaaS (×0.20) | Composite |
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|------|---------|--------------|--------------|-------------|-----------|
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| **#1** | Billing company / DME RCM | 3.60 | 2.46 | 1.55 | **7.61** |
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| **#2** | NikoHealth-type platform | 4.28 | 2.13 | 0.93 | **7.34** |
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| **#3** | VGM Group / MSO | 3.58 | 1.08 | 1.06 | **5.72** |
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| **#4** | Mid-size independent supplier | 1.65 | 2.09 | 1.62 | **5.36** |
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**The 0.27-point gap between #1 and #2 is a sequencing signal, not a clear winner.**
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Pilot with billing company → generate evidence → close NikoHealth asset sale at higher price.
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These tracks are mutually reinforcing.
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---
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## Denial Cost Absorption vs. Recovery — Full Quantification
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### Appeal Ladder Economics (Per ~$250 CGM Claim)
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| Level | Timeline | Staff Cost | Overturn Rate | Net Yield |
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|-------|----------|-----------|--------------|-----------|
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| L1 Redetermination | 60–74 days | $25–$55 | 20–30% | $22.50 net after labor |
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| L2 QIC Reconsideration | 60 days | $50–$118 | 50–65% | $58.50 net after labor |
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| L3 ALJ Hearing | 6–18 months | $200–$1,500+ | 60–70% | ($687.50) net LOSS per claim |
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| L4–5 Council / Court | Years | $5K–$50K+ | Variable | Not viable for CGM refills |
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**MA-specific overlay:** MA L2 overturn rate is 63.9% (vs ~57% FFS) — but MA plans
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deny more aggressively initially. Net: higher appeal labor per recovered dollar.
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### Absorption Model — 500-Patient Supplier, One Month
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```
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500 active CGM patients | $125,000/month billing | 25.2% improper payment rate
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126 denied claims (~$31,500 face value)
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├── 38 not appealed → written off immediately $9,500
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├── 50 appealed at L1 only
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│ ├── 13 overturned (~27%) $3,250 recovered
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│ ├── 25 denied → abandoned $6,250 written off
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│ └── 12 escalated to L2
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└── 38 at L2 total (12 escalated + 26 direct)
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├── 22 overturned (~57%) $5,500 recovered
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└── 16 denied → written off $4,000 written off
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OUTCOME LEDGER:
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Permanently written off (all paths): 79 claims $19,750 63%
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Recovered through appeals: 35 claims $8,750 28%
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Still in process: 12 claims $3,000 9%
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Appeal labor cost (88 filings): $5,192/month
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Net recovery after labor: $8,750 − $5,192 = $3,558
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Net loss including labor: $19,750 + $5,192 = $24,942
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ONE IN FIVE CGM BILLING DOLLARS IS PERMANENTLY LOST.
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The appeal process recovers less than 30 cents of every denied dollar
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after accounting for the staff labor required to run it.
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```
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---
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## The Six Situations Where Suppliers Ship Despite Documentation Risk
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### Situation 1: The PA-Pending Ship
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**What:** PA submitted but not yet affirmed. Refill due in 5 days. Supplier
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ships assuming approval will come through.
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**Frequency:** Very high — 14–21 day MAC adjudication window routinely overlaps
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refill schedule for reactive workflows.
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**Outcome if PA denied:** Non-covered denial. Zero recovery path.
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**Signal CGM intervention:** PA initiated 45 days out. Order blocked until
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PA confirmed. Ship date never collides with adjudication window.
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### Situation 2: The CMN Gray Zone
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**What:** CMN expired 60 days ago. Doctor's office has been faxed three times.
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Insulin-dependent patient is out of supplies. Supplier ships anyway.
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**Frequency:** High. Physicians have 200 other patients. CMN renewal takes
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60–90 days in slow practices.
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**Outcome:** Denial. Backdated CMN rarely accepted at redetermination.
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**Signal CGM intervention:** CMN expiration flagged 60 days out. Outreach
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triggered at 45 days. Hold queue activates at 30 days if CMN not received.
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### Situation 3: The New-Code Gap
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**What:** CMS adds codes to Required PA list (7 new codes April 13, 2026).
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Staff not notified. Existing workflow processes orders normally. No PA obtained.
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**Frequency:** Episodic but acute at each list expansion. Hypothesis 2 in
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validation-hypotheses.md tests whether this gap is live and unpatched now.
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**Outcome:** Non-covered denial. No recovery.
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**Signal CGM intervention:** Required PA code list maintained current and
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applied automatically to all open refill windows.
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### Situation 4: The PECOS Assumption
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**What:** Prescriber was enrolled at intake 18 months ago. Practice changed.
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PECOS lapsed. Supplier has no system to re-check at refill cycle.
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**Frequency:** Moderate but growing. Practice instability post-COVID increasing.
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**Outcome:** Hard denial. No appeal path if prescriber genuinely not enrolled.
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**Signal CGM intervention:** NPPES checked at intake AND at each refill cycle.
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Inactive NPI → order blocked → alert to supplier staff.
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### Situation 5: The Synapse Blindside
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**What:** Patient on UHC Medicare Advantage. Valid UHC PA in hand. Unknown to
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supplier: UHC transitioned patient's state to Synapse Health (April 1, 2026).
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Supplier not enrolled in Synapse. PA obtained through UHC portal not valid
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in Synapse-managed network. Order ships. Denied: not in authorized network.
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**Frequency:** Acute. 20+ states now in Synapse territory as of April 2026.
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**Outcome:** Network access denial. Difficult appeal — supplier must prove
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non-notification.
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**Signal CGM intervention:** Payer-plan tracking layer flags UHC MA patients
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in Synapse-covered states. Verifies Synapse enrollment before shipment.
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### Situation 6: The Continuity Bridge
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**What:** Coverage lapsed. Supplier working to restore. Patient calls: out of
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sensors, insulin-dependent. Supplier provides bridge supplies with no active
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PA, no valid CMN, no documentation.
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**Frequency:** Low per patient; high consequence. The end state of situations
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1–4 going unmanaged.
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**Outcome:** Full product cost absorbed. No billing path.
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**Signal CGM intervention:** Situations 1–4 never reach Situation 6 when
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caught 45 days out. This situation is structurally prevented by the other five.
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---
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## Workflow Leverage Analysis
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| Step | Financial Impact/Event | Frequency/Month | Preventability | Leverage Score |
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|------|----------------------|----------------|----------------|----------------|
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| **Prior Authorization** | $250 hard write-off; zero recovery path | HIGH: 15–25 at-risk refills in 500-pt book | HIGH: PA tracked 45 days out; ship blocked until confirmed | **9.2 / 10** |
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| **Refill Tracking (Coverage Clock)** | Enables all other steps | HIGH: every active patient every month | HIGH: core calendar engine | **8.8 / 10** |
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| **6-Month Visit Compliance** | $250/claim; 55% recoverable at L2 | MODERATE: 8–15 patients/month in mature book | HIGH: visit window calculated from refill date | **8.1 / 10** |
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| **PECOS Validation** | $250 hard write-off; zero recovery | LOW: 2–5 events/month in 500-pt book | HIGH: NPPES checked at intake + each refill | **7.4 / 10** |
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| **Intake Validation** | Prevents pipeline contamination | LOW: 5–15 new patients/month in mature book | HIGH: NPI, eligibility, base equipment, duplicates | **6.5 / 10** |
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| **Audit Defense Log** | High if audit triggered ($50K–$500K) | LOW: episodic | MODERATE: time-stamped byproduct of all other steps | **5.8 / 10** |
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### The Leverage Verdict
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**Prior authorization is the single highest-leverage intervention point.** PA
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failure = non-recoverable write-off. No appeal path. Zero exceptions. Every
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other denial type has some theoretical recovery path. PA does not.
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**Refill tracking is the enabling infrastructure, not a standalone lever.**
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Without knowing when the next order ships, nothing else is actionable. It is
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the architecture, not a feature.
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**6-month visit compliance is the highest-frequency daily queue driver.** 8–15
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patients per month, every month, in a 500-patient mature book. Prevented before
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shipment is worth more than 57% chance of recovery after denial.
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**Audit defense is the second story for asset sale conversations.** After daily
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denial prevention, before competitive bidding urgency. In the current OIG
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enforcement environment, "your customers can prove proactive compliance" is a
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meaningful product differentiator.
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---
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## Asset Sale One-Liner
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> "Signal CGM gives the buyer's customers 45 days to fix what would otherwise
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> cost them 20% of their CGM revenue — and generates a compliance record that
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> defends them against the government enforcement environment that's already active."
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---
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## Sources
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- [CMS 2024 CGM Improper Payments — 25.2% rate](https://www.cms.gov/training-education/medicare-learning-networkr-mln/compliance/medicare-provider-compliance-tips/glucose-monitoring-supplies)
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- [VGM DMEPOS Appeals Guide](https://www.vgm.com/communities/navigating-dmepos-appeals-processes-a-strategic-guide-for-providers/)
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- [Denial Management Metrics](https://www.panahealthcaresolutions.com/blogs/denial-management-metrics-for-faster-reimbursement/)
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- [Experian State of Claims 2025](https://www.experian.com/blogs/healthcare/state-of-claims-2025/)
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- [KFF: MA Prior Authorization 2024](https://www.kff.org/medicare/nearly-50-million-prior-authorization-requests-were-sent-to-medicare-advantage-insurers-in-2024/)
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- [OIG CGM Enforcement Priority 2025](https://oig.hhs.gov/reports/all/2025/medicare-payments-for-continuous-glucose-monitors-and-supplies-exceeded-supplier-costs-and-retail-market-prices-indicating-medicare-can-save-at-least-tens-of-millions-of-dollars-in-one-year/)
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- [UHC/Synapse Health Expansion — UHCprovider.com](https://www.uhcprovider.com/en/resource-library/news/2025/synapse-health-manage-dme-orders.html)
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- [CGM Fraud Schemes — Qlarant](https://www.qlarant.com/knowledge/blog/continuous-glucose-monitor-fraud-schemes/)
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- [Ossur Medicare Appeals Timeline Guide](https://www.ossur.com/en-us/professionals/ossur-rr/appealing-denied-medicare-claims-redetermination-reconsideration-and-alj)
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# Signal CGM — Re-Scored Composite Model v2
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### Asset Sale Primary (50%) · Pilot Secondary (30%) · SaaS Tertiary (20%)
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### MA + Medicaid First Proof-of-Concept Payer Scope
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### STTIL Solutions LLC | April 2026
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---
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## Priority Weights
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| Objective | Weight | Rationale |
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|-----------|--------|-----------|
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| Asset sale / strategic handoff | 50% | Fastest path to capital realization |
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| Pilot validation | 30% | Evidence from pilot raises asset sale price |
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| SaaS ICP potential | 20% | Informs asset buyer's deployment ROI |
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---
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## Scoring Assumption Audit
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### Asset Sale — Why These Weights
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**Distribution reach (30%):** An asset sale to a platform touching 500+ suppliers
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is worth orders of magnitude more than one touching one. This is the dominant
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criterion because it determines the multiplier on the asset's downstream value.
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**Strategic need (25%):** Pull motion (buyer has documented gap) is more reliable
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than push motion (we convince buyer they need it). NikoHealth's CGM intelligence
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gap is documented and real. Billing companies' MA plan-rule complexity is felt daily.
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**Price ceiling (20%):** Current $25K–$60K is priced for a direct supplier buyer.
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A platform vendor or MSO can justify 3–5× that. Weight at 20% because price ceiling
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is contingent on strategic need — no need, no premium.
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**Speed to close (15%):** Closing faster is better but not at the expense of deal
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size. Pursue fast-close candidates in parallel with long-cycle targets.
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**Build vs. buy (10%):** Modifier on other criteria. Accelerates a deal that
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already has strategic need; doesn't create one where those are absent.
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### Pilot — Why These Weights
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**Data accessibility (25%):** Pilot must generate measurable denial rate change.
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Requires structured CGM billing data with denial reason codes — not spreadsheets.
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**Cooperation likelihood (20%):** Active partner engagement multiplies data access
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value. Poor data + high cooperation still generates useful qualitative signal.
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**Signal quality (20%):** Pilot must generalize to the asset buyer's customer base.
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Single Florida supplier = anecdote. Billing company across 3 MACs = evidence.
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**PHI/compliance overhead (20%):** High-overhead pilot = delayed pilot. Given CB
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2028 window, compliance friction is a real timeline risk.
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**Feedback loop speed (15%):** A 30–60 day feedback cycle is acceptable;
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6 months is not viable given the urgency window.
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---
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## Individual Segment Scores — MA + Medicaid Scope Applied
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### NikoHealth-Type Platform Vendor
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**Asset Sale Sub-Score:**
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| Criterion | Wt | Score | Note |
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|-----------|-----|-------|------|
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| Distribution reach | 30% | 10 | Serves exact buyer profile across hundreds of suppliers |
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| Strategic need | 25% | 10 (+1) | MA+Medicaid scope widens the gap — no platform has plan-specific rules |
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| Price ceiling | 20% | 9 | MA module = 3–5× current ask to a motivated platform buyer |
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| Speed to close | 15% | 3 | Enterprise procurement: 4–8 months minimum |
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| Build vs. buy | 10% | 8 (+1) | MA plan-rule maintenance is ongoing data work, not a sprint |
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**Sub-score: 8.55**
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**Pilot Sub-Score:**
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| Criterion | Wt | Score | Note |
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|-----------|-----|-------|------|
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| Data accessibility | 25% | 10 | Best dataset: all supplier clients across all payers |
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| Cooperation likelihood | 20% | 3 (−1) | Exposing own platform gap is sensitive under MA scope |
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| Signal quality | 20% | 10 | Multi-supplier, multi-plan, multi-jurisdiction |
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| PHI overhead | 20% | 7 | HIPAA infrastructure exists |
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| Feedback speed | 15% | 4 | Enterprise review before data access |
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**Sub-score: 7.10**
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**SaaS ICP Score: 4.65**
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**NikoHealth Composite: (8.55×0.50) + (7.10×0.30) + (4.65×0.20) = 7.34**
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---
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### Billing Company / DME RCM Outsourcer
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**Asset Sale Sub-Score:**
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| Criterion | Wt | Score | Note |
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|-----------|-----|-------|------|
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| Distribution reach | 30% | 7 | Serves 10–50 DMEPOS clients per firm |
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| Strategic need | 25% | 9 (+1) | MA plan-specific PA rules are their most expensive unsolved problem |
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| Price ceiling | 20% | 7 (+1) | $40K–$80K justified across 20+ clients under MA scope |
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| Speed to close | 15% | 5 | Owner/managing partner: 60–90 day decision cycle |
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| Build vs. buy | 10% | 7 | Not a tech company; will buy |
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**Sub-score: 7.20**
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**Pilot Sub-Score:**
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| Criterion | Wt | Score | Note |
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|-----------|-----|-------|------|
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| Data accessibility | 25% | 10 | MA + Medicaid billing data across all clients — defines the advantage |
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| Cooperation likelihood | 20% | 8 (+1) | MA complexity is their daily pain; highly motivated under this payer scope |
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| Signal quality | 20% | 10 | Multi-supplier, multi-plan data |
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| PHI overhead | 20% | 6 | HIPAA infrastructure exists; BAA manageable |
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| Feedback speed | 15% | 6 | Fast initiation; first MA cycle data in 30 days |
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**Sub-score: 8.20**
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**SaaS ICP Score: 7.75 (+0.80 under MA scope — tool becomes a revenue line)**
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**Billing Company Composite: (7.20×0.50) + (8.20×0.30) + (7.75×0.20) = 7.61**
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---
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### VGM Group / MSO
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**Asset Sale Sub-Score:**
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| Criterion | Wt | Score | Note |
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|-----------|-----|-------|------|
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| Distribution reach | 30% | 10 | Thousands of small-to-mid DMEPOS suppliers nationally |
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| Strategic need | 25% | 6 (−1) | MA/Medicaid are plan-specific problems outside VGM's policy leverage |
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| Price ceiling | 20% | 7 | $75K–$150K justified as member benefit |
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| Speed to close | 15% | 3 | 6–12 month committee procurement |
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| Build vs. buy | 10% | 8 | VGM endorses/buys tools, does not build |
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||||||
|
**Sub-score: 7.15**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Pilot Sub-Score:**
|
||||||
|
| Criterion | Wt | Score | Note |
|
||||||
|
|-----------|-----|-------|------|
|
||||||
|
| Data accessibility | 25% | 3 | No supplier billing data; must recruit members |
|
||||||
|
| Cooperation likelihood | 20% | 5 | Conceptual support; cannot drive participation |
|
||||||
|
| Signal quality | 20% | 3 (−1) | Member base skews rural/small; less MA density |
|
||||||
|
| PHI overhead | 20% | 4 | VGM as intermediary adds complexity layer |
|
||||||
|
| Feedback speed | 15% | 3 | Slow: member recruitment + separate BAAs |
|
||||||
|
**Sub-score: 3.60**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**SaaS ICP Score: 5.30**
|
||||||
|
**VGM Composite: (7.15×0.50) + (3.60×0.30) + (5.30×0.20) = 5.72**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Mid-Size Independent Supplier
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Asset Sale Sub-Score:**
|
||||||
|
| Criterion | Wt | Score | Note |
|
||||||
|
|-----------|-----|-------|------|
|
||||||
|
| Distribution reach | 30% | 1 | Single supplier; no scale |
|
||||||
|
| Strategic need | 25% | 6 (+1) | MA scope raises personal pain — daily multi-plan complexity |
|
||||||
|
| Price ceiling | 20% | 3 (+1) | MA ROI strengthens argument; still marginal for asset sale |
|
||||||
|
| Speed to close | 15% | 4 | Owner decision: 2–8 weeks if motivated |
|
||||||
|
| Build vs. buy | 10% | 3 | Cannot build; would subscribe not buy |
|
||||||
|
**Sub-score: 3.30**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Pilot Sub-Score:**
|
||||||
|
| Criterion | Wt | Score | Note |
|
||||||
|
|-----------|-----|-------|------|
|
||||||
|
| Data accessibility | 25% | 7 | Structured in Brightree/NikoHealth; needs 50+ MA patients for signal |
|
||||||
|
| Cooperation likelihood | 20% | 8 | Billing manager engages daily; highly motivated |
|
||||||
|
| Signal quality | 20% | 7 (−2) | Thin MA mix reduces cross-plan generalizability |
|
||||||
|
| PHI overhead | 20% | 5 | BAA: standard, manageable |
|
||||||
|
| Feedback speed | 15% | 8 | Monthly MA billing cycle; fast iteration |
|
||||||
|
**Sub-score: 6.95**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**SaaS ICP Score: 8.10 (+0.30 — MA complexity is their most expensive unsolved problem)**
|
||||||
|
**Mid-Size Supplier Composite: (3.30×0.50) + (6.95×0.30) + (8.10×0.20) = 5.36**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Composite Ranking Summary (Base + MA/Medicaid Adjusted)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Rank | Segment | Base Composite | MA+Med Adj | Final Score |
|
||||||
|
|------|---------|---------------|-----------|-------------|
|
||||||
|
| #1 | Billing company / DME RCM | 7.17 | +0.44 | **7.61** |
|
||||||
|
| #2 | NikoHealth-type platform | 7.22 | +0.12 | **7.34** |
|
||||||
|
| #3 | VGM Group / MSO | 5.98 | −0.26 | **5.72** |
|
||||||
|
| #4 | Mid-size independent supplier | 5.27 | +0.09 | **5.36** |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## The Sequencing Logic
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The #1 and #2 positions are 0.27 points apart. This is not a clear winner —
|
||||||
|
it is a parallel tracks signal:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
1. **Pilot with billing company first.** 60 days. Generates denial rate
|
||||||
|
reduction data from real MA + Medicaid billing. Low cost.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
2. **Use that evidence to close NikoHealth.** The pilot data makes the
|
||||||
|
NikoHealth asset sale conversation 3× easier and likely 2× more valuable
|
||||||
|
in price negotiation.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
These tracks are mutually reinforcing, not competing.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**VGM is the correct follow-on distribution deal** after the NikoHealth asset
|
||||||
|
sale or billing company deployment — not the primary target during MA + Medicaid
|
||||||
|
proof-of-concept.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## MA + Medicaid: The Payer Complexity That Changes Everything
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
```
|
||||||
|
FFS Medicare: One ruleset per MAC jurisdiction (4 MACs nationally)
|
||||||
|
Medicare Advantage: 800+ plans, each with plan-specific PA rules
|
||||||
|
layered on top of CMS Part B baseline
|
||||||
|
Medicaid: 50 state rulesets, often MCO-layered within each state
|
||||||
|
TRAP: Several states have moved CGM coverage to pharmacy-only
|
||||||
|
(NY May 2024; others following) — verify before piloting
|
||||||
|
```
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Why this matters for NikoHealth:** Maintaining current MA plan-specific
|
||||||
|
PA rules across 800+ plans is ongoing data work, not engineering. A supplier
|
||||||
|
tool that owns this database has a moat that is expensive to replicate.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Why this matters for billing companies:** They are already maintaining
|
||||||
|
these rules manually in someone's spreadsheet. The pain is personal and daily.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Key Denial Quantification
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Metric | Value | Source |
|
||||||
|
|--------|-------|--------|
|
||||||
|
| CGM improper payment rate | 25.2% | CMS 2024 |
|
||||||
|
| Projected annual improper payments | $278.5M | CMS 2024 |
|
||||||
|
| Documentation failure share | 94.2% | CMS 2024 |
|
||||||
|
| No documentation at all | 67.6% | CMS 2024 |
|
||||||
|
| Insufficient documentation | 26.6% | CMS 2024 |
|
||||||
|
| MA DMEPOS appeal success (L2) | 63.9% | KFF 2024 |
|
||||||
|
| MA PA denial rate | 7.7% | KFF 2024 |
|
||||||
|
| Write-off rate on denied claims | ~63% | Derived from appeal ladder economics |
|
||||||
|
| Net revenue loss after appeals | ~20% of gross CGM billing | Derived |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Sources
|
||||||
|
- [CMS 2024 CGM Improper Payments](https://www.cms.gov/training-education/medicare-learning-networkr-mln/compliance/medicare-provider-compliance-tips/glucose-monitoring-supplies)
|
||||||
|
- [KFF: MA 53M PA Determinations 2024](https://www.kff.org/medicare/nearly-50-million-prior-authorization-requests-were-sent-to-medicare-advantage-insurers-in-2024/)
|
||||||
|
- [MA Denial Spike — Medicare Rights Center](https://www.medicarerights.org/medicare-watch/2024/09/26/medicare-advantage-denials-increased-before-the-implementation-of-new-prior-authorization-rules)
|
||||||
|
- [Unequal DME/Pharmacy Enforcement — CMS Comment](https://downloads.regulations.gov/CMS-2025-0242-0025/attachment_1.pdf)
|
||||||
|
- [UHC/Synapse Health State Expansion](https://www.uhcprovider.com/en/resource-library/news/2025/synapse-health-manage-dme-orders.html)
|
||||||
|
- [OIG CGM Payments Exceeded Costs 2025](https://oig.hhs.gov/reports/all/2025/medicare-payments-for-continuous-glucose-monitors-and-supplies-exceeded-supplier-costs-and-retail-market-prices-indicating-medicare-can-save-at-least-tens-of-millions-of-dollars-in-one-year/)
|
||||||
|
- [NY State Medicaid CGM Billing Update 2024](https://www.emedny.org/ProviderManuals/communications/billing_glucose_monitors_-_5-9-24.pdf)
|
||||||
|
- [NikoHealth vs Brightree 2026](https://coruzant.com/software/dme-and-hme-software-in-2026/)
|
||||||
|
|
@ -0,0 +1,146 @@
|
||||||
|
# Signal CGM — Segment Scoring Model v1
|
||||||
|
### Explicit Criteria, Weights, and Rankings Across Three Objectives
|
||||||
|
### STTIL Solutions LLC | April 2026
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Scoring Architecture
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Three independent rankings. Each uses different criteria, weights, and success
|
||||||
|
definitions. A segment that ranks #1 for SaaS ICP may be wrong for a pilot and
|
||||||
|
irrelevant for an asset sale. Treat them as separate decisions.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Model 1: Best SaaS ICP for MRR/ARR
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Criterion | Weight | What it measures |
|
||||||
|
|-----------|--------|-----------------|
|
||||||
|
| Pain intensity | 25% | How acutely the segment feels the CGM denial problem |
|
||||||
|
| Willingness / ability to pay | 20% | Named budget, ROI clarity, buyer who can sign |
|
||||||
|
| Revenue per customer (ARR × LTV) | 20% | Monthly contract × expected contract duration |
|
||||||
|
| Sales cycle speed | 15% | Weeks from first contact to signed contract |
|
||||||
|
| Churn durability | 10% | Still exists and values the tool in 24 months? |
|
||||||
|
| Reachability at scale | 10% | Find and reach efficiently without large sales org |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### SaaS ICP Scores
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Segment | Pain (25%) | Pay (20%) | ARR×LTV (20%) | Cycle (15%) | Churn (10%) | Reach (10%) | Score |
|
||||||
|
|---------|-----------|-----------|--------------|-------------|------------|-------------|-------|
|
||||||
|
| Mid-size supplier (10–50 emp) | 9 | 8 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 7 | **7.80** |
|
||||||
|
| Billing company / DME RCM | 8 | 7 | 7 | 5 | 8 | 6 | **6.95** |
|
||||||
|
| Small supplier (2–8 emp) | 10 | 5 | 4 | 6 | 4 | 8 | **6.40** |
|
||||||
|
| VGM Group / MSO | 5 | 4 | 7 | 3 | 9 | 5 | **5.30** |
|
||||||
|
| DME platform vendor (NikoHealth) | 3 | 4 | 8 | 2 | 9 | 3 | **4.65** |
|
||||||
|
| State / national association | 2 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 7 | 9 | **2.55** |
|
||||||
|
| Grant-funded / QI org | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 4 | 4 | **2.60** |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Key rationale:**
|
||||||
|
- Mid-size supplier leads because they have pain + budget + ROI clarity at $199–$399/month
|
||||||
|
- Small supplier has maximum pain (10/10) but minimum reliability — high churn risk as CB 2028 approaches
|
||||||
|
- Billing company scores #2: absorbs denial labor directly; LTV longer than any individual supplier
|
||||||
|
- NikoHealth scores low on SaaS — they are an asset buyer, not a subscriber
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Model 2: Best Buyer for Asset Sale / Strategic Handoff
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Criterion | Weight | What it measures |
|
||||||
|
|-----------|--------|-----------------|
|
||||||
|
| Distribution reach | 30% | How many suppliers does this buyer already reach? |
|
||||||
|
| Strategic need | 25% | Documented feature gap; would they build it otherwise? |
|
||||||
|
| Price ceiling | 20% | How much would a motivated buyer plausibly pay? |
|
||||||
|
| Speed to close | 15% | Weeks from conversation to signed term sheet |
|
||||||
|
| Build vs. buy calculus | 10% | Is acquiring faster than building given CB 2028 window? |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Asset Sale Scores
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Segment | Distribution (30%) | Need (25%) | Price (20%) | Speed (15%) | B/B (10%) | Score |
|
||||||
|
|---------|-------------------|-----------|------------|-------------|-----------|-------|
|
||||||
|
| DME platform vendor (NikoHealth) | 10 | 9 | 9 | 3 | 7 | **8.20** |
|
||||||
|
| VGM Group / MSO | 10 | 7 | 7 | 4 | 8 | **7.55** |
|
||||||
|
| Billing company / DME RCM | 7 | 8 | 6 | 5 | 7 | **6.75** |
|
||||||
|
| State / national association | 8 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 3 | **4.40** |
|
||||||
|
| Mid-size supplier | 1 | 5 | 2 | 4 | 3 | **2.85** |
|
||||||
|
| Small supplier | 1 | 4 | 1 | 3 | 2 | **2.10** |
|
||||||
|
| Grant-funded / QI org | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 2 | **2.40** |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**NikoHealth (#1 asset buyer) rationale:**
|
||||||
|
- Already serves the exact buyer profile; CGM feature gap is documented and real
|
||||||
|
- API-first architecture makes integration technically trivial
|
||||||
|
- CB 2028 window makes buying faster than 6–9 month internal build
|
||||||
|
- Price ceiling is 3–5× current $25K–$60K ask for a motivated platform buyer
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Model 3: Best Pilot Validation Partner
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Criterion | Weight | What it measures |
|
||||||
|
|-----------|--------|-----------------|
|
||||||
|
| Data accessibility | 25% | Structured CGM billing data with denial reason codes |
|
||||||
|
| Cooperation likelihood | 20% | Will they actively participate and give feedback? |
|
||||||
|
| Signal quality | 20% | Will pilot results generalize to target market? |
|
||||||
|
| PHI / compliance overhead | 20% | BAA and data security burden |
|
||||||
|
| Feedback loop speed | 15% | How quickly is denial rate change measurable? |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Pilot Scores
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Segment | Data (25%) | Coop (20%) | Signal (20%) | PHI (20%) | Speed (15%) | Score |
|
||||||
|
|---------|-----------|-----------|-------------|----------|------------|-------|
|
||||||
|
| Billing company / DME RCM | 10 | 7 | 10 | 6 | 6 | **8.00** |
|
||||||
|
| Mid-size supplier | 8 | 8 | 9 | 5 | 8 | **7.60** |
|
||||||
|
| DME platform vendor | 10 | 4 | 10 | 7 | 4 | **7.30** |
|
||||||
|
| Small supplier | 6 | 9 | 7 | 5 | 7 | **6.75** |
|
||||||
|
| VGM / MSO | 3 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | **3.80** |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Billing company leads pilot scoring** because they have multi-supplier,
|
||||||
|
multi-plan, multi-jurisdiction billing data — the fastest path to H1 validation
|
||||||
|
(denials are documentation-fixable) across a meaningful sample size.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Government Enforcement Context
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Finding | Source | Strategic Implication |
|
||||||
|
|---------|--------|----------------------|
|
||||||
|
| CGM improper payment rate: 25.2% / $278.5M/yr | CMS 2024 | One in four CGM dollars improperly paid |
|
||||||
|
| 94.2% from documentation failures | CMS 2024 | Not fraud — fixable workflow gaps |
|
||||||
|
| $1.9B total DMEPOS improper payments FY2024 | OIG | CGM is highest-scrutiny category |
|
||||||
|
| $1.8B in payments suspended 2025 | CMS Fraud Defense Ops | Enforcement is executing at scale now |
|
||||||
|
| CGM as explicit 2026 enforcement priority | OIG / DOJ | Legitimate suppliers get caught in sweeps |
|
||||||
|
| Unequal enforcement: pharmacy vs DMEPOS | CMS-2025-0242-0025 | DMEPOS held to higher standard than pharmacy for same product |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**The dual-edge positioning:** Signal CGM's audit log is not just a billing tool —
|
||||||
|
it is liability documentation. A supplier who can show time-stamped pre-submission
|
||||||
|
checks has a defensibility argument when the MAC issues an ADR.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## NikoHealth Foothold Assessment
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Verdict: Credible and growing challenger. Not the market standard.**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Indicator | Assessment |
|
||||||
|
|-----------|-----------|
|
||||||
|
| Architecture | Cloud-native, API-first — genuine advantage over Brightree |
|
||||||
|
| Pricing | More accessible for small suppliers than Brightree ($600–$1,500+/mo) |
|
||||||
|
| Market position | Capturing switchers from legacy platforms; not dominant |
|
||||||
|
| Customer count | G2 review volume suggests low hundreds, not thousands |
|
||||||
|
| CGM-specific intelligence | Generic authorization alerts; no 6-month visit tracking, no MAC-jurisdiction rules, no 45-day runway logic |
|
||||||
|
| Competitive risk | Could close the CGM gap in 6–9 months of focused engineering |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Asset sale timing window: open but not permanent.** NikoHealth's API-first
|
||||||
|
architecture makes acquisition or licensing integration technically trivial
|
||||||
|
relative to Brightree's legacy stack.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Sources
|
||||||
|
- [CMS 2024 CGM Improper Payment Data](https://www.cms.gov/training-education/medicare-learning-networkr-mln/compliance/medicare-provider-compliance-tips/glucose-monitoring-supplies)
|
||||||
|
- [OIG 2025: CGM Payments Exceeded Supplier Costs](https://oig.hhs.gov/reports/all/2025/medicare-payments-for-continuous-glucose-monitors-and-supplies-exceeded-supplier-costs-and-retail-market-prices-indicating-medicare-can-save-at-least-tens-of-millions-of-dollars-in-one-year/)
|
||||||
|
- [KFF: MA Prior Authorization 2024](https://www.kff.org/medicare/nearly-50-million-prior-authorization-requests-were-sent-to-medicare-advantage-insurers-in-2024/)
|
||||||
|
- [Unequal DME/Pharmacy Enforcement — CMS Comment Record](https://downloads.regulations.gov/CMS-2025-0242-0025/attachment_1.pdf)
|
||||||
|
- [NikoHealth G2 Reviews 2026](https://www.g2.com/products/nikohealth/reviews)
|
||||||
|
- [DME/HME Software 2026 — Coruzant](https://coruzant.com/software/dme-and-hme-software-in-2026/)
|
||||||
|
- [DOJ $14.6B Healthcare Fraud Takedown 2025](https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/national-health-care-fraud-takedown-results-324-defendants-charged-connection-over-146-billion)
|
||||||
|
- [Federal Authorities Targeting CGM Reimbursement — Nat'l Law Review](https://natlawreview.com/article/federal-authorities-are-targeting-continuous-glucose-monitoring-cgm-device)
|
||||||
|
|
@ -0,0 +1,130 @@
|
||||||
|
# Signal CGM — Asset Sale Overview
|
||||||
|
## Plain Language Edition
|
||||||
|
### For Social Sharing and Non-Technical Decision Makers
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
> SIGNAL CGM
|
||||||
|
> Stop Losing 20% of Your Clients' CGM Revenue.
|
||||||
|
> A ready-to-deploy tool for DME billing companies.
|
||||||
|
> STTIL Solutions LLC | kisasttil@gmail.com
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### The Problem. In Plain English.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Right now, your clients are losing money they don't have to lose.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
For every $100 they bill on CGM (continuous glucose monitors), about **$20
|
||||||
|
disappears.** It doesn't go to fraud. It doesn't go to bad patients. It goes
|
||||||
|
to paperwork that wasn't ready on time.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
A claim gets denied. The product was already shipped. The patient has it. Your
|
||||||
|
client can't get it back. They try to appeal. Most of the time, they lose more
|
||||||
|
money fighting it than they get back.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Here's the part that stings: **94% of those denied claims could have been
|
||||||
|
prevented.** The information existed. Someone just didn't have it in hand
|
||||||
|
before the order shipped.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
That's what Signal CGM fixes.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### What Goes Wrong — and When We Catch It
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
There are six places in the workflow where a claim goes from "fine" to "denied."
|
||||||
|
We catch all six **before the product ships**, not after.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**1. Prior Authorization — the biggest one.**
|
||||||
|
No PA before shipment = no money, period. No appeals, no second chances. We
|
||||||
|
make sure PA is confirmed 45 days before the order goes out the door.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**2. The Coverage Clock.**
|
||||||
|
Every CGM patient has a refill schedule. We track it for every patient, every
|
||||||
|
month. This is the engine everything else runs on.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**3. The 6-Month Doctor Visit.**
|
||||||
|
Medicare requires a check-in with the prescribing doctor every 6 months for
|
||||||
|
CGM patients to keep getting supplies. When that visit doesn't happen, the
|
||||||
|
claim gets denied. We flag it a month before it becomes a problem.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**4. Prescriber Enrollment Check.**
|
||||||
|
If the doctor who ordered the CGM isn't currently enrolled in Medicare, the
|
||||||
|
claim gets denied — even if everything else is perfect. We re-check this every
|
||||||
|
time an order is about to ship, not just when the patient first signs up.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**5. New Patient Setup.**
|
||||||
|
Before anyone's first order ships, we check eligibility, duplicate claims, and
|
||||||
|
whether the right supplier is on file with CMS. Bad setups become expensive
|
||||||
|
surprises later.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**6. Audit Defense — the safety net.**
|
||||||
|
Every check we run gets logged with a time stamp. If CMS ever audits one of
|
||||||
|
your clients, that log shows exactly what was verified and when. It's proof
|
||||||
|
they were doing things right.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Try It First. On Your Own Client Data.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
We're offering a **60-day pilot** at no cost.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Pick two to three of your suppliers. We run Signal CGM on their live CGM
|
||||||
|
patient data. We track what would have been denied. We show you what changed.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
At the end of 60 days, you'll see the before-and-after in your clients' actual
|
||||||
|
numbers — not in a demo, not in a made-up scenario.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
If it doesn't show a clear improvement in first-pass CGM claims, there's no deal.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### What We're Asking
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Signal CGM is available two ways:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Option 1 — You own it.**
|
||||||
|
One-time purchase: **$45,000–$65,000.**
|
||||||
|
You get the full code, all the research, 30 days of live handoff sessions, and
|
||||||
|
the AI development context so your team can keep building. You white-label it.
|
||||||
|
You charge your clients. The revenue is yours.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Option 2 — Per-client licensing.**
|
||||||
|
**$75 per supplier client per month.**
|
||||||
|
If you have 20 CGM-active clients, that's $1,500/month. You pass the cost
|
||||||
|
through at whatever margin makes sense for your business.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Three Questions You're Probably Already Thinking
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**"Is this worth the cost?"**
|
||||||
|
Your clients are losing $20 of every $100 they bill on CGM. If Signal CGM
|
||||||
|
moves that to $14 lost instead of $20 — a modest improvement — a single
|
||||||
|
500-patient supplier recovers $9,000+ per month. At $75/month, that's a
|
||||||
|
120-to-1 return. The cost question answers itself.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**"Doesn't this make my billing services less necessary?"**
|
||||||
|
No. Your clients still need you to run their billing, handle denials, and
|
||||||
|
manage payer relationships. Signal CGM handles the pre-shipment window — the
|
||||||
|
45 days before a claim exists. That's not your current job. It becomes a new
|
||||||
|
service you offer, not a replacement for what you already do.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**"What happens to patient data?"**
|
||||||
|
Signal CGM never stores patient names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth,
|
||||||
|
or contact information. The only identifier the system uses is the supplier's
|
||||||
|
internal patient ID number. All audit logs hash even that. Data stays on your
|
||||||
|
infrastructure, not ours. A Business Associate Agreement is part of every
|
||||||
|
deployment.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Ready to run the pilot?**
|
||||||
|
Contact: kisasttil@gmail.com
|
||||||
|
STTIL Solutions LLC | Signal CGM
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
*Key data: CMS 2024 CGM improper payment rate 25.2% / $278.5M projected annual.*
|
||||||
|
*Source: [CMS Glucose Monitoring Compliance](https://www.cms.gov/training-education/medicare-learning-networkr-mln/compliance/medicare-provider-compliance-tips/glucose-monitoring-supplies)*
|
||||||
|
|
@ -0,0 +1,192 @@
|
||||||
|
# Signal CGM — Asset Sale Overview
|
||||||
|
## Professional Edition
|
||||||
|
### Strategic Acquisition for DME-Focused Revenue Cycle Management Organizations
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
> SIGNAL CGM
|
||||||
|
> A CGM-Specific Denial Prevention and Compliance Intelligence Platform
|
||||||
|
> for DME Revenue Cycle Management Organizations
|
||||||
|
>
|
||||||
|
> Asset Acquisition and Licensing Opportunity | April 2026
|
||||||
|
> STTIL Solutions LLC | kisasttil@gmail.com
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### The Problem Your Clients Cannot Solve Alone
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
CMS's 2024 Medicare Fee-for-Service data puts the CGM improper payment rate at
|
||||||
|
**25.2% — $278.5 million in projected annual overpayments** on glucose monitor
|
||||||
|
billing. Of that figure, 94.2% traces directly to documentation deficiencies:
|
||||||
|
missing or expired Certificates of Medical Necessity, prior authorizations not
|
||||||
|
obtained before shipment, undocumented 6-month physician visits, and prescriber
|
||||||
|
PECOS enrollment failures. Less than 6% reflects medical necessity disputes or
|
||||||
|
coverage policy conflicts.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The financial consequence for a supplier billing 500 active CGM patients monthly
|
||||||
|
runs deeper than the denial rate suggests. After accounting for appeal labor,
|
||||||
|
write-off timing, and the hard limits of the five-level Medicare appeals process,
|
||||||
|
**approximately 63% of denied CGM claim value is permanently absorbed** — not
|
||||||
|
recovered through redetermination or QIC reconsideration. The net effect on a
|
||||||
|
$125,000/month CGM billing book: a structural revenue loss of roughly $25,000
|
||||||
|
per month, or **20% of gross CGM billing**, that does not appear as a line item
|
||||||
|
in any supplier's P&L but is reflected across AR aging, appeal staffing overhead,
|
||||||
|
and uncompensated product cost.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
This is the problem Signal CGM was built to eliminate — not by improving the
|
||||||
|
appeals process, but by making the appeals process unnecessary.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Six Workflow Leverage Points, in Priority Order
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**1. Prior Authorization Tracking (Highest Leverage — No Recovery Path if Missed)**
|
||||||
|
PA not obtained before CGM shipment is the only denial type with zero appeal
|
||||||
|
recovery. Signal CGM initiates PA tracking 45 days before the projected refill
|
||||||
|
date — sufficient runway for the MAC's 14–21 day adjudication window plus a
|
||||||
|
resubmission buffer — and blocks order release until PA is confirmed in the
|
||||||
|
system. The April 13, 2026 expansion of the Required Prior Authorization list
|
||||||
|
and ongoing MA plan-specific requirements (UHC non-T1D since September 2024)
|
||||||
|
are automatically reflected in the current HCPCS code tracking layer.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**2. Refill Tracking / Coverage Clock (Enabling Architecture)**
|
||||||
|
A predictive refill calendar keyed to each patient's last dispense date, device
|
||||||
|
type, and payer-specific wear-day rules generates the operational foundation for
|
||||||
|
every other intervention point. Without forward visibility into the refill
|
||||||
|
schedule, PA initiation, CMN flagging, and visit compliance checks are reactive
|
||||||
|
lookups rather than automated workflow triggers.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**3. 6-Month Physician Visit Compliance (Highest Frequency Preventable Denial)**
|
||||||
|
Medicare's continued CGM coverage requirement mandates a documented in-person
|
||||||
|
or telehealth visit with the treating practitioner every six months. In a mature
|
||||||
|
500-patient book, 8–15 patients per month are approaching or past this window.
|
||||||
|
Unlike PA failures, missed-visit denials carry a 50–65% QIC overturn rate when
|
||||||
|
documentation can be obtained retroactively — but preventing the denial is worth
|
||||||
|
more than recovering half of it post-filing. Signal CGM surfaces each patient's
|
||||||
|
visit window as a prioritized outreach task 30+ days before the refill date.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**4. Prescriber PECOS Validation at Each Refill Cycle (Hard Write-Off Prevention)**
|
||||||
|
Medicare requires that the ordering physician maintain active enrollment at the
|
||||||
|
time each order is placed — not merely at the time of initial patient intake.
|
||||||
|
No incumbent DME billing platform currently re-validates prescriber enrollment
|
||||||
|
status at the refill cycle level. Signal CGM queries the NPPES registry against
|
||||||
|
the ordering provider's NPI at each scheduled refill and routes any inactive or
|
||||||
|
mismatched NPI to a supplier alert queue before the order can release.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**5. Intake Validation (Pipeline Defense)**
|
||||||
|
At new patient intake, Signal CGM performs eligibility verification, duplicate
|
||||||
|
claim history check, base equipment record validation (M124), and initial
|
||||||
|
prescriber PECOS status check before any first order is authorized.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**6. Audit Defense Log (Compliance Record as System Byproduct)**
|
||||||
|
Every pre-submission check generates a time-stamped audit log entry documenting
|
||||||
|
what was verified and when. In the current enforcement environment — with $1.9B
|
||||||
|
in DMEPOS improper payments under active OIG scrutiny, CGM explicitly identified
|
||||||
|
as a 2026 nationwide enforcement priority, and $1.8B in payments suspended by
|
||||||
|
CMS's Fraud Defense Operations Center in 2025 — a defensible compliance record
|
||||||
|
distinguishes a legitimate supplier from an audit target when the MAC issues an ADR.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### The Pilot Offer: 60-Day Proof of Concept on Live Client Data
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
We are offering a structured 60-day pilot at no cost or obligation.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Select two to three CGM-active clients from your book. Signal CGM runs against
|
||||||
|
their live billing data — tracking open refills, flagging PA status gaps, CMN
|
||||||
|
expirations, and visit compliance windows across their active CGM patient roster.
|
||||||
|
At day 30 and day 60, we deliver a denial risk exposure report: claims that would
|
||||||
|
have shipped without documentation in hand, segmented by denial type and estimated
|
||||||
|
dollar exposure.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The pilot does not require replacing or integrating with existing billing software.
|
||||||
|
Signal CGM operates as a parallel layer over whatever clearinghouse or platform
|
||||||
|
the client currently uses. PHI handling during the pilot is governed by a Business
|
||||||
|
Associate Agreement executed before data access begins.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
At the conclusion of 60 days, you hold a documented, client-specific before-and-after
|
||||||
|
comparison. That evidence either supports a deployment decision or it does not.
|
||||||
|
There is no obligation if the results do not meet your threshold.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### The Ask
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Option 1 — Full Asset Acquisition**
|
||||||
|
One-time acquisition: **$45,000–$65,000**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Includes: full Python/FastAPI source code, coverage calculator, audit logger,
|
||||||
|
PostgreSQL data models, payer rules configuration, complete research library
|
||||||
|
(market research, compliance roadmap, BAA framework), 30-day live knowledge
|
||||||
|
transfer with the STTIL Solutions founder, and the CLAUDE.md AI development
|
||||||
|
context enabling immediate continuation of development with Claude Code at
|
||||||
|
zero ramp-up cost. No licensing fees, no royalties, no ongoing STTIL involvement
|
||||||
|
unless contracted separately.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Buyer white-labels the product, deploys across their client base, and captures
|
||||||
|
the full downstream revenue.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Option 2 — Per-Seat Licensing**
|
||||||
|
**$75 per supplier client per month** (volume negotiable above 25 seats)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Includes ongoing payer rule updates, Required PA code list maintenance, and
|
||||||
|
access to product improvements. A 20-client deployment at $75/month represents
|
||||||
|
$1,500/month in licensing cost against a conservative $9,000–$18,000/month in
|
||||||
|
recovered denial revenue across those clients — before accounting for staff
|
||||||
|
labor savings on appeal management.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Three Objections Addressed Directly
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**"The cost isn't justified at our current scale."**
|
||||||
|
The financial threshold for ROI is low. A single client with 300 active CGM
|
||||||
|
patients billing $75,000/month, running at the documented 25% improper payment
|
||||||
|
rate, absorbs approximately $11,200/month in net CGM write-offs after exhausting
|
||||||
|
the appeal process. If Signal CGM prevents 40% of those — the conservative end
|
||||||
|
of what pre-submission PA and CMN tracking demonstrably delivers — that client
|
||||||
|
recovers $4,500/month. Against a $75/month per-seat cost, that is a 60-to-1
|
||||||
|
return on a single deployment. The 60-day pilot makes this calculation concrete
|
||||||
|
on your clients' actual numbers.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**"This tool reduces the complexity that makes our billing services valuable."**
|
||||||
|
Signal CGM operates exclusively in the pre-submission window — the 45 days before
|
||||||
|
a claim exists. It does not touch denial management, appeals coordination, payer
|
||||||
|
negotiation, remittance reconciliation, or any other function that defines your
|
||||||
|
current service relationship. What it does is give your clients fewer denials to
|
||||||
|
manage, which reduces the reactive workload on your team without displacing any
|
||||||
|
service functions you bill for. The more accurate framing: Signal CGM converts
|
||||||
|
reactive denial management — which your staff absorbs at $50–$118 per appeal
|
||||||
|
cycle — into a proactive workflow your clients pay you a premium to maintain.
|
||||||
|
It is a service tier expansion, not a service substitution.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**"We can't expose client PHI to a third-party system."**
|
||||||
|
Signal CGM was designed from the architecture level with this constraint as
|
||||||
|
non-negotiable. The system ingests five fields only: patient ID (the supplier's
|
||||||
|
internal account number, not a Medicare beneficiary identifier), device type,
|
||||||
|
shipment date, quantity, and payer code. No patient names, dates of birth, Social
|
||||||
|
Security numbers, diagnoses, or contact information enter the system at any point.
|
||||||
|
All audit logs hash even the patient ID before storage. The system is self-hosted
|
||||||
|
— it runs on your infrastructure or your client's infrastructure, not on STTIL's
|
||||||
|
servers. Data never transits a third-party network. The Business Associate
|
||||||
|
Agreement and full compliance documentation package are included in both
|
||||||
|
acquisition and licensing structures.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Next Step: Schedule the pilot conversation.**
|
||||||
|
kisasttil@gmail.com | STTIL Solutions LLC | Signal CGM
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
*This document is a confidential business communication intended for the named
|
||||||
|
recipient only.*
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Sources
|
||||||
|
- [CMS 2024 CGM Improper Payment Rate — 25.2% / $278.5M](https://www.cms.gov/training-education/medicare-learning-networkr-mln/compliance/medicare-provider-compliance-tips/glucose-monitoring-supplies)
|
||||||
|
- [OIG 2025: CGM Payments Exceeded Supplier Costs](https://oig.hhs.gov/reports/all/2025/medicare-payments-for-continuous-glucose-monitors-and-supplies-exceeded-supplier-costs-and-retail-market-prices-indicating-medicare-can-save-at-least-tens-of-millions-of-dollars-in-one-year/)
|
||||||
|
- [Federal Authorities Targeting CGM Claims — National Law Review](https://natlawreview.com/article/federal-authorities-are-targeting-continuous-glucose-monitoring-cgm-device)
|
||||||
|
- [MA Prior Authorization Denial Rates — KFF 2024](https://www.kff.org/medicare/nearly-50-million-prior-authorization-requests-were-sent-to-medicare-advantage-insurers-in-2024/)
|
||||||
|
- [UHC/Synapse Health DME Orders — UHCprovider.com](https://www.uhcprovider.com/en/resource-library/news/2025/synapse-health-manage-dme-orders.html)
|
||||||
|
- [CMS Prior Authorization Expansion April 13, 2026](https://www.hcintellect.com/post/medicare-dmepos-prior-authorization-expansion-effective-april-13-2026)
|
||||||
|
- [Denial Management Metrics](https://www.panahealthcaresolutions.com/blogs/denial-management-metrics-for-faster-reimbursement/)
|
||||||
99
CGM-Denial-Prevention/01-Claude-Outputs/master-summary.md
Normal file
99
CGM-Denial-Prevention/01-Claude-Outputs/master-summary.md
Normal file
|
|
@ -0,0 +1,99 @@
|
||||||
|
# Signal CGM — Master Summary
|
||||||
|
### Strategic Analysis Package | STTIL Solutions LLC | April 2026
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## What This Package Contains
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| File | Description |
|
||||||
|
|------|-------------|
|
||||||
|
| Analysis/signal-cgm-segment-scoring-v1.md | Three-model scoring: SaaS ICP, Asset Sale, Pilot Validation across 7 segments |
|
||||||
|
| Analysis/signal-cgm-re-scored-composite-v2.md | Composite re-score (50/30/20 weights) with MA + Medicaid payer scope applied |
|
||||||
|
| Analysis/signal-cgm-final-ranking-leverage-v3.md | Final four-segment ranking, denial quantification, six leverage points |
|
||||||
|
| Assets/signal-cgm-pitch-v1-plain.md | Leave-behind: plain language / social media (6th grade reading level) |
|
||||||
|
| Assets/signal-cgm-pitch-v2-professional.md | Leave-behind: professional (mid-size and larger billing organizations) |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Final Composite Rankings (MA + Medicaid Scope · Asset Sale Primary)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Rank | Segment | Composite Score | Primary Use |
|
||||||
|
|------|---------|----------------|-------------|
|
||||||
|
| #1 | Billing company / DME RCM outsourcer | **7.61** | Pilot partner + asset buyer |
|
||||||
|
| #2 | NikoHealth-type platform vendor | **7.34** | Primary asset sale target |
|
||||||
|
| #3 | VGM Group / MSO | **5.72** | Follow-on distribution post-sale |
|
||||||
|
| #4 | Mid-size independent supplier | **5.36** | SaaS ICP if pivot away from asset sale |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Weights:** Asset sale 50% · Pilot 30% · SaaS 20%
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Key Metrics (All Sources: CMS 2024 / OIG 2025 / KFF 2024)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Metric | Value |
|
||||||
|
|--------|-------|
|
||||||
|
| CGM improper payment rate (Medicare) | 25.2% |
|
||||||
|
| Projected annual CGM improper payments | $278.5M |
|
||||||
|
| Share from documentation failures | 94.2% |
|
||||||
|
| Net revenue loss after appeals (per supplier) | ~20% of gross CGM billing |
|
||||||
|
| Permanently written off (not recovered) | ~63% of denied claim value |
|
||||||
|
| Recovered through L1+L2 appeals | ~28% of denied claim value |
|
||||||
|
| MA DMEPOS appeal success rate (L2) | 63.9% |
|
||||||
|
| MA prior auth denial rate | 7.7% of PA requests |
|
||||||
|
| Traditional HME supplier locations (2024) | ~8,005 (−38% from 2013) |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Leverage Priority Stack (Workflow Intervention Points)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
1. **Prior Authorization** (9.2/10) — Only denial type with zero recovery path
|
||||||
|
2. **Refill Tracking / Coverage Clock** (8.8/10) — Enabling infrastructure for everything
|
||||||
|
3. **6-Month Visit Compliance** (8.1/10) — Highest-frequency daily queue driver
|
||||||
|
4. **PECOS Validation at Each Refill** (7.4/10) — Hard write-off prevention
|
||||||
|
5. **Intake Validation** (6.5/10) — Front-door pipeline defense
|
||||||
|
6. **Audit Defense Log** (5.8/10) — Compliance record as system byproduct
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Sequencing Recommendation
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
```
|
||||||
|
Week 1–2: Identify 2–3 billing company targets with CGM-active client books
|
||||||
|
Week 2–4: Approach with Version 1 or 2 leave-behind; propose 60-day pilot
|
||||||
|
Week 4–8: Execute pilot on live MA + Medicaid CGM data under BAA
|
||||||
|
Week 8: Deliver denial risk exposure report (before/after)
|
||||||
|
Week 9–12: Use pilot evidence to open NikoHealth asset sale conversation
|
||||||
|
at higher valuation than current $45K–$65K ask
|
||||||
|
Week 12+: Parallel VGM vendor partner program conversation for distribution
|
||||||
|
```
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Validated Hypotheses Status (as of April 2026)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
| Hypothesis | Status | Method |
|
||||||
|
|-----------|--------|--------|
|
||||||
|
| H1: Denials are documentation-fixable | **Confirmed by CMS data** — 94.2% doc failures | Desk research (OIG + CMS 2024) |
|
||||||
|
| H2: April 13 PA expansion is live and unpatched | **Likely confirmed** — no incumbent updated | Requires 2–3 discovery calls to verify |
|
||||||
|
| H3: CB 2028 deadline drives active buying urgency | **Untested** | Requires 5 discovery calls with owner-operators |
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Next-Steps Prompt for Next Claude Code Session
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
> Continue Signal CGM go-to-market execution. All strategic analysis is
|
||||||
|
> in CGM-Denial-Prevention/01-Claude-Outputs/. The asset sale target ranking
|
||||||
|
> is: #1 Billing company (pilot first), #2 NikoHealth (asset sale after pilot
|
||||||
|
> evidence). Payer scope: Medicare Advantage and Medicaid as first
|
||||||
|
> proof-of-concept. Pilot offer: 60 days, no cost, on live client data under
|
||||||
|
> BAA. Asset ask: $45K–$65K acquisition or $75/client/month licensing.
|
||||||
|
> Next priority: identify 3 billing company targets (suggest starting with
|
||||||
|
> Florida-based DME RCM firms given existing FAHCS research) and prepare
|
||||||
|
> outreach sequence using Assets/signal-cgm-pitch-v2-professional.md.
|
||||||
|
> Hypothesis H2 (April 13 PA gap) and H3 (CB urgency) still require
|
||||||
|
> discovery call validation per validation-hypotheses.md in Obsidian vault.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
*Generated: April 2026 | STTIL Solutions LLC | Signal CGM*
|
||||||
|
*All figures from CMS, OIG, KFF primary sources — see individual files for citations*
|
||||||
Loading…
Reference in a new issue