OB/GYN Billing Services in Connecticut

Connecticut's ob/gyn practices face unique billing challenges shaped by Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Connecticut's commercial rules, HUSKY Health (a self-insured, state-administered Medicaid program with no MCOs) requirements, and National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K) Medicare policies. Our AAPC-certified coders specialize in both CT payer rules and ob/gyn coding complexity.

AAPC Certified
CT Payer Expert
OB/GYN Specialists
2.49% Rate
Last reviewed: May 2026Reviewed by the Go Medical Billing Editorial TeamAAPC-certified coders
13,000+CT Physicians
2.49%Starting Rate
1Medicaid MCOs
98%+Clean Claim Rate

Why Connecticut OB/GYN Practices Need Specialized Billing

Connecticut's healthcare market includes 13,000+ physicians, and ob/gyn practices here face a payer market dominated by Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Connecticut on the commercial side and HUSKY Health (a self-insured, state-administered Medicaid program with no MCOs) on the public payer side. Medicare claims are processed through National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K), which applies its own Local Coverage Determinations that directly affect ob/gyn procedure coverage and medical necessity requirements. Generic billing teams without CT specific knowledge leave revenue on the table.

OB/GYN billing itself is complex. Obstetric billing uses global maternity codes (59400 vaginal, 59510 cesarean, 59610 VBAC) that bundle antepartum visits, delivery, and postpartum care. But high-risk antepartum visits, complications, and procedures outside the global package can be billed separately with the right documentation. Gynecologic billing covers office procedures (colposcopy, endometrial biopsy), surgery (hysterectomy, laparoscopy), and preventive care. When you combine this coding complexity with Connecticut's specific payer rules, authorization requirements, and 1 HUSKY Health (a self-insured, state-administered Medicaid program with no MCOs) managed care plans that each have their own billing rules, you need a team that understands both dimensions. Go Medical Billing provides that expertise at 2.49% of collections, serving ob/gyn practices from Hartford to Norwalk and across Connecticut.

2026 Connecticut Medicare Allowables for OB/GYN CPT Codes

These are the 2026 Medicare allowable amounts for ob/gyn CPT codes in Connecticut, processed under National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K). Allowables are locality-adjusted, so CTrates differ from other states — the highest-value ob/gyn code below pays $2,643.38 non-facility here. Compare any code across states with our Medicare fee calculator by state.

Code
Description
Non-Facility
Facility
Routine obstetric care (vaginal delivery, global)
$2,361.37
$2,361.37
Cesarean delivery (global)
$2,643.38
$2,643.38
VBAC (vaginal birth after cesarean, global)
$2,491.74
$2,491.74
Fetal non-stress test
$53.95
$53.95
Colposcopy with biopsy
$176.24
$125.52
Hysteroscopy with biopsy
$1,363.13
$215.60
Laparoscopic hysterectomy
$877.82
$877.82
OB ultrasound, first trimester
$124.32
$124.32

Source: 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule, CT locality (National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K)). Commercial Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Connecticut rates typically run above these benchmarks; HUSKY Health (a self-insured, state-administered Medicaid program with no MCOs) rates run below. Figures for reference, not a guarantee of payment.

The Connecticut Market Context for OB/GYN Practices

Connecticut has about 13,000 physicians and the most unusual Medicaid structure in the country. HUSKY Health is self-insured, meaning the state pays providers directly rather than contracting with MCOs that bear capitated risk. Connecticut removed MCOs from Medicaid in 2012 after years of poor outcomes and rate disputes, and the state has used Administrative Services Organizations (ASOs) ever since. Community Health Network of Connecticut administers medical services, Beacon Health Options administers behavioral health, DentaQuest administers dental, and Conduent administers non-emergency transportation. Provider rates have steadily improved since 2012 according to state data. HUSKY has four eligibility categories: HUSKY A (children, pregnant women, parents), HUSKY B (CHIP for higher-income children), HUSKY C (aged, blind, disabled), and HUSKY D (childless adults). Connecticut expanded Medicaid in 2014. The commercial market is dominated by Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Connecticut and ConnectiCare, with Yale New Haven Health (about $7.6B annual revenue) and Hartford HealthCare as the two largest health systems in the state. The PCMH+ program provides enhanced payments to recognized patient-centered medical homes.

Connecticut-specific factors that shape ob/gyn reimbursement: Connecticut removed MCOs from its Medicaid program in 2012 and moved to a self-insured model administered through Administrative Services Organizations. It is one of very few states with no risk-bearing Medicaid MCOs.; HUSKY Health uses four ASOs: Community Health Network of Connecticut for medical, Beacon Health Options for behavioral, DentaQuest for dental, and Conduent for transportation. Each handles a different slice of the program.; Yale New Haven Hospital is the largest hospital in New England by bed count (1,541 beds) and is the anchor of Yale New Haven Health, which has about $7.6B in annual revenue.. Our CT coders build these into every ob/gynclaim — see how this works alongside our Connecticut medical billing and ob/gyn billing teams.

Connecticut Payer Challenges for OB/GYN

Every CT payer has specific rules for ob/gyn claims. Here's how we navigate them.

Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Connecticut OB/GYN Claims

Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Connecticut processes the largest share of Connecticut commercial ob/gyn claims. We know their CT specific fee schedules, prior authorization requirements for ob/gyn procedures, and their appeal timelines when claims are denied. The OB global includes 13 antepartum visits, delivery, and postpartum. Unbundling errors in either direction cause denials.

HUSKY Health (a self-insured, state-administered Medicaid program with no MCOs) OB/GYN Billing

HUSKY Health (a self-insured, state-administered Medicaid program with no MCOs) routes ob/gyn patients through 1 managed care plans: No MCOs. HUSKY Health is administered through four Administrative Services Organizations (ASOs): Community Health Network of Connecticut (medical), Beacon Health Options (behavioral), DentaQuest (dental), and Conduent (transportation). The state pays providers directly.. Each MCO has its own ob/gyn authorization and billing rules that we manage.

Medicare (National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K)) OB/GYN Coverage

National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K) processes Medicare ob/gyn claims in Connecticut with its own Local Coverage Determinations. We navigate National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K)'s policies around high-risk add-ons to prevent medical necessity denials.

Denial Prevention for Connecticut OB/GYN

Common ob/gyn denials in Connecticut include antepartum visit billed outside global without documentation and high-risk condition not coded as secondary diagnosis. Our team catches these issues before submission and appeals aggressively with CT payer-specific documentation when denials occur.

Get Expert OB/GYN Billing in Connecticut

Free billing assessment for your CT ob/gyn practice. See where revenue is leaking.

98%+ clean claim rate
2.49% starting rate
Results in 30 days

Fill in your details and we'll call you back

Or call directly:888-701-6090

What We Handle for Connecticut OB/GYN Practices

Obstetric global package management
High-risk pregnancy coding and billing
Gynecologic office procedure coding
Surgical gynecology (hysterectomy, laparoscopy)
OB ultrasound and fetal testing billing
Colposcopy and cervical biopsy coding
Preventive GYN visit optimization
Prior auth for GYN surgery and imaging

Connecticut OB/GYN Billing Cost Comparison

Hiring an in-house biller with ob/gyn expertise in Connecticut costs $44K-$60K annually in salary alone. Add benefits, software, clearinghouse fees, and office space, and the true cost is even higher. At 2.49% of collections, Go Medical Billing provides an entire team of AAPC-certified ob/gyn coders and CT payer specialists for a fraction of that cost.

$44K-$60K

In-House Biller Salary

+ benefits, software, space

2.49%

Go Medical Billing Rate

Full team, all services included

60-80%

Typical Cost Reduction

With better results

Frequently Asked Questions

All major CT payers: Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Connecticut, ConnectiCare, Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Oxford Health Plans, HUSKY Health (a self-insured, state-administered Medicaid program with no MCOs) (including No MCOs. HUSKY Health is administered through four Administrative Services Organizations (ASOs): Community Health Network of Connecticut (medical), Beacon Health Options (behavioral), DentaQuest (dental), and Conduent (transportation). The state pays providers directly.), and Medicare through National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K). If a payer accepts ob/gyn patients in Connecticut, we submit and follow-up on claims with them.
The most frequent ob/gyn denials we see from CT payers include antepartum visit billed outside global without documentation, high-risk condition not coded as secondary diagnosis, ultrasound medical necessity not established. Our team catches these before submission by applying both ob/gyn coding expertise and CT payer-specific rules to every claim.
HUSKY Health (a self-insured, state-administered Medicaid program with no MCOs) routes ob/gyn patients through 1 managed care plans: No MCOs. HUSKY Health is administered through four Administrative Services Organizations (ASOs): Community Health Network of Connecticut (medical), Beacon Health Options (behavioral), DentaQuest (dental), and Conduent (transportation). The state pays providers directly.. Each MCO has its own ob/gyn authorization requirements, fee schedules, and billing rules. We credential and bill with all of them so your ob/gyn practice gets paid correctly.
Most CT ob/gyn practices are fully transitioned within two to three weeks. We connect to your EHR, learn your ob/gyn workflows, and start submitting claims to Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Connecticut, HUSKY Health (a self-insured, state-administered Medicaid program with no MCOs), Medicare, and all your CT payers with no downtime.

Fix Your Connecticut OB/GYN Billing

Call 888-701-6090 for a free billing assessment specific to your CT ob/gyn practice. We'll show you where revenue is leaking and how to fix it.