Pulmonology Practice Management Realities
Pulmonology practice management spans office-based ambulatory care and hospital-based inpatient work (ICU coverage, pulmonary consultation). Office workflow handles asthma, COPD, interstitial lung disease, pulmonary hypertension, sleep disorders (often combined with sleep medicine), and lung cancer screening coordination. PFT (pulmonary function testing) ancillary revenue is significant — in-office spirometry, full PFTs, DLCO, methacholine challenge. Sleep medicine integration (polysomnography, home sleep apnea testing, CPAP management) adds distinct revenue stream per American Thoracic Society data.
Revenue Cycle Complexity
Revenue cycle has layered streams. Clinic E/M for chronic disease management. PFT billing (CPT 94010 spirometry, 94060 pre/post bronchodilator, 94720 DLCO, 94010 family with various add-ons). Bronchoscopy billing (CPT 31622-31649) when performed — typically at hospital with professional fee to practice. Pulmonary rehab is a billable program for COPD/ILD (CPT G0424 with session codes). Sleep medicine billing is distinct — polysomnography (CPT 95810/95811/95808), HSAT (G0398-G0400), CPAP management (E0601 DME with separate billing pathway). Advanced PAH therapy (prostacyclins, endothelin receptor antagonists) requires specialty pharmacy and substantial prior auth.
Operational Workflow
Operational workflow combines clinic, testing, and hospital work. Clinic schedule supports chronic disease management with PFT workflow parallel (patients can have PFT before/after physician visit). Sleep medicine workflow is separate — sleep study scheduling, scoring, patient education, CPAP/BiPAP compliance monitoring via ResMed AirView and Philips Care Orchestrator. Hospital work includes ICU coverage for critical care-trained pulmonologists, inpatient consultation, and bronchoscopy procedures. Pulmonary rehab program scheduling is often outsourced or run by dedicated respiratory therapy staff.
Regulatory & Industry Framework
Regulatory framework includes CMS Quality Payment Program (MIPS/MVPs) with ATS-provided measures, HHS Office for Civil Rights HIPAA, AASM accreditation for sleep centers (voluntary but often required by payers), FDA regulation for CPAP/BiPAP devices, CMS-specific rules for lung cancer screening (USPSTF-aligned coverage with specific eligibility), CMS DME rules for CPAP/BiPAP (face-to-face visit requirement, adherence monitoring for continued coverage), and state medical board rules for pulmonary practice.
What Changes at Scale
Scaling pulmonology creates operational leverage through PFT, sleep medicine, and pulmonary rehab concentration. Mid-size groups (5-10 pulmonologists) support in-house PFT lab, sleep center, and pulmonary rehab. Large groups operate multi-location with sleep-medicine-focused centers, shared CPAP compliance operations, and specialty concentration (interstitial lung disease, pulmonary hypertension, transplant pulmonology, interventional pulmonology). PE involvement in pulmonology is limited given hospital-heavy practice and critical care dependencies.
Related Services & Specialties
Geographic Coverage
Practice management support across all 11 NJ counties: Bergen, Hudson, Essex, Passaic, Morris, Union, Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset, Ocean, Mercer. Major cities: Hackensack, Newark, Jersey City, Paterson, Elizabeth, Morristown, New Brunswick, Princeton, Trenton, Toms River. See complete locations directory.
How an Engagement Starts
Our process is structured, documented, and starts with listening — not pitching.
Step 1 — Discovery call (30 minutes, no obligation). Practice owner or office manager. We listen. What's working, what's broken, what's the immediate pain point. No pitch, no vendor pressure, no slide deck.
Step 2 — Scoped assessment. On-site or remote — we inventory infrastructure, EHR environment, cybersecurity posture, vendor contracts, and clinical workflow patterns. Typically 2-5 business days depending on practice size. Deliverable: a written assessment with findings and prioritized remediation recommendations.
Step 3 — Proposal and engagement structure. If Pulmonology practice management is a fit, we propose an engagement — scope, pricing, timeline, measurable outcomes. No long-term lock-in contracts on first engagement. If we're not the right fit, we'll tell you directly.
Step 4 — Onboarding and delivery. Structured 30-60 day onboarding with clear milestones. Documentation, tooling deployment, knowledge transfer, and operational handoff. You know exactly what's happening and when.
For practices currently with a generalist MSP, see our Qventive vs. generalist MSP comparison. For practices evaluating internal hire vs. managed services, see managed IT vs. internal hire. For questions on the MSP landscape generally, our resources and FAQ pages cover common questions.
Why Qventive, Specifically
Not a pitch — a factual description of how we're structured differently.
Healthcare-exclusive since 1994. Every engineer, every helpdesk technician, every account manager works only with medical practices. No retail, no law firms, no logistics companies. That focus has operational consequences — our on-call engineer at 2 a.m. knows what a downtime toolkit is for Epic. Our helpdesk understands that “the EHR is slow” is an emergency, not a ticket.
Steve Gerbino founded this company in 1994. The founder still answers questions. The depth of specialty and clinical workflow knowledge compounded over three decades is genuinely hard to replicate — and it's why we serve solo practices, group practices, multi-location practices, FQHCs, ASCs, concierge medicine, hospital-adjacent practices, and PE-backed platforms with equal depth.
Observe-Improve-Prevent methodology. Every engagement starts with observation — shadowing providers, auditing infrastructure, reviewing documentation. We don't assume. Then we improve based on what we actually see. Then we monitor continuously to prevent drift. This isn't a marketing slogan — it's an operational pattern baked into how our engineers work.
Geographic proximity. Our Bergen County headquarters in Hackensack means fast on-site response across NJ. We're not a 50-state remote-only MSP. When something needs hands-on work — new infrastructure, physical troubleshooting, device deployment — we send people. Learn more about us, our why Qventive positioning, and read testimonials from practices we serve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Detailed answers from 30+ years of healthcare-exclusive IT and practice management expertise.
How do you handle PFT billing?+
Spirometry (CPT 94010), pre/post bronchodilator (94060), full PFT (94010 + 94726 lung volumes + 94729 DLCO). Bundling rules — some codes cannot be billed together. Interpretation billed separately from technical (-26/-TC modifiers). In-office PFT is substantial ancillary revenue requiring credentialed respiratory therapist staff.
What about sleep medicine integration?+
Sleep medicine is distinct sub-specialty often combined with pulmonology. Polysomnography (CPT 95810/95811/95808), home sleep apnea testing (G0398-G0400), MSLT (95805), CPAP titration (95811). CPAP device DME pathway (E0601) is separate billing. AASM accreditation often required by commercial payers.
How do you handle CPAP compliance monitoring?+
Medicare requires 70% adherence (4+ hours use per night, 70% of nights) over 30 consecutive days in first 90 days for continued CPAP coverage. Device manufacturer platforms (ResMed AirView, Philips Care Orchestrator) provide compliance data. Workflow: initial setup, compliance check at 30-90 days, medical re-qualification if needed.
What's the lung cancer screening workflow?+
USPSTF-aligned coverage: 50-80 year olds, 20+ pack-year smoking history, current smoker or quit within 15 years. CMS coverage requires shared decision-making visit (G0296) before first LDCT. Follow-up per Lung-RADS. EHR workflow automates eligibility screening and tracks surveillance.
How do you handle PAH therapy?+
Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension therapy (Remodulin, Flolan, Ventavis, Tyvaso, Uptravi, newer oral agents) requires specialty pharmacy coordination. Right heart catheterization confirmation before therapy initiation. Extensive prior auth. Ongoing clinical and hemodynamic monitoring. REMS programs for specific agents.
What about pulmonary rehab billing?+
Pulmonary rehab program (CPT G0424 with specific session codes) covers COPD and other chronic lung disease patients. Usually 36 sessions over 12 weeks. Outcome measurement (6-minute walk, dyspnea scales) for quality reporting. Separate respiratory therapy staff and program structure.
How do you handle interstitial lung disease?+
ILD management includes antifibrotic therapy (Ofev, Esbriet) with substantial prior auth. Specialty pharmacy coordination. Lung transplant referral workflow for eligible ILD patients. Clinical trial participation common. Multi-disciplinary ILD board meetings for complex cases.
What about hospital and ICU work?+
Critical care-trained pulmonologists cover ICU with separate billing structure (CPT 99291/99292 critical care time). Inpatient consultation (99221-99223 initial, 99231-99233 follow-up). Bronchoscopy at hospital bills professional fee (facility fee goes to hospital).
Does Qventive serve my area?+
Last Updated: April 2026 · Reviewed by Qventive Healthcare clinical technology team