(CRCR) Exam Questions & Answers |
Updated Practice Test Bank & Study Guide
for Healthcare Revenue Cycle Certification
CERTIFIED REVENUE CYCLE REPRESENTATIVE (CRCR) EXAM
Practice Test Bank & Study Guide
DOCUMENT OVERVIEW:
• This comprehensive practice exam contains 200 questions designed to thoroughly
prepare you for the CRCR certification exam, covering all core revenue cycle
competencies with detailed EXPERT RATIONALE for every answer to reinforce
learning and retention.
• Study this material by working through sections systematically, reviewing EXPERT
RATIONALE carefully after each answer, and using incorrect responses as learning
opportunities to strengthen weak areas before your official exam.
1) What is the primary purpose of insurance verification before patient
service delivery?
A) To determine the patient's credit score
B) To confirm coverage eligibility, benefits, and patient responsibility
C) To establish the patient's work history
D) To verify the patient's emergency contact information
E) To assess the patient's income level
✓ CORRECT ANSWER: B) To confirm coverage eligibility, benefits, and patient
responsibility
EXPERT RATIONALE: Insurance verification ensures that the insurance policy is
active, covers the specific services the patient will receive, identifies any limitations
,or exclusions, and determines the patient's out-of-pocket obligations (copay,
deductible, coinsurance). This prevents claim denials and billing disputes while
protecting the healthcare facility's revenue. Verifying eligibility, benefits, and patient
responsibility is a fundamental revenue cycle function that occurs before service
delivery.
2) Which document is typically used to capture patient demographic and
insurance information at the point of service?
A) Explanation of Benefits (EOB)
B) Patient Registration Form
C) Remittance Advice (RA)
D) Claim Submission Form
E) Discharge Summary
✓ CORRECT ANSWER: B) Patient Registration Form
EXPERT RATIONALE: The patient registration form is the primary document used
to collect demographic information (name, address, date of birth) and insurance
details (policy numbers, group numbers, employer information) at the point of
service. This information is essential for accurate claim submission and billing. The
EOB and RA are insurer documents, while discharge summaries are clinical
documents, and claim forms are generated after registration.
3) What does the term "clean claim" mean in healthcare billing?
A) A claim that has been paid in full by the insurance company
B) A claim submitted without any errors or missing information that meets payer
requirements
C) A claim that has been appealed and overturned
D) A claim that includes all supporting medical documentation
,E) A claim that is submitted electronically rather than on paper
✓ CORRECT ANSWER: B) A claim submitted without any errors or missing
information that meets payer requirements
EXPERT RATIONALE: A clean claim is one that contains all required information,
follows proper formatting standards, includes accurate diagnosis and procedure
codes, matches medical documentation, and is submitted within required
timeframes. Clean claims are processed faster and have higher approval rates.
Industry standards suggest clean claims should be paid within 30 days, while claims
with errors face delays and denials.
4) Which coding system is primarily used to code diagnoses in healthcare
billing?
A) CPT codes
B) HCPCS codes
C) ICD codes
D) RVU codes
E) DRG codes
✓ CORRECT ANSWER: C) ICD codes
EXPERT RATIONALE: ICD (International Classification of Diseases) codes, currently
ICD-10-CM in the United States, are used to code and classify diagnoses, conditions,
and reasons for encounters. CPT codes represent procedures and services, HCPCS
codes are for supplies and services, RVU codes represent relative value units, and
DRG codes represent diagnosis-related groups for hospital payment. The revenue
cycle requires accurate ICD coding for claim justification.
5) What is the correct order of the revenue cycle process?
A) Billing, Claims Submission, Patient Registration, Payment Posting, Collections
, B) Patient Registration, Insurance Verification, Coding, Claims Submission, Payment
Posting, Denials Management
C) Claims Submission, Coding, Insurance Verification, Patient Registration, Payment
Posting
D) Payment Posting, Collections, Patient Registration, Coding, Claims Submission
E) Insurance Verification, Patient Registration, Billing, Collections, Denials
Management
✓ CORRECT ANSWER: B) Patient Registration, Insurance Verification, Coding,
Claims Submission, Payment Posting, Denials Management
EXPERT RATIONALE: The revenue cycle follows a logical sequence beginning with
patient registration to capture information, followed by insurance verification to
confirm coverage, then coding of diagnoses and procedures, claims submission to
insurers, payment posting when payments are received, and finally denials
management for any claim rejections. This sequence ensures maximum claim
acceptance and timely payment collection.
6) Which term describes the amount a patient must pay toward healthcare
costs before insurance coverage begins?
A) Copay
B) Coinsurance
C) Deductible
D) Premium
E) Out-of-pocket maximum
✓ CORRECT ANSWER: C) Deductible
EXPERT RATIONALE: A deductible is the fixed amount a patient must pay out-of-
pocket for covered healthcare services before the insurance plan begins to pay.
Copays are fixed fees per visit, coinsurance is a percentage split between patient
and insurer after deductible is met, premiums are monthly insurance payments,