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State Alerts: What’s Happening in California?

Is California a good place to build a career as a medical biller and coder?

If you have been following the news, you already know about the state’s budgetary problems, which have led to cutbacks in state funding for healthcare services, education, and a variety of essential services.

According to the Anderson Forecast, an independent trend-monitoring report issued by UCLA, here’s how things look for California’s overall employment picture in the coming year:

“Writing about California, UCLA Anderson Senior Economist Jerry Nickelsburg notes that despite the recession having officially ended, California’s unemployment rate continues to rise, while local governments continue to shed jobs. The outlook for the balance of 2010 is for little or no growth in the state, with the economy picking up speed slightly by the beginning of next year . . . The unemployment rate – currently at 12.5% – will fall slowly through the balance of this year and should average 11.8% for 2010. Though the state’s economy will be growing, it won’t be generating enough jobs to push the unemployment rate below double-digits until 2012.”

Double-digit unemployment is no laughing matter. Yet high unemployment does not necessarily translate to fewer jobs for medical billers and coders. Here are some factors to consider if you are thinking about working in the state:

  • California has Medi-Cal, it’s own state-funded healthcare insurance program. Claims for medical service must be submitted not only to insurers and Medicare, but (if patients are participants) to Medi-Cal too. The process of billing claims to Medi-Cal can be complex, which can create a need in the state for medical billers and coders with applicable training.
  • California is seeing an increase in the number of urgent care centers and other non-hospital healthcare service providers. One example: According to The Urgent Care Association of America, “the number of urgent care centers in the U.S. grew from approximately 8,000 in February 2009 to 8,700 in February 2010.” Urgent care centers are now dispersed widely through the state of California, as are California chiropractors and other healthcare providers that can hire medical billers and coders.
  • The need for healthcare services in California remains strong. Even though the California Hospital Association points to a reduction in state funding for hospitals, there are many positive signs. One is that Kaiser Permanente, one of America’s leading not-for-profit healthcare plan providers, has just announced plans to equip 15 California hospitals with 15 megawatts of solar-generated electrical power by the summer of 2011. That’s a significant investment in the state’s hospital infrastructure.

So, is there a future for you in California? It could well be. To keep aware of hiring in the state, we’d recommend visiting CareerBuilder.com’s page of California job listings for medical billers and coders. It’s a convenient way to monitor some of the available jobs in the state.

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