Patent Publication Number: US-10762570-B2

Title: System and method for using a first electronic representation of contract terms for generating a second electronic representation of the contract terms

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     The present application is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/965,673 filed Oct. 14, 2004, titled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR USING A FIRST ELECTRONIC REPRESENTATION OF CONTRACT TERMS FOR GENERATING A SECOND ELECTRONIC REPRESENTATION OF THE CONTRACT TERMS, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference. The present application is also related to commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/577,386 filed May 23, 2000 titled “NOVEL METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR REPRICING A REIMBURSEMENT CLAIM AGAINST A CONTRACT,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,904,317, and co-pending and commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/923,539 filed Aug. 20, 2004 titled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR MODELING TERMS OF A CONTRACT UNDER NEGOTIATION TO DETERMINE THEIR IMPACT ON A CONTRACTING PARTY,” the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference. 
    
    
     TECHNICAL FIELD 
     This disclosure relates generally to contract management, and more particularly to using contract terms from a first electronic representation of a contract to form at least a part of a second electronic representation of the contract. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Contracts govern many activities of individuals, companies, and other entities. The terms of contracts between the contracting parties are important for defining roles, responsibilities, rights, and obligations of each party. As one example, contracts govern the relationships between many service providers and insurers. For instance, in the third-party payer health care industry, a “third party” (referred to herein generally as an “insurer”) pays for health care services received by a member (or “insured”) from a service provider (any person, such as a doctor, nurse, dentist, pharmacist, etc., or institution, such as a hospital or clinic, that provides medical care). Examples of such third-party payers (or “insurers”) include an insurance company (e.g., BlueCross® BlueShield®, Aetna® Inc., etc.), Health Maintenance Organization (“HMO”), Preferred Provider Organization (“PPO”), or the Federal Government (e.g., Medicare). The insurers negotiate with the service providers (e.g., hospitals, doctors, etc.) various terms, including the amounts (and corresponding conditions) that the insurers will pay the service providers for services rendered to the members of the insurers. For instance, a negotiated contract may specify that an insurer will pay a service provider X amount for performance of a given procedure (e.g., caesarean-section procedure, open heart surgery, blood test, routine physical exam, LASIK eye surgery, dental root canal, prescribed pharmaceuticals, etc.) for one of its members. The contract may specify those procedures for which the insurer will reimburse the service provider, as well as the corresponding reimbursement rates for each procedure. Of course, any arrangement imaginable that is agreeable to both parties may be provided for in the contracts, and such terms are becoming increasingly complex. The negotiated terms generally differ from service provider to service provider as the types of services and specialties of each service provider may differ. At any given time, an insurer may have many contracts in force for governing its relationship with its service providers. 
     Contract management systems are known for monitoring the contracts (e.g., to remind parties of their respective rights and obligations under the contract). More particularly, contract management systems may monitor which contracts are in place at any given time and remind parties as to their performance obligations as such obligations arise and contract renewals. As examples, such contract management systems are available from diCarta, Inc. (e.g., the diCarta Contracts Version 5 software solution) and Contract Management Solutions, Inc. (CMSI) (e.g., the CMSI 6.1 Software Suite). Particularly considering the large number of contracts that are in force at any given time for an insurer, the contract management systems are important tools for aiding the insurer in managing the life cycle of its various contracts from reminding the insurer of upcoming renewals to aiding the insurer during the negotiation process with a service provider to aiding the insurer in monitoring its obligations under an executed contract. 
     Typically, once contract terms are agreed upon and a contract is executed by the parties, the insurer provides the contract terms to an operator who interprets the terms and attempts to manually configure their contract management system in accordance with such terms. Particularly considering the increasing complexity of many terms in such contracts, the actual negotiated terms may differ materially from the configuration of the contract management system as a result of errors in the manual configuration process. In addition to the human errors that may arise in manually configuring an insurer&#39;s contract management system in accordance with an executed contract with a given service provider, such manual configuration also incurs undesirable delays in having the newly executed contract incorporated into the contract management system. 
     Additionally, claims processing systems are often implemented by an insurer, which are intended to at least partially automate the processing of claims received from service providers by insurers in accordance with the terms of the governing executed contracts. Thus, typically once contract terms are agreed upon and a contract is executed by the parties, the insurer&#39;s claims processing system is configured in accordance with such terms for processing claims received from the service provider (e.g., for determining the proper price to be paid by the insurer for a given claim in accordance with the terms of the governing contract). 
     Traditionally, the claims processing systems and the contract management systems are disparate systems, and the configurations of those systems to reflect the terms of a given contract are performed separately and thus do not ensure that the contract terms are reflected consistently across the various systems. 
     BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention is directed to a system and method in which contract terms from a first electronic representation of a contract are used to form at least a part of a second electronic representation of the contract. For instance, the first electronic representation of a contract may be formed for use with a first software application, such as an adjudication application, and such first electronic representation of the contract is used to form at least part of a second electronic representation of the contract, wherein such second electronic representation is used by a second software application, such as a contract management application. As described further herein, disparate applications often utilize different representations of contract terms (e.g., different formats for the electronic representation, etc.), and certain embodiments enable a second electronic representation to be formed at least in part from a first electronic representation so that the different electronic representations are consistent as to the overlapping contract terms included therein. Thus, according to certain embodiments, a first electronic representation of a contract is used to form at least part of a second electronic representation of the contract that is not compatible with the first electronic representation. The first and second electronic representations may be used by disparate applications. 
     In certain embodiments, a contract is represented electronically in an adjudication application that processes information and/or performs tasks according to the terms of the contract. One example of an adjudication application is a claim adjudication application that processes claims submitted to an insurer in accordance with the terms of a contract. Of course, other adjudication applications may perform other operations that are governed by terms of a contract, and thus such adjudication applications utilize an electronic representation of the governing contract. The electronic representation of the contract used by the adjudication application is, in certain embodiments, communicated to a contract management application for forming at least a portion of an electronic representation of a contract that is managed by the contract management application. As opposed to adjudicating actions that are governed by the contract (as with the adjudication application); the contract management application manages the contract to, for example, remind a party of the renewal date for the contract, remind the party of other deadlines (such as fixed payment dates, etc.) that arise under the contract. Thus, while the adjudication application performs operations, such as determining a payment amount for an insurer to pay a service provider for a submitted claim, that are governed by the terms of contract, the contract management application manages the contract itself 
     The contract management application may require an electronic representation of the contract that it is to manage that differs from the electronic representation required by the adjudication application. Accordingly, in certain embodiments, the electronic representation of contract terms that is used by the adjudication application is translated into the electronic representation that is used by the contract management application for forming at least a part of the electronic representation of the contract to be managed by the contract management application. In one embodiment, the electronic representation of the contract on the adjudication application generates a plain language (e.g., plain English terminology) representation of the terms of the contract, and such plain language representation is communicated to the contract management application. For instance, at least one phrase describing a term of the contract may be generated. In certain implementations, the at least one phrase includes at least one sentence that describes the term of the contract. 
     As a specific example, in one embodiment an electronic representation of a contract between an insurer and a service provider is implemented within a claim adjudication application for computing the proper amount of payment for the insurer to pay the service provider for claims submitted to the insurer by the service provider. The rate terms of the contract that govern the payment for claims (used by the claim adjudication application) is communicated to the contract management application. Thus, the rate terms provided to the contract management application accurately specify the rate terms of the electronic representation of the contract that will be used by the claim adjudication system. Accordingly, the rate terms received by the contract management application can be used in forming a portion of the electronic contract between the insurer and the service provider that the contract management application manages. In addition to the rate terms received by the contract management application from the electronic representation used by the adjudication application, the electronic representation of the contract in the contract management system may include further information, such as contract term (e.g., expiration date), etc. 
     It is often desirable to represent terms of a contract across a plurality of disparate applications. For instance, an insurer may utilize both a claim adjudication system and a contract management application, and each of those disparate applications may have different electronic representations of a given contract. That is, the claim adjudication system may utilize a first electronic representation of a contract between the insurer and a service provider for adjudicating claims submitted to the insurer by the service provider. The contract management application is a disparate application that may utilize a different electronic representation of the contract between the insurer and the service provider, which the contract management application uses for managing the contract (e.g., to remind the insurer of the contract renewal deadline, etc.). Thus, traditionally these disparate applications require that different electronic representations of a given contract be formed for each application. Further, each of the different electronic representations have typically been created through manual entry of data into each application. Thus, a mistake in the data entry or inconsistent interpretation of the contract terms by data entry personnel results in inconsistency between the different electronic representations of a given contract. 
     In view of the above, manual entry of at least a portion of the contract terms into the contract management system is alleviated by certain embodiments provided herein, which improves efficiency and accuracy in creating the electronic representation of the contract to be managed by the contract management system. Further, in instances in which the terms of the electronic representation of the contract to be used by an adjudication application are communicated to the contract management application, the contract management application is assured that its representation of the contract terms accurately represent those terms that will actually be used for adjudication of the activities governed by the contract (e.g., claim payment by an insurer). That is, the contract terms are assured to be accurately reflected across disparate applications, even though the disparate applications may utilize different electronic representations (e.g., different formats, etc.) of the contract terms. 
     In one embodiment, a contract modeler application is implemented, such as that disclosed in co-pending and commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/923,539 filed Aug. 20, 2004 titled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR MODELING TERMS OF A CONTRACT UNDER NEGOTIATION TO DETERMINE THEIR IMPACT ON A CONTRACTING PARTY,” the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference. Such contract modeler application can model certain terms of a contract during contract negotiations to enable a party to analyze the impact of specific terms. Once the modeled terms of the contract are approved, such terms may be communicated to an adjudication application and/or contract management application in accordance with certain embodiments described herein. 
     While various examples are described herein for use in the third-party payer health care system, and particularly for use by an insurer, application of the techniques described herein are not intended to be limited to the third-party payer health care system. While the techniques described herein have particular applicability for insurers to enable accurate and efficient creation of electronic representations of contracts across the disparate applications commonly used by such insurers (e.g., claim adjudication application, contract management application, etc.), the techniques described herein can be readily applied within any other environments in which multiple electronic representations of a contract are desired. Further, while the examples described herein are directed to electronic representations of contracts between insurers and service providers, the techniques described can readily be applied to other types of contracts between other parties. 
     The foregoing has outlined rather broadly the features and technical advantages of the present invention in order that the detailed description of the invention that follows may be better understood. Additional features and advantages of the invention will be described hereinafter which form the subject of the claims of the invention. It should be appreciated that the conception and specific embodiment disclosed may be readily utilized as a basis for modifying or designing other structures for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention. It should also be realized that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the invention as set forth in the appended claims. The novel features which are believed to be characteristic of the invention, both as to its organization and method of operation, together with further objects and advantages will be better understood from the following description when considered in connection with the accompanying figures. It is to be expressly understood, however, that each of the figures is provided for the purpose of illustration and description only and is not intended as a definition of the limits of the present invention. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       For a more complete understanding of the present invention, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, in which: 
         FIG. 1  shows an exemplary system according to one embodiment of the present invention; 
         FIG. 2  shows an exemplary third-party payer health care system in which one embodiment of the present invention is employed; 
         FIG. 3  shows an exemplary process flow  300  for generating a contract between an insurer and a service provider; 
         FIG. 4  shows an exemplary system in which adapters are used for translating a first electronic representation of contract terms into a second electronic representation of contract terms in accordance with certain embodiments of the present invention; and 
         FIG. 5  shows an exemplary operational flow diagram of an embodiment of the present invention. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
       FIG. 1  shows an exemplary system  100  according to one embodiment of the present invention. A first software application A, labeled  101 , executes on a processor-based device, such as a personal computer (PC), laptop computer, personal digital assistant (PDA), workstation, server, etc. A second software application, such as a contract management tool  104 , executes on a processor-based device, which may be the same or a different processor-based device as that which software application  101  executes. In software application  101 , the terms of a contract are electronically represented, shown as representation  102 . In accordance with certain embodiments provided herein, the electronic representation  102  of contract terms can be imported from the first software application  101  to a second software application, such as contract management application  104  in this example. That is, an electronic representation  102  of the contract terms is communicated via communication  103  to be included in an electronic representation  105  of the contract that is managed by contract management application  104 . In this example, the representation of contract terms  102  is imported into contract representation  105  to provide the rate schedule  106  portion of such contract representation  105 . 
     Communication  103  of the contract terms from electronic representation  102  to electronic representation  105  may be an electronic communication (e.g., across a network) or other communication to the contract management application  104 . For instance, the electronic representation  102  of the contract terms may be saved to a computer-readable medium, such as a portable mass storage drive (e.g., USB drive), floppy disk, compact disk (CD), digital versatile disc (DVD), etc., and such computer-readable medium may be read by the contract management application  104 . Irrespective of the technique of “communicating”  103  the electronic representation  102  of the contract to form the electronic representation  105  of the contract for use by contract management application  104 , in certain embodiments the electronic representation  102  is advantageously utilized to generate an electronic representation  105  that is compatible with contract management application  104 . Thus, because at least a portion (e.g., rate schedule terms  106 ) of the electronic representation  105  of the contract need not be manually entered into the contract management application  104 , the time involved with creating the electronic representation  105  for use by the management application  104  in managing the contract is minimized. Further, manual errors are avoided, and it is ensured that the same terms utilized in software application  101  (e.g., an adjudication application) are consistently reflected in the electronic representation  105  of the contract utilized by contract management application  104 . 
     In certain embodiments, the first software application  101  is an adjudication application, such as a claim adjudication application. The representation  102  of the contract terms utilized by such first software application  101  are preferably represented as described further in commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/577,386 filed May 23, 2000, titled “NOVEL METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR REPRICING A REIMBURSEMENT CLAIM AGAINST A CONTRACT,” now. U.S. Pat. No. 7,904,317, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. In certain embodiments, first software application  101  is a contract modeler application, such as described in co-pending and commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/923,539 filed Aug. 20, 2004, titled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR MODELING TERMS OF A CONTRACT UNDER NEGOTIATION TO DETERMINE THEIR IMPACT ON A CONTRACTING PARTY,” the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. In one embodiment, the electronic representation  102  of the contract terms is utilized within a contract modeler application during negotiation of the contract terms. For instance, various terms of the contract may be modified within the contract modeler application to enable a party to analyze the impact of the terms. As described further in co-pending and commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/923,539 titled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR MODELING TERMS OF A CONTRACT UNDER NEGOTIATION TO DETERMINE THEIR IMPACT ON A CONTRACTING PARTY,” upon agreement being reached between the parties as to the terms of a contract, the electronic representation of the agreed-upon terms of the contract can then be communicated from the modeler to an adjudication system for use in adjudicating actions that are governed by the contract terms (e.g., adjudicating payment of claims submitted to an insurer pursuant to the rate terms of the contract). In accordance with embodiments provided herein, such electronic representation  102  of the contract terms may be used for generating at least a portion of another electronic representation  105  of a contract that can be used by another application, such as contract management application  104 . 
       FIG. 2  shows an exemplary third-party payer health care system  200  in which one embodiment of the present invention is employed. In this example, an insurer has negotiated contracts with different service providers, such as service providers A and B. Insurer system  201  includes data storage  203  that stores an electronic representation of contract terms between the insurer and the service providers, such as representation  204 A of the contract terms governing the relationship of the insurer with Service Provider A and representation  204 B of the contract terms governing the relationship of the insurer with Service Provider B. Claim adjudication application  202  is also included, which uses electronic representations  204 A and  204 B of the contracts to determine the payment amount for claims submitted to the insurer by Service Providers A and B, respectively. The electronic representations  204 A and  204 B of the contracts and the use of such electronic representations by claim adjudication application  202  are preferably employed in the manner described further in commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/577,386 titled “NOVEL METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR REPRICING A REIMBURSEMENT CLAIM AGAINST A CONTRACT,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,904,317. 
     In this example, contract modeler application  205  is also included. As described further in co-pending and commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/923,539 titled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR MODELING TERMS OF A CONTRACT UNDER NEGOTIATION TO DETERMINE THEIR IMPACT ON A CONTRACTING PARTY,” such contract modeler application  205  may use performance data  206  to model the impact of terms of a contract under negotiation. Once the contract terms are agreed to by the insurer and the service provider, the electronic representation of the agreed-upon terms of such contract may be stored to data storage  203  (e.g., as with electronic representations  204 A and  204 B) and used by claim adjudication system  202  to govern the payment by the insurer of claims submitted by the service providers in accordance with the terms of the executed contracts. 
     In accordance with certain embodiments provided herein, the contract terms in place on the insurer system  201  for use by claim adjudication application  202  (e.g., electronic representations  204 A and  204 B) can be communicated, via communication  207 , to a contract management tool  208 , and used for forming at least a portion of the representation of contract terms in such contract management tool  208 . Such contract management tool  208  may be included on the insurer&#39;s system  201 , or it may be included on a third-party&#39;s system for managing the insurer&#39;s contracts with service providers. In the illustrated example, the representations of contract terms  204 A and  204 B for the contracts that the insurer has with Service Providers A and B, respectively, are communicated to contract management tool  208  and used for forming at least part of the representations of contract terms  209 A and  209 B for the contracts that the insurer has with Service Providers A and B, respectively. 
     In this example, the rate terms that are used for governing claim adjudication may be represented in electronic representations  204 A and  204 B, and thus may not represent the full contractual terms between the insurer and the service providers. Information in addition to the rate terms, such as duration of the contract (e.g., when it expires) and/or other legal details of the contract, may be desired in the contract representations  209 A and  209 B in the contract management tool  208 . However, the rate terms represented by electronic representations  204 A and  204 B, which are actually used for adjudicating claims, are used to accurately import these rate terms into the electronic representations  209 A and  209 B on the contract management tool, thus not requiring manual input of such rate information to the contract management tool  208 . 
       FIG. 3  shows an exemplary process flow  300  for generating a contract between an insurer and a service provider. In this example, a contract management application  301  is used manage various aspects of the contract negotiation/generation process. The contract management application utilizes an electronic representation of various terms of a contract to be managed, such as service discount terms  30 , user permissions  31 , schedule  32 , previous contracts  33 , legal provisions  34 . Blocks  30  through  34  represent functionality of the contract management application. Block  30  is the proposed negotiated service discounts, an example of these types of terms is included in Table 1 below. Block  31  are electronic representations of the rights for each user of the contract management application, such as whether they have rights to read and/or modify a contract. 
     In creating and negotiating a contract with a service provider, the insurer&#39;s personnel may perform operations  35 - 38  described hereafter, wherein the insurer&#39;s personnel may interact with contract management application  301  in performing one or more of those operations. In generating a contract, a draft of the contract is generally created (e.g., from previous contracts  33 ) and that draft of the contract undergoes internal review  35  within the insurer organization. The contract management application  301  may automate the publishing of the draft to a defined set of individuals for the review process. Once approved in the internal review, the approved draft of the contract is published in block  36  to the service provider with whom the insurer is negotiating the contract. The contract management application  301  may automate this publishing aspect. Once the service provider has reviewed the contract, the insurer and service provider may negotiate various provisions (or “terms”) of the contract, in block  37 . The contract management application  301  may identify the revisions during the negotiation process, including predefined acceptable alternatives to originally proposed provisions. As a result of such negotiation, various terms of the contract may be modified, and the modified contract may again undergo internal review  35  and then be re-published  36  to the service provider. Once the terms of the contract are agreed to in the negotiation process  37 , the contract may be sent to the appropriate authority (e.g., management) of the insurer to finalize the contract, in block  38 , and execute the contract on behalf of the insurer. The contract management application  301  retains the final version of the contract. 
     As shown, in this example, the insurer may also have a contract modeler application  302  that uses an electronic representation of contract terms  303  to enable a user to analyze the impact of the terms during the negotiation process. More specifically, electronic representation  303  represents the financial terms of the contract, such as the claim payment terms in an insurer/service provider contract, and modeler application  302  models the impact that such financial terms will have on a party to the contract (e.g., based on historical performance data). In this example, the electronic representation  303  of the financial terms (which is used by contract modeler application  302 ) is used to import, via communication  39 , such financial terms to the electronic representation of the contract being managed by the contract management tool  301 . Specifically, the electronic representation  303  of the contract terms are used to generate the electronic representation of service discount terms  30  for use by contract management tool  301 . Thus, the insurer&#39;s system can generate, from electronic representation  303  of the contract terms, at least the service discount terms  30  in an electronic representation that is compatible with contract management tool  301 . As described further herein, in certain embodiments adapter(s)  304  is/are used to translate the electronic representation  303  of the financial terms to a compatible format for use by contract management tool  301 . 
       FIG. 4  shows an exemplary system  400  in which adapters  403  and  404  are used for translating a first electronic representation  406  of contract terms into a second electronic representation  403 A of contract terms in accordance with certain embodiments of the present invention. The adapters  403  and  404  are preferably implemented as described in concurrently filed and commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/965,253 titled “INTERFACING DISPARATE SOFTWARE APPLICATIONS,” the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference. 
     Exemplary system  400  includes a processor-based device (e.g., PC)  407  that executes contract modeler application  405  which uses a first electronic representation  406  of the financial terms (e.g., claim rates) of a contract for modeling the impact of such financial terms on a party (e.g., insurer). A preferable electronic representation  406  for representing terms of a contract between an insurer and a service provider is described further in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/577,386 titled “NOVEL METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR REPRICING A REIMBURSEMENT CLAIM AGAINST A CONTRACT”, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,904,317, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. In general, this technique represents each term of a contract with a qualifier and a corresponding calculation method. An example of terms represented in this manner is provided in Table 1 below: 
     
       
         
           
               
               
               
             
               
                 TABLE 1 
               
               
                   
               
               
                 Term 
                 Qualifier 
                 Calculation Method 
               
               
                   
               
             
            
               
                 Chemotherapy 
                 DRGCode410 
                 Pricing is a case rate of 
               
               
                 Treatment 
                   
                 $6000 
               
               
                 Case Rate 
                   
                 for up to 15 days and 
               
               
                   
                   
                 $1500 per day for each 
               
               
                   
                   
                 additional day. Limit the 
               
               
                   
                   
                 allowed to be the lesser 
               
               
                   
                   
                 of the discounted rate or 
               
               
                   
                   
                 charges. on the bill. 
               
               
                 ICU/CCU 
                 Any Revenue codes 
                 Pricing is a per diem of 
               
               
                 Per diem 
                 with values of 200 
                 $1400 
               
               
                   
                 through 219 
                 per day. 
               
               
                   
               
            
           
         
       
     
     Accordingly, as described further in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/577,386 titled “NOVEL METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR REPRICING A REIMBURSEMENT CLAIM AGAINST A CONTRACT,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,904,317, terms of a contract may be electronically represented by associating with each term information representing at least one qualifier having a corresponding calculation method, wherein the at least one qualifier identifies at least one condition to be satisfied by a claim for reimbursement in order to trigger the corresponding calculation method. Further information may be associated with each term representing a priority of such term relative to the other terms to enable a determination of which terms take priority in the event that more than one term&#39;s qualifier is satisfied. 
     Processor-based devices (e.g., PCs)  401 A and  401 B provide communicative access to contract management tool  402  for managing contracts between an insurer and service providers. Thus, electronic representations  403 A,  403 B,  403 C, . . . , of contracts between the insurer and various service providers are utilized by contract management tool  402 . Contract management tool  402  may be a legacy system that electronically represents contracts differently than the electronic representations  406  used by contract modeler  405  and/or a claim adjudication application (not shown). Adapters  403  and  404  enable the electronic representations  406  of financial terms of contracts to be imported to form the financial terms of the electronic representations of the corresponding contracts in the contract management tool. For instance, an electronic representation  406  of the financial terms of a contract between an insurer and a first service provider is imported to form the financial terms  41  of the electronic representation of such contract between the insurer and the first service provider in the contract management tool  402 . 
     Currently filed and commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/965,253 titled “INTERFACING DISPARATE SOFTWARE APPLICATIONS,” describes an embodiment of adapters that provides a decentralized architecture using a common communication bus protocol. For example, each adapter of an embodiment is adapted for proprietary data communication with one or more associated applications, thereby providing information communication suitable for establishing an end of a software application information communication link. Additionally, each adapter of the foregoing embodiment is adapted for data communication with other adapters using protocols common to each such adapter. According to one embodiment, the common protocols utilized in inter-adapter communications comprise an open or standardized protocol, such as the extensible markup language (XML), simple object access protocol (SOAP), web services description language (WSDL), universal description, discovery and integration (UDDI), as a common communication bus protocol. 
     Thus, adapter  404  preferably includes an application-specific interface operable to interface with contract modeler  405  (or other application) to retrieve electronic representation  406  of the financial terms of a desired contract. Further, adapter  404  is operable to translate the electronic representation  406  of the financial terms into an inter-adapter format, e.g., XML. Thus, the adapter  404  preferably includes an inter-adapter interface for communicating the electronic representation, e.g., via XML, to the adapter  403 . Similarly, adapter  403  preferably includes an inter-adapter interface for receiving the electronic representation from adapter  404 . Adapter  403  is operable to translate the received electronic representation of the financial terms into an application-specific format. That is, the adapter  403  is operable to translate the received electronic representation of the financial terms (which is received in the inter-adapter format) to a format desired by contract management tool  402 . Adapter  403  preferably includes an application-specific interface operable to interface with contract management tool  402  to import the financial terms  41  into the electronic representation  403 A of the corresponding contract. 
     In certain embodiments, a plain English description of the electronic representation  406  is provided to the contract management tool  402 . Co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/577,386 titled “NOVEL METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR REPRICING A REIMBURSEMENT CLAIM AGAINST A CONTRACT,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,904,317, discloses a technique in which the contract terms are represented in plain language (e.g., plain English terminology). For instance, in certain embodiments, a software application includes a user interface that provides a phrase describing a term of a contract for reimbursement, wherein the phrase includes at least one input field for receiving input from a user. The software application also includes code for generating information representing at least one term of a contract based at least in part on information input to the at least one input field. The phrase presented by the user interface may include at least one sentence, wherein upon input to the at least one input field the phrase forms at least one complete sentence. The input field(s) may include a drop-down menu providing a plurality of choices for selection of input to such field(s). Accordingly, the user need not be restricted to understanding and/or working with the specific format in which the terms of the contract are electronically represented, but may instead interact with the plain language interface for properly creating the electronic representation. Further, if desired, the plain language description of the contract terms, as electronically represented, can be generated and viewed and/or printed and may be included as an attachment to or overview of the terms of a contract (as such contract is electronically represented by the software application). Thus, in certain embodiments, this plain language description of the contract terms represented by electronic representation  406  is generated and imported to the electronic representation of the contract in contract management application  402 . 
     The techniques described herein are not limited to the specific examples provided above. For instance,  FIG. 5  shows an exemplary operational flow diagram for one embodiment of the present invention. In operational block  501 , a first electronic representation of contract terms that are used by a first application is created on a system. In certain embodiments, this first application is an adjudication application, such as a claim adjudication application. Also, as described above, a modeler application may be used in certain embodiments for creating such first electronic representation of contract terms. In operational block  502 , the system uses the first electronic representation of contract terms to generate at least a portion of a second electronic representation of the contract that is used by a second application. As described above, the second electronic representation may be a different representation that is required by the second application, such as by a legacy contract management application. Thus, because the system can effectively import the contract terms from the first electronic representation into the second electronic representation, the contract terms are assured to be represented consistently across the different applications. Further, the second electronic representation of the contract can be created more efficiently than requiring a user to manually enter the terms that are represented in the first electronic representation. 
     The various embodiments of the software applications (e.g., contract modeler, contract management tool, etc.), as well as the electronic representations of contractual terms, described above may be implemented via computer-executable software code. The executable software code may be obtained from a computer-readable medium (e.g., a hard drive media, optical media, EPROM, EEPROM, tape media, cartridge media, flash memory, ROM, memory stick, and/or the like) or communicated via a data signal from a communication medium (e.g., the Internet). In fact, as used herein, computer-readable media can include any medium that can store or transfer information. 
     Although the present invention and its advantages have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations can be made herein without departing from the invention as defined by the appended claims. Moreover, the scope of the present application is not intended to be limited to the particular embodiments of the process, machine, manufacture, composition of matter, means, methods and steps described in the specification. As one will readily appreciate from the disclosure, processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps, presently existing or later to be developed that perform substantially the same function or achieve substantially the same result as the corresponding embodiments described herein may be utilized. Accordingly, the appended claims are intended to include within their scope such processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps.