MICHAEL JONES, O.D.
401 N BUFFALO DR STE 205, LAS VEGAS, NV 89145
NPI Number
1174571442
Practice location · View on Google Maps
Total Medicaid Payments
$396,323
+118% vs specialty average
Patients Seen
14,576
Total Claims
14,833
$ Per Patient
$27
Specialty avg: $38
Specialty Rank
#38 of 377
Optometrist providers in Nevada
Peer Average
$181,896
Average total for Optometrist
Claims per Patient
1.0
Average visits / services per person
Payments by Year
How much Medicaid paid this provider each year. Large jumps can indicate changes in practice volume or billing patterns.
| Year | Total Paid | % of Max |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | $43,086 | |
| 2019 | $32,210 | |
| 2020 | $65,352 | |
| 2021 | $70,182 | |
| 2022 | $67,883 | |
| 2023 | $65,582 | |
| 2024 | $52,029 |
Procedure Code Breakdown
The specific medical services this provider billed Medicaid for. Each HCPCS/CPT code represents a different type of visit, test, or treatment.
| HCPCS Code | Description | Claims | Paid | % of Total | Avg per Claim |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 92014 | Eye exam or vision test | 2,378 | $106,791 | 26.9% | $45 |
| V2025 | Deluxe frame | 1,650 | $79,635 | 20.1% | $48 |
| 92004 | Eye exam or vision test | 1,521 | $73,452 | 18.5% | $48 |
| V2020 | Frames, purchases | 1,431 | $52,733 | 13.3% | $37 |
| 92340 | Eye exam or vision test | 2,142 | $33,189 | 8.4% | $15 |
| V2100 | Sphere, single vision, plano to plus or minus 4.00, per lens | 1,279 | $29,569 | 7.5% | $23 |
| 92015 | Eye exam or vision test | 2,515 | $11,854 | 3.0% | $5 |
| V2103 | Spherocylinder, single vision, plano to plus or minus 4.00d sphere, .12 to 2.00d cylinder, per lens | 1,198 | $5,787 | 1.5% | $5 |
| V2784 | Lens, polycarbonate or equal, any index, per lens | 703 | $3,010 | 0.8% | $4 |
| V2203 | Spherocylinder, bifocal, plano to plus or minus 4.00d sphere, .12 to 2.00d cylinder, per lens | 16 | $302 | 0.1% | $19 |
About This Data
This data comes from the HHS Medicaid Provider Spending dataset (opendata.hhs.gov). It shows payments made through Nevada Medicaid from 2018–2024. High payments do not mean a provider is doing anything wrong — some specialties naturally cost more, and busy providers see more patients. But unusually high numbers compared to peers can be worth a closer look.