FRANKLIN AKIOYAME, APN
4903 VEGAS DR STE 101, LAS VEGAS, NV 89108
NPI Number
1982863882
Practice location · View on Google Maps
Total Medicaid Payments
$113,565
+85% vs specialty average
Patients Seen
3,524
Total Claims
4,309
$ Per Patient
$32
Specialty avg: $33
Specialty Rank
#34 of 244
Nurse Practitioner, Family providers in Nevada
Peer Average
$61,530
Average total for Nurse Practitioner, Family
Claims per Patient
1.2
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 | $113,565 |
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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 99214 | Office visit for a moderate problem (established patient) | 537 | $28,154 | 24.8% | $52 |
| 99205 | New patient office visit — comprehensive visit for a complex problem | 273 | $24,565 | 21.6% | $90 |
| 99215 | Office visit for a complex or serious problem (established patient) | 316 | $22,370 | 19.7% | $71 |
| 90833 | Individual therapy session added to a regular doctor visit (30 minutes) | 348 | $9,059 | 8.0% | $26 |
| 99213 | Office visit for a simple problem (established patient) | 100 | $4,219 | 3.7% | $42 |
| 99490 | Chronic care management — monthly coordination for patients with multiple ongoing conditions | 114 | $3,039 | 2.7% | $27 |
| 96125 | Medical service or procedure | 147 | $2,748 | 2.4% | $19 |
| 94664 | Breathing test or lung function test | 287 | $2,606 | 2.3% | $9 |
| G0447 | Face-to-face behavioral counseling for obesity, 15 minutes | 265 | $2,394 | 2.1% | $9 |
| G0446 | Annual, face-to-face intensive behavioral therapy for cardiovascular disease, individual, 15 minutes | 241 | $2,221 | 2.0% | $9 |
| 90836 | Individual therapy session added to a regular doctor visit (45 minutes) | 68 | $1,974 | 1.7% | $29 |
| 99407 | Medical service or procedure | 231 | $1,770 | 1.6% | $8 |
| 97535 | Self-care training — learning to do daily activities like dressing, cooking, or bathing | 167 | $1,766 | 1.6% | $11 |
| G0108 | Diabetes self-management training for individuals | 54 | $1,606 | 1.4% | $30 |
| 80305 | Drug or substance testing | 201 | $1,508 | 1.3% | $8 |
| G0444 | Annual depression screening | 150 | $900 | 0.8% | $6 |
| G0442 | Annual alcohol misuse screening, 5 to 15 minutes | 140 | $774 | 0.7% | $6 |
| 99354 | Medical service or procedure | 30 | $420 | 0.4% | $14 |
| 94010 | Breathing test or lung function test | 14 | $324 | 0.3% | $23 |
| 36415 | Drawing blood from a vein (routine blood draw) | 176 | $306 | 0.3% | $2 |
| 96372 | IV infusion or injection of medication | 12 | $207 | 0.2% | $17 |
| 93000 | Heart monitoring test (ECG/EKG) | 17 | $190 | 0.2% | $11 |
| 71045 | Chest X-ray (single view) | 33 | $179 | 0.2% | $5 |
| 83036 | Hemoglobin A1c test (shows average blood sugar over 3 months — used for diabetes) | 14 | $91 | 0.1% | $6 |
| 94760 | Breathing test or lung function test | 61 | $60 | 0.1% | $1 |
| 93040 | Heart monitoring test (ECG/EKG) | 17 | $56 | 0.0% | $3 |
| 36416 | Finger or heel stick for blood collection | 35 | $34 | 0.0% | $1 |
| 81003 | Urinalysis — automated test | 39 | $12 | 0.0% | $0 |
| 96127 | Brief emotional or behavioral screening (like a depression or anxiety questionnaire) | 41 | $12 | 0.0% | $0 |
| 71020 | Chest imaging (X-ray, CT, or MRI) | 12 | $0 | 0.0% | $0 |
| 99497 | Medical service or procedure | 17 | $0 | 0.0% | $0 |
| 99358 | Medical service or procedure | 37 | $0 | 0.0% | $0 |
| G0396 | Alcohol and/or substance (other than tobacco) misuse structured assessment (for example., audit, dast), and brief intervention 15 to 30 minutes | 115 | $0 | 0.0% | $0 |
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.