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Report Picture Perfect Annual Wellness Visits With These 5 Tips
Posted on 18. Jan, 2011 by dchandhok.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) extended preventive coverage to more than 88 million patients covered by health insurance, and Medicare has codified that benefit in the form of an annual wellness visit. Medicare valued the new annual wellness codes based on a level 4, problem-oriented new and established E/M service. The two new codes are:
- G0438 – Annual wellness visit; includes a personalized prevention plan of service (PPPS), first visit
- G0439 – Annual wellness visit; includes a personalized prevention plan of service (PPPS), subsequent visit.
Tip 1: Apply G0438 to Second Year of Coverage
Be wary of applying these codes to new Medicare patients coming in to your physician’s practice in 2011.
The reason is that Medicare will only reimburse the
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CPT 2011: Pay Attention To These New Joint Injection Guidelines
Posted on 18. Jan, 2011 by dchandhok.
Remember to check for updated or revised guidelines when preparing to use your new code books for 2011, not just code descriptors. CPT 2011 includes new details for coding some common injection procedures, as pointed out at the AMA’s CPT and RBRVS 2011 Annual Symposium in Chicago. Read on for a few pointers to help stay on the right track.
The introduction of new codes for paravertebral facet joint injections in 2010 (64490-64495) meant changes to how you reported related codes. During the CPT and RBRVS Symposium, Douglas G. Merrill, MD, MBA, of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, pointed out two revised guidelines dealing with paravertebral facet (spinal) joint procedures.
Instructions in CPT 2010 directed you to report 64999 (Unlisted procedure, nervous system) if the provider used ultrasound guidance during paravertebral facet joint injections. The AMA released a correction later in 2010, and the CPT 2011 clarifies the situation. If your provider used ultrasound guidance when administering paravertebral facet joint injections, report the
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96446 And Dozen Others Join The List of CCI Edits
Posted on 17. Jan, 2011 by dchandhok.
Effective Jan. 1, 2011, new CPT codes and, inevitably, new Correct Coding Initiative (CCI) physician edits are there for physicians. For version 17.0, “19,822 new edit pairs have been added to the database while 9,778 have been terminated, for a net gain of 10,044 new edit pairs,” according to Frank Cohen, MPA, MBB, of the Frank Cohen Group, in his Dec. 14, 2010, “NCCI Version 17.0 Change Analysis” announcement.
The main edits you want to be sure to watch for are those related to new code 96446 (Chemotherapy administration to the peritoneal cavity via indwelling port or catheter).
The 96446 non-mutually exclusive (NME) edits are largely what you would expect based on other chemotherapy code edits — bundles with E/M, anesthesia, venipuncture and other vascular procedures, for example. You want to be sure to watch which is the column 1 code and which is the column 2 code for these bundles.
CCI places E/M codes 99217-99239 in the column 1 position and 96446 in the column 2 position. On the other hand, CCI places
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C34 — Pay Attention To Location for Malignant Neoplasm of Main Bronchus
Posted on 15. Jan, 2011 by dchandhok.
ICD-9 2011 and ICD-10 2011 both have coding options for a malignant neoplasm of the main bronchus. Both indicate that the codes are appropriate for malignant neoplasms of the carina or hilus of lung.
What’s different: ICD-9 2011 includes simply 162.2 (Malignant neoplasm of main bronchus).
ICD-10 2011, on the other hand, offers options specific to location:
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Registration open for electronic health records incentives
Posted on 04. Jan, 2011 by dchandhok.
On Jan. 3, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) opened the registration for the Medicare and Medicaid electronic health record (EHR) incentive programs. It was started in Alaska, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Michigan, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas and broad participation is invited from eligible professionals and eligible hospitals who wish to participate.
In February, the registration will open in
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Here’s How You Can Bill The Correct New G Code
Posted on 04. Jan, 2011 by dchandhok.
If you find choosing the right G code for your claims difficult, help is at hand.
Starting Jan. 1, CMS is requiring eight new billing codes in addition to the existing six codes for home health agency services. Those include new nursing codes for RN management and evaluation of the plan of care (G0162), LPN or RN observation and assessment (G0163), and LPN or RN training and education (G0164). CMS is revising G0154 to cover only direct skilled care by an RN or LPN, CMS notes in Dec. 17 Transmittal No. 824 (CR 7182).
“We recognize that, in the course of a visit, a nurse or qualified therapist could likely provide more than
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Primary vs. Secondary Diagnosis
Posted on 03. Jan, 2011 by dchandhok.
Question: Many of our ophthalmology patients claim general reasons for their visit, such as “I can’t see well,” or “My vision is foggy.” We code these visits with 368.8 as the primary diagnosis because this is the primary reason for the visit. Any other problems or underlying causes of the blurry vision we report as secondary diagnoses. Is 368.8 the most appropriate code to use in these situations, and should we list it first?
Answer: You should only report 368.8 (Other specified visual disturbances) as a primary diagnosis code when the ophthalmologist doesn’t find a more definitive diagnosis during the course of the visit.
Carriers often consider a visit for blurred vision the same thing as a routine exam — and Medicare will not pay for this service.
Primary vs. secondary: Whenever possible, you should list a more definitive diagnosis as primary and then the patient’s complaint of blurred vision as secondary. For example, if the ophthalmologist discovers that a cataract is causing the patient’s blurry vision, you would first list
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Watch Changes to EEG, Joint Injection Guidelines
Posted on 03. Jan, 2011 by dchandhok.
You report several EEG codes such as 95812 (Electroencephalogram [EEG] extended monitoring; 41-60 minutes) and 95813 (… greater than 1 hour) based on the amount of recording time. But what constitutes recording time?
Jeffrey Cozzens, MD, professor and chair of the neurosurgery division of Southern Illinois University School of Medicine and a presenter at the AMA’s CPT and RBRVS 2011 Annual Symposium in Chicago, addressed the issue during his presentation about neurosurgery and neurology changes for 2011. Keep two things in mind when calculating recording time for these EEGs:
- Recording time is when the recording is underway and the healthcare provider is collecting data.
- Recording time excludes set-up and take-down time.
Other EEG codes, however, focus on the amount of physician time rather than recording time. Watch for that specificity in guidelines for 95961 (Functional cortical and subcortical mapping by stimulation and/or recording of electrodes or brain surface, or of depth electrodes, to provoke seizures or identify vital brain structures; initial hour of physician attendance) and +95962 (… each additional hour of physician attendance [List separately in addition to code for primary procedure). If the physician is in attendance for a total of
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Learn the Best Ways to Navigate Codes For Cisplatin, Cyclophosphamide, and Vincristine
Posted on 03. Jan, 2011 by dchandhok.
The recently released HCPCS 2011 code-set reveals a slew of deletions, streamlining your drug coding choices. Cisplatin, cyclophosphamide, and vincristine are among the affected drugs.
This change should simplify billing, particularly if the system your practice or facility uses, such as Pyxis or Lynx, limits you to a single code and billable unit for a drug, says Lisa S. Martin, CPC, CIMC, CPC-I, chargemaster specialist for OSF Healthcare System in Peoria, Ill. “As a consultant, I saw different facilities using only the 100 mg code [for example] for that very reason, so this change should facilitate more consistent and compliant billing practices.”
While these changes have a positive side, “there are always considerations that will arise,” Martin says. For example, if your practice uses different vial sizes, you will need to be alert for the different and specific national drug code (NDC) numbers for the agent dispensed to the patient when you
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Steer Clear of MUE Denials With These Tips
Posted on 21. Dec, 2010 by dchandhok.
If you’re receiving denials from Medicare, one possibility is that you’re running up against medically unlikely edits (MUEs). The edits, which are designed to prevent overpayments caused by gross billing errors, usually a result of clerical or billing systems’ mistakes, often confuse even veteran coders.
Ensure you’re not letting MUEs wreak havoc on your urology practice’s coding and reimbursement by uncovering the truth about four aspects of these edits.
While you shouldn’t stress too much, any practice filing a claim with Medicare should know what MUEs are and how they work.
“They limit the frequency a CPT code can be used,” says Chandra L. Hines, business office manager at Capital Urological Associates in Raleigh, N.C. “With our specialty of urology, we need to become aware of the denials and not let every denial go because the insurance company said it was an MUE. We should all be aware of MUEs as they occur, and we cannot always control whether or not we will receive payment.”
The MUE list includes specific CPT or HCPCS codes, followed by the number of units that CMS will pay. CMS developed the MUEs to reduce
