2012年5月31日 星期四

OBGYN Coding - Deliver Postpartum V Codes With Care


Bonus: Get exposure to ICD-10 coding equivalents

Question: A mentally-retarded patient who delivered at home was admitted to the hospital for postpartum care. She delivered the placenta at home, and once she was admitted, there were no complications. However the ob-gyn did perform a first degree laceration repair. I am not sure what diagnosis code to go for. Should I take a look at routine postpartum care or pregnancy complications? And in case I use a complication code, what would the fifth digit to a "1" or "0?"

Answer: Under most situations where the ob-gyn treated no problems during the admission, you would have to go for code V24.0 (Postpartum care and examination; immediately after delivery) on the admission date and V24.2 (Routine postpartum follow-up) for any subsequent routine care.

However in this case, your physician also repaired a first degree laceration (CPT code for 59300, Episiotomy or vaginal repair, by other than attending physician). As such, you may consider this to be an admission for a postpartum condition and instead go for 664.04 (First degree perineal laceration). The fifth digit can't be "1" or "0" as the patient delivered before her admission and of course you know her delivery status. The fifth digit must be "4" in this case to indicate a purely postpartum condition. Optionally you may report V24.0 and V24.2 as your secondary diagnoses, however they're not required in this case.

ICD-10: In the immediate future, you will replace ICD-9 codes V24.0 and V24.2 with ICD-10 codes Z39.0 (Encounter for care and examination of mother immediately after delivery) and Z39.2 (Encounter for routine postpartum follow-up), respectively. Code O70.0 (First degree perineal laceration during delivery) will replace 664.04.




Suzanne Leder, M.Phil., CPC, COBGC is a ob-gyn coding [http://www.codingconferences.com/ob_gyn_1209cds.htm]. Alert editor for five years and counting. Also, she holds a specialty OB/GYN coding certification. Currently, she is an Executive Editor at the Coding Institute and has covered topics in cardiology, physical medicine and rehab, gastroenterology, neurology, neurosurgery, orthopedics, and otolaryngology.





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Using The Right Medical Billing Code For Home Dialysis


A simple, but crucial medical billing change has recently occurred. Beginning on October 1, 2005, the Medicare durable medical equipment regional carrier (DMERC) will no longer accept the diagnosis code 585.0. Instead of using ICD-9 585.0, medical billing should be done with the ICD-9 code 585.6 for home dialysis charges.

The code 585.0 means chronic renal failure. This code has now been discontinued and the DMERC will no longer be lenient on the code. The more descriptive code, 585.6 (end stage renal disease) much more accurately describes the diagnosis for home dialysis. It is important that your medical billing staff note this change. Failure to do so will result in unpaid future claims.

Situations like this depict the necessity to hire an outside medical billing firm. Many mistakes can be avoided by hiring one of these companies. Medical billing companies employ highly skilled individuals who are trained, certified, and updated on current medical billing/coding practices. By hiring these companies you are relieving your practice from the responsibility of training and updating your own medical billing personnel on changes.

Another advantage to using a medical billing firm is the time they free up for your personnel to work one-on-one with patients. The less time your staff spends on medical billing, the more time you can focus on customer service. This is an added bonus because the essence of medical care is centered around trust. In order for your patients to trust you, you must build up a rapport.

The change to the home dialysis medical billing code may be simple, however, there are many other medical billing changes that are not so simple. It is very important to keep up with all medical billing changes to ensure proper reimbursement for the future of your practice.




Melissa Clark, CCS-P is President and Director of Medical Billing Services for Outsource Management Group, LLC, a leading national medical billing firm.





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2012年5月30日 星期三

Understanding CPT Code 28510 - Billing for Fracture Care Follow-Ups


Standard Fracture Care

When a patient suffers from a fracture, the initial treatment of the injury is usually performed in the emergency room. If your patient comes to your office for their fracture follow-up care instead of seeing an orthopedic specialist, you can bill for the follow-up care as long as you use the appropriate procedure codes and the ICD-9 code that correlates with the site of the fracture. CPT code 28510 covers the follow-up care for all closed fracture sites except for a fracture that is located in the big toe. Because of this, you will not need to perform any site manipulations to bill for the follow-up care you provide to your patients. Using CPT code 28510, you can expect to receive more than $100.00 for each follow-up visit related to the fracture.

Identifying the Correct Modifier

When treating a patient for follow-up fracture care, it is not uncommon to spend significant amounts of time addressing the injury. It is also common for patients to address other ailments during the course of their follow-up visits to your office. Fortunately, you can bill for the time spent addressing these ailments separately from the follow-up fracture care. Because you are addressing issues that are separate from the fracture itself, by documenting the visit accurately, you can bill for the separate consultation in addition to the fracture follow-up.

Fracture care has a specified global period in regards to medical billing. In order to bill correctly, your diagnosis codes must match each procedure performed. You should also take care to use the appropriate modifier for the office visit code when treating your patients. This will help you in your billing procedures.

It is important to remember that there will be times when a patient suffers from multiple fractures at different sites. For example, a patient who has suffered a serious accident may face broken ribs in addition to broken bones in the arm or leg. In cases such as this, you should bill for each site separately and use the appropriate modifier to separate the treatment of each fracture site. Also make sure that you document how much time is spent addressing each fracture site when treating your patient. In some cases, you may only be able to treat one fracture at a time when dealing with patients who are suffering from multiple injuries.

Understanding Worker's Compensation & PIP Guidelines

Many of the injured patients you treat will be billed through primary insurance providers, however, other patients may suffer injuries due to work-related activities or car accidents. Because of this, you need to ensure that you thoroughly understand the guidelines and regulations pertaining to Worker's Compensation and Personal Injury Protection policies in your state.

Depending on the area of your practice, the insurance carriers you bill may not accept modifiers or they may require that you use modifiers that are different from the ones you would normally use. The goal is to be paid for your time regardless of the type of insurance you are submitting claims to. If the insurance provider does deny a claim for the initial fracture care, you will need to call and explain to the provider that you did not provide the initial fracture care to the patient.

Obtaining the Compensation You Deserve

You can expect to treat at least ten patients a year for follow-up care related to a fracture. If these patients come to your office for treatment of a single-site fracture, each patient you treat will generate over $500.00 in billable revenue in addition to the revenue received for the standard office visit. It is not uncommon for practices to receive thousands of dollars in extra revenue each year for the treatment of fracture follow-up care, even if there are only a few patients in their care receiving this treatment. Because of this, you should do everything you can to take advantage of this particular source of revenue whenever possible.




Dr. Adam L. Alpers, D.O. is a medical practice consultant and invites you to access and gain knowledge in enhancing your medical billing and coding by visiting our blog at http://www.medbillingncoding.com This program was developed for providers to gain quick and easy understanding of some of the most needed information in billing and coding. You do the work, now get paid for what you do. To Learn and Earn more. Please, check out our informative teaching and free online e-course today also at: http://www.medicalcodingcashsecrets.com

Copyright - Adam L. Alpers. All Rights Reserved Worldwide





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ICD-10-CM - The New Medical Coding Challenge Arriving October 1, 2013


On October 1, 2013, the medical coding world as we know it, will awaken to a new and exciting challenge. The 14,000 ICD-9 medical codes that millions of physicians, medical facilities, and hospitals use, will increase to approximately 64,000 codes. With the extra 50,000 codes will come very specified disease diagnoses and the medical coding world will need to brush up on their coding guidelines, their medical terminology and their anatomy and physiology.

January 1, 2012, is the compliance date for the HIPAA 5010 (HIPAA X12 formats version 5010), which is a new format designed to regulate electronic transmissions of specific healthcare transactions. Any medical facility not in compliance will not be able to receive their reimbursements.

Are you ready for ICD-10? Good quality classes in medical terminology and anatomy and physiology will be worth the time and funds spent when you are able to find the new codes with ease.

What medical coding certification are you seeking? Have you made up your mind to seek the certification from the AHIMA (CCS) or from the AAPC (CPC)? Whichever one you choose, make sure you use the study guides for general information, but also, and most importantly, study the coding books depending on what test you are taking and what specialty you decide on. Know the different surgeries in each of the chapters of the CPT book. You can order some instructional coding books that give you an opportunity to practice coding with the answers in the back of the book. In-patient hospital and physician offices will need to know the E & M codes forward and backward. Learn how to find ICD codes quickly and learn where modifiers are needed. Familiarize yourself with the HCPCS codes. Check with coding associations and take practice tests to help you get ready to be tested. Get a good nights rest, eat a nourishing breakfast and go into the testing room with a positive attitude in becoming the next coding specialist.

Many medical coders are fortunate in finding medical coding jobs where they can work from home. What a dream to be able to work from home and not have to leave the house. After years of experience working in a facility, it is possible to find a medical coding job opportunity and work from home.

Medical coding is a very challenging profession. To succeed in medical coding, one must study medical terminology and anatomy and physiology. Being successful is not only knowing the medical language and where all of the body parts are, it is also important to know the government guidelines and to know how to match the medical necessity codes correctly to the procedure codes. The reward will not only be the provider reimbursement from submitting clean claims, but also the satisfaction of knowing that the challenges were met!




Nancy Krall is a retired nurse and works as a medical coder in outpatient radiology and has a medical coding website http://www.icd-diagnosis.com that features ICD-10 resources and a new eBook "ICD Medical Thesaurus For Coders".





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Medical Coding Services and Physicians - What Impact Will the Switch to ICD-10 Have on You?


You have probably heard by now that the required switch to using ICD-10 has been delayed by a few years. You can breathe a little easier for now, but have you begun to consider how your office will implement the changes? And what do these changes mean to you anyway?

A little background...as you know, insurance companies do not pay for "tension headaches" and "15 minute office visits for an established patient" - insurance companies pay for medical diagnosis codes like 307.81 and procedure CPT codes such as 99213. Diagnosis codes, CPT and HCPCS codes all describe patient complaints, illness, procedures and supplies for a submitted claim. The ICD-9 codes currently in use were adopted in the 1960s by the U.S. Since then there have been many advances in healthcare. Under the current coding system, the room to expand is limited. By adding codes under the new system, there will be room to expand and be more specific in reporting.

How much so? Think there are a lot of codes now? Try 68,000 diagnoses codes, up from 13,000 now. For procedure codes (CPT) we go from 3000 codes now to 87,000 codes! What is more, ICD-9 codes will go from up to 5 digits (ex. 307.81) to up to 7.

The deadline for implementation is 2013, which is still in the future. According to a recent article in the Wall Street Journal: "CMS says it expects implementation of the new system initially will boost by as much as 10% the number of claims returned because of coding errors. But a study by the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association of insurers predicts billing errors are likely to rise between 10% and 25% in the first year."

If you currently do your billing in-house and file using on-site software, the switch to ICD-10 could be a large expense for updates to your software as well. By the start of 2012 all physicians must begin using the new version of HIPAA transaction standards known as 5010 in order to file claims. This is due to the fact that the current 4010 version does not accommodate ICD-10 codes. Even if you believe you can put off updates to switching to ICD-10, you should at the very least start considering what it will take to update to the 5010 transaction standards.

It may be a good time to consider either a switch to outsourcing your billing to pass the cost off to a billing company, or at least consider an internet based billing program. The advantages with internet based electronic claims filing is that the updates are built in to the platform at no cost to you other than your regular fee of using the service. This could potentially save you thousands upfront as well as over the long run. The whole purpose of the switch to ICD-10 is to accommodate the annual updates in technology and procedures. You can be sure that any in-house software you use for claims filing will require annual updates that can represent cost to you as well.

You can see why it will be more important then ever to have a coder educated on the new codes as a part of your practice. Implementation of the new system will be costly, so when the time comes, out-sourcing your coding could be a cost-saving solution.




Jeff Roh is owner of Profast Billing Solutions, offering physicians billing services and medical coding services. He writes articles on important and current issues relating to insurance billing for the medical community. For more information visit http://www.profastbilling.com





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2012年5月29日 星期二

Oncology Coding - Gear Up for New Transfusion-Reaction Codes


As you all know, ICD-9 2011 will go into effect on October 1, 2010. So if you have patients who get blood transfusions, gear up for some key changes to your diagnosis coding choices later this year. CMS has provided proposed updates for ICD-9 2011, and transfusion-reaction codes are everywhere.

Broaden your iron overload options

Right now, under ICD 2010, if you need to code hemochromatosis, you will need to code 275.0. But when ICD-9 2011 goes into effect, you will have more specific options to code hemochromatosis. This time ICD-9 intends to make 275.0 invalid and replace it with the following: 275.01, 275.02, 275.03, and 275.09.

When the ICD-9 2011 becomes official, you will have to pay close attention to any notes with the codes to ensure you're pairing your case to the right ICD-9 option for your Oncology practice. ICD-9 2011 also intends to expand the current 276.6 to include 276.61 and 276.69. Another proposal would expand 287.4 to include the 287.41 and 287.49. This change would allow precise reporting of posttransfusion purpura (PTP), which normally arises five to 12 days after transfusion of blood components. What's more, the addition of 999.83 has been proposed; this would have placed it under 999.8. However, the proposed rule lists 780.66 placing FNHTR under 780.6.

Apart from all these, a slew of other potential new transfusion-reaction codes add specificity to reporting incompatibility reaction type and timing (acute or delayed).

Acute: Acute hemolytic transfusion reaction (AHTR) is accelerated destruction of red blood cells less than 24 hours after transfusion. The proposed codes which specify acute are 999.62, 999.72, 999.77, and 999.84.

Delayed: On the other hand, delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction (DHTR) refers to "accelerated destruction of red blood cells which normally manifests 24 hours to 28 days after a transfusion." The proposed codes include 999.63, 999.73, 999.78, and 999.85.

So with more than 130 proposed new codes, there are chances you will need to use at least some of them for your patients. As such, you need to stay informed of all the ICD-9 2011 code changes. One way of doing so from the comforts of your office or meeting room is an audio conference. On signing up for such a conference, you also stand to acquire CEUs.




Audioeducator offers audio conferences and provides advanced Learning Opportunities about ICD-9 2011 code changes through audio conferences through all types of audio conferences and exceptional series of training CD's, DVD's & Tapes.





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Coding to the Highest Level of Specificity


Insurance carriers often deny claims for not being coded to the highest level of specificity. As many billers are not coders they often don't understand what has gone wrong or how to fix it.

If a service line is denied for this reason they are saying that the diagnosis code needs to be more specific. Some diagnosis codes are only three or four digits but many are five digits. The diagnosis must be coded to the absolute highest level for that code, meaning the most number of digits for the code being used.

For example, the diagnosis for hypertension begins with 401. However if you submit a cliam with the diagnosis 401 it will be denied. The code 401 requires a 4th digit. 401.0 is malignant essential hypertension. 401.1 is benign essential hypertension. 401.9 is unspecified essential hypertension. So to bill a claim with a diagnosis of hypertension it must be either 401.0, 401.1, or 401.9.

Another example of a diagnosis needing to be billed to a higher level of specificity would be diabetes. 250.0 indicates diabetes however you neeed a 5th digit to specify what type of diabetes. 250.00 is diabetes mellitus type two, 250.01 is diabetes mellitus type one (juvenile type), and 250.02 is diabetes mellitus type one uncontrolled and so on.

As you can see in the above example just putting 250.0 does not indicate specifically what the problem is. Without the fifth digit the claim is lacking enough information to be processed and therefore will be denied.

If you are unsure if the diagnosis is coded to the highest level of specificity you can look it up in an ICD9 code book or on the web. There are several websites with current ICD9 codes available. They will indicate if the code is coded to the highest level.

Some practice management systems have scrubbers that will catch under coded diagnosis and give you a warning. Sometimes the biller may recognize a truncated diagnosis (or a diagnosis requiring an additional digit.)

In either case the biller should go back to the coder or provider and ask them to be more specific with the diagnosis code so the claim can be resubmitted.

Copyright 2009 - Michele Redmond




Alice Scott and her daughter / partner Michele Redmond are co-owners of a medical billing service. They offer an informational website for both physician's offices and the general public looking for information or help with their problems with medical insurance billing. Check out their website for more information, more about important changes now going on in Medical Insurance Billing, or to sign up for their free monthly newsletter.





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Medical Coding Education


Medical coding can be defined as the assigning of medical codes to different diagnosis and procedures, used in a hospital or in allopathic medicine, so as to make the procedure of reimbursement easier for all the parties involved.

A medical coder should have the ability to convert a disease into ICD-9-CM code (acronym for international classification of diseases manual) and a medical diagnosis into a CPT (current procedural terminology) code. This requires accurate and detailed knowledge of codes and the procedure that they stand for. Schools and colleges that offer courses in medical billing and coding provide extensive training in this field.

There are many types of medical coding courses that teach subjects such as advanced medical coding, procedural medical coding, advanced medical coding, medical coding and billing associate certificate programs, advanced coding for the physicians office, and advanced procedural coding. These courses are available on the Internet and in classrooms as well. Distance learning is another option that is open to people who want to pursue medical coding as a secondary career.

Some medical coding courses emphasize on topics other than coding such as accounting, business communication and professional development. Another specialization available under medical coding is medical insurance coding training. This course teaches the coder to recognize and apply the correct codes, government compliance regulations, reimbursement optimization, and eligibility for entry-level insurance position.

Personnel who work in a hospital or in a physician?s office (other than doctors) have an opportunity to become successful medical coders because of the experience that they possess. Health information management coders work in hospitals and physicians' offices, and many are freelancers. In large organizations such as hospitals and insurance companies, coders work under the supervision of a health information manager or a technician.

As the health care industry is ever- expanding, the career prospects for a certified medical coder are very good indeed. However, a medical coder has to keep up with the continuous changes and advances that are made in this field almost on a daily basis.




Medical Coding [http://www.e-MedicalCoding.com] provides detailed information on Medical Coding, Medical Coding Salaries, Medical Coding Certification, Medical Coding Specialists and more. Medical Coding is affiliated with Medical Billing Services.





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2012年5月28日 星期一

Medical Coding - The Importance Of This Growing Profession


Medical coding is medical terminology and represents the system of coding in medical field. This is the process of transforming the descriptions, diagnosis and procedures that take place in a doctor's office into universal codes used across the profession. Codes are prepared after taking information from various sources, such as health care centers and scientific laboratories. The purpose of gathering this information is to inculcate the maximum of the coding disease with the diagnosis. The application of medical coding is used for a variety of purposes, including the analysis of the disease and therapeutic conditions, decision systems based on the knowledge of the diagnosis, and application in widespread health programs.

The coding system makes things easier to interpret and enables doctors and other medical professionals to better understand and document patient medical records, knowing the history of the disease on the same level. In other words, it can be said that people throughout the world are at equal level of knowledge when they use the codes for knowing the history of a specific procedure or a disease. Thus, it removes doubts and brings a mutual level of sharing, through which it is easier to understand the severity and the intensity of the patient's symptoms.

Under this classification, all similar diseases are kept under one group. For example, all contagious diseases, such as flu and athlete's foot, are represented by a similar group of codes. While chronic diseases like diabetes, joint arthritis and other disorders are kept in one group. The purpose of this type of classification is not only to help the practitioner but also to assist researchers in making further advancement in the field. Thus, the history is updated and the researchers know what the codes mean. It also helps in the treatment of the patients when moved from one place to another, and a doctor can understand the whole story (or history) from the written code.

Medical coding is not merely a system made by anyone who knows the ABC's of the coding, as it has gone through much more than that. It is estimated that it will cross the top professionals in the next decade, as one of the highest paying jobs and can further be started as a business of its own. As such, the awareness of the importance of the medical coding is increasing by the day and more students are enrolling to get diplomas for becoming professionals, which are fast becoming as respected and demanded as doctors and nurses themselves.




If you're ready to start your Medical Coding Training & Certification, we have more great tools and resources on our website http://www.medicalcodingtrainingcertification.com





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The Ideal Medical Coding Supervisor


Medical coding is a respectable profession and also a well paying one. Exceptional medical coders after a few years of experience can become medical coding supervisors. Like in most other profession, a medical coding supervisor also has to be a good team leader. He should also be an expert in his field of work and preferably be a certified medical coder.

What are the duties that a medical coder will have to do? The main duty of a medical coding supervisor is to lead a team of certified medical coders. Coders do the job of identifying, collecting, and assessment of claim and encounter coding information as it pertains to the CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) hierarchical Condition Categories.

The ideal supervisor has to establish formal guidelines and make sure that the hospital is compliant with the various coding policies. He must also interact well with other hospital counterparts to promote optimal use of all software and equipment. He is needed to constantly be in touch with the accounts/ billing manager so that he can reach higher performance levels.

Besides having a perfect understanding of emergency medical coding, a medical coding supervisor must be able to apply coding changes and also may have to directly train his subordinate staff to ensure accuracy of the coding work. It is the responsibility of the supervisor to make sure that everything is compliant with the industry standards. After analyzing various reports he will have to ensure the accuracy, completeness, specificity and appropriateness of diagnosis codes for the services rendered. All submissions are tracked and monitored by the supervisor and it is his responsibility to make sure that all coding information gets accepted.

Whenever there is a problem the supervisor should be able to get in touch with the right subject matter experts and refer appropriate information resources to resolve the issues. Other duties include delegation of responsibility and effectively achieving all work related goals. Coding supervisors are also expected to train and give information to the customers.




The author of this article is Ricci Mathew of Outsource Strategies International (OSI), a US based company that offers services in Medical Coding, Medical Billing, Medical Transcription for clients across the US.





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2012年5月27日 星期日

Blue Screen Error Codes - Know the Codes!


These days, people are becoming familiar with computer blue screen error codes. These types of problems can create big effects in your computer work. It occurs when the computer is shut down unexpectedly. The blue screen shows the error message or code for the automatically shut down your computer. Often, it will show all the details on the blue screen for preventing irreparable damages for an operating system. In most cases, people can see the blue error codes can blow up due to the hardware or software misconfiguration or incompatible drivers. It is a major error for your computer. These types of errors have some codes; it may arise from some uncorrectable factors.

Since 1985, the blue screen error has been present in Windows Operating System. However, during the initial days, people can find very little information about the system error and don not offer an easy method to solve the problem and this information cannot give the option for retrieving your system to restart. Through the virus, your PC may get infected and that can results into a blue screen problems further. It can make the memory and the windows operating system a dump. You can diagnosis the RAM or software of your computer. These error codes can be used to diagnosis such issue.

These types of problems can arise due to two factors:

* One for the hardware issue

* Another or second for the software issue

It includes huge information about the system crash. Often, this information can help for solving these kinds of problems and such operation should commit to RAM and what sort of operation should be followed.

There is some specific application that can cause the system error codes. At the other hand, the hardware blue screen has less information for these kinds of problems. It will not include diagnosis information about the system error. For most part receiving the random error message on PC once is a not worse thing, which will happen. Quite often, it is your computer trying to tell you that it requires time to think & it may freeze on you for second or two and throw up not responding - and give me break message!

The blue screen error codes, send a jolt of fear & panic up most of the people's spines. It is the terrible feeling when the display turns totally blue all of sudden. Most of the people on seeing the screen, will probably not recognize this is not just the run of mill error, as well as do what most of the people will do. That is following IT pro's usual of turning the computer off & then back on. Unfortunately, an only method to escape from error code is the full restart.




Fore more information on Blue Screen Death Fix and and how to prevent it check out Best registry cleaner.

Check out the step by step procedure to Fix Blue Screen Death Error





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Geriatric Medical Coding - Coding for Dementia


Geriatric medicine involves health concerns of the elderly population, and these cover a number of syndromes and conditions. Dementia, urinary incontinence, osteoarthritis, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, cerebrovascular diseases, hypertension, hearing concerns, and hyperthyroidism are some of the major conditions. Geriatricians carry out various examinations and offer counseling sessions for their patients. Practitioners in this field also screen patients for various psychosocial concerns.

Dementia Codes - Medical and Psychiatric Codes

Dementia is a condition that affects a number of old people and it is defined as the progressive and severe impairment of one's brain function that interferes with one's normal functioning. Dementia is usually irreversible. It may be mild, moderate, severe or profound.

The new codes for dementia are provided in ICD-10 Chapter V: Mental and Behavioural Disorders. These codes signify various types of dementia and include medical codes and psychiatric codes. When billing for dementia, service providers should give the correct diagnostic codes for medical conditions causing irreversible dementia such as:

• Alzheimer's disease

• Frontotemporal dementia

• Multi-infarct dementia

• Parkinson's disease with dementia

• Huntington's disease

• Leukoencephalopathies

• Senile degeneration of the brain

• Mild cognitive impairment

• Dementia with Lewy bodies

• Pick's disease

• Binswanger's disease

• Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

• Multiple sclerosis

• HIV

• Neurosyphilis

• Unspecified cerebral degeneration

• Memory loss and late effects of CVD

Psychiatric codes signify uncomplicated senile dementia, presenile dementia, senile dementia with delusional features, senile dementia with depressive features, senile dementia with delirium, arteriosclerotic dementia, dementia without behavioral disturbances, and dementia with behavioral disturbances. When coding, it is necessary to indicate whether the dementia occurred with or without behavioral disturbances such as violent behavior, aggressive behavior, wandering off and more.

Reversible types of dementia are treatable and are most often caused by conditions such as brain tumors, chronic alcoholism, infections, certain deficiencies, heavy-metal poisoning, hyperthyroidism and so on. Providers can bill for pharmacologic, physical, occupational, speech-language and other therapies that are provided for their dementia patients. Payers require that providers clearly enter their primary diagnosis as well as the secondary diagnosis that support the medical necessity of the services provided. In case the patient suffers from an illness or injury not related to their dementia, the physician's primary diagnosis recorded in the claim should reflect clearly the need for the billed service.

Factors that Have an Impact on Reimbursement

• CMS does not regard certain diagnostic codes as regular medical codes. As a result, these are not reimbursed at the usual rate, sometimes these are not paid at all. The provider has to have in-depth knowledge regarding the assignment of the correct primary and secondary diagnostic codes to ensure full reimbursement.

• Reporting all professional services in all settings such as inpatient, outpatient, home and nursing facilities, correctly using the appropriate CPT five digit codes

• Appropriate use of evaluation and management (E/M) codes or the five digit codes used to report non-procedural professional services. These codes should clearly highlight the complexity of the service provided. Tests such as gait and balance assessment, mini mental status exam, history, physical and family interview do not have their own CPT codes. So these are included under E/M.

A physician's interaction with the patient includes screening, procedure visit and visit for discussing results. For effective reimbursement, the correct diagnostic and procedural codes have to be assigned for each of these visits. During screening, the physician identifies the condition for which the appropriate diagnostic code has to be assigned. Any new problem that requires a differential diagnosis has to be documented during the procedure visit. The provider has to also ascertain whether requirements for a higher level code are met. Additional documentation includes valid diagnostic codes to justify a comprehensive exam, codes to report any co-existing conditions such as diabetes, weight loss, delirium and so on. This is important with regard to using higher levels of E/M coding. In the case of a patient with multiple problems, the doctor will have to spend more time to complete the assessment. It is the visit's complexity that would justify billing for the highest level E/M.

• 99205 - Level 5 comprehensive exam for new patient

• 99215 - Level 5 comprehensive exam for established patient

• 96116 - neurobehavioral status examination

Codes to Use for Care Management Provided

• First hour - 99358

• Each additional 30 minutes - 99359

• Telephone services - 99371-3

Tips for Accurate Coding

Review of systems (ROS), history of present illness (HPI), family, physical examination, social medical history, medical decision making, time spent for discussion of counseling, and organizing care, all these have to be taken into account when assigning E/M codes. When coding for dementia, under no circumstances should a lower level of service be reported using a higher level code. If you are to receive due reimbursement, medical necessity of a provided service is of course the primary consideration. Individual requirements of the CPT codes used are also a major criterion. The level of service reported should have sufficient supporting documentation.




Geriatric Medical Coding - Outsource Strategies International (OSI), a leading medical billing and coding company in the US, provides a comprehensive suite of medical billing and coding outsourcing services.





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CPT Code 99212 Vs CPT Code 99213


Many doctors lose a significant amount of revenue because they bill lower codes than necessary. For example, even if the office visit meets criteria for CPT code 99213, many doctors will still bill the visit at a lower level. No matter how you look at it, the medical practice absorbs all of the loss in terms of time and resources consumed. That said, you can still capture this money without having to worry about it boosting the cost of patient copays.

Coding 99213

To begin, it is important to realize that you do not need to be presented with a complex or detailed problem in order to bill at the 99213. If a normally healthy patient sees you for a paper cut, it may be suitable to bill at the lower level. On the other hand, if the patient has some type of immune disorder, the cut is infected, or located near a finger joint, it would be better to bill at the higher code. In a similar way, visits for patients with stable, but chronic diabetes, hypertension, or obesity can usually be coded as 99213.

When you are trying to choose between codes 99212 and 99213, you should always be mindful of the amount of time spent with the patient, as well as any discussions about medical history. Anything that removes your focus from the initial complaint can help you bill at the higher code. Among other things, if the patient starts talking about sinus problems, or family illness, you can document those facts in the chart. The additional diagnosis codes, plus medical history review will ensure you meet criteria for billing at the higher level. Depending on the number of conditions discussed, you may even find that the visit actually qualifies to be billed as a 99214.

Track Time with Your Patients

Depending on your outlook, you may not keep track of the time when you sit with a patient. If you remember to document the time when you begin, and the time when you finish, you are likely to find that you spent more than 10 minutes for the visit. Under these circumstances, you are literally throwing money out the door when you do not bill at a higher code. If you see 40 patients a day, an additional five minutes per patient adds up to 200 minutes of your time that is not being reimbursed. In a sense, you will be working full time, but only requesting reimbursement for half of your time.

Even though you may be hesitant about changing from 99212 to 99213 for office visits, it will be to your advantage to look at each criteria for these particular codes. If you find that you are naturally meeting the criteria for a 99213 visit, then it is worth your while to change your billing polices. That said, if you want to give away four hours of your day for free, then you might as well go on billing at the lower level. Rather than go on losing this money, you will be well served by keeping a list on hand of criteria for billing at the higher CPT level. If you feel that you need some additional reminders, you can always adjust office visit forms to ensure your notes are complete and consistent with the code being used.




Dr. Adam L. Alpers is a medical practice consultant and invites you to access and gain knowledge in enhancing your medical billing and coding by visiting http://www.medicalcodingcashsecrets.com
This program was developed for providers to gain quick and easy understanding of some of the most needed information in billing and coding. You do the work, now get paid for what you do. To Learn and Earn more. Also, check out our blog today: http://www.medcodingnbilling.com/blog

Copyright - Adam L. Alpers. All Rights Reserved Worldwide





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2012年5月26日 星期六

Transition From ICD 9 Codes to ICD 10 Codes - What Concerns This Medical Billing Business Owner


The transition from ICD-9 Codes to ICD 10 scares me - and here's why.

Experience with NPI

Just judging by the adoption of NPI (National Provider Identifier) numbers and the challenges it gave our billing service, ICD-10 code implementation has the potential to be very disruptive if a practice or billing service has not planned and prepared.

And NPI was only ONE number - ICD 10 codes are much more complex. Even if you and your provider are prepared, what about clearinghouses and insurance payers? Not to mention the largest insurance payer of them all - Medicare!

When our billing service incorporated NPI, we had the cost and disruption of upgrading our practice management software, coupled with having to re-map our claim files sent to the clearinghouse. There were also problems and confusion with some insurance carriers regarding legacy ID numbers, group NPI, and individual NPI.

This resulted in many claims not getting paid on the first submission - or second - or third... In some cases claims had to be re-submitted many times over. This was a major disruption to our clients revenue - and ours. And our clients are looking to us as a billing service to have all the answers.

As with NPI, we can expect that everybody will have a different interpretation of what implementing the new ICD 10 codes will require.

What sill it Cost?

What will the cost be to the small medical billing service? What will it cost our providers?

October 1, 2013 seams like a long way off - but we need to be learning, planning, and preparing for this transition now. I don't know if we have all fully grasped how much this will cost in direct and in-direct costs.

What I mean by direct costs are the time and money required for training, mapping ICD-9 to ICD-10, and potential costly software modifications. Indirect costs refer to interruptions to reimbursement for a providers - especially small ones. I have a feeling this is another unfunded mandate resulting from the 1996 HIPAA legislation thats going to cost all parties involved.

Brief Background of ICD 10 Codes

ICD-9 codes are nearly 30 years old and cannot be expanded any further diagnosis. Many of the diagnosis categories are full. ICD 9 codes are 3 to 5 characters. The first can be a number or letter, the 2nd through 5th are numbers with a decimal after the third character.

ICD 10 codes are 3 to 7 characters, the first one is a letter, 2nd through 7th are either a letter or number, with a decimal after 3 characters. These codes are arranged in chapters and sub-chapters with diseases grouped by letter. It allows over 155,000 diagnosis codes compared to a maximum of 17,000 ICD 9 codes.

Supposedly the greater number of codes in the ICD 10 will make it easier to find the right diagnosis code. ICD 10 has an improved structure and is more specific making it easier to use than ICD 9. Most practices use a relatively small number of codes related to the type of specialty.

Part of HIPAA

HIPAA legislation included the requirement for use of ICD 10 with a compliance date of October 1, 2013 to be implemented. The government agency requiring implementation is the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). HHS has no plans to delay implementing.

Related to the switch to ICD 10 is the transition to the version 5010 standard for electronic transactions effective January 1, 2012. The 5010 changes are necessary to accommodate ICD 10 codes and NPI.

ICD-9 will no longer be maintained after implementation of ICD 10. ICD 10 is currently in use by other countries and is updated annually just like ICD 9.

Concerns

The issues of concern for most providers and those who serve them are the potential economic impacts. Will practice management systems be able to accommodate the greater number of diagnosis codes (up to 155,000) for ICD 10? Software applications from the front end physicians office to the clearinghouse to the payer will have to be able to accommodated ICD 10.

Will payers that don't yet use ICD 10 codes map everything back to ICD 9 for processing?

Estimates for healthcare providers, coders, and billers to become proficient with ICD 10 is 6 months.

From what I've read about ICD 10, it's an improvement to the current ICD 9 diagnosis codes, however the transition has the potential to be very disruptive. It seams like a long way off, but it's important to begin planning and preparing for this transition now.




Gina Wysor has over 10 years experience in the medical billing industry as well as an additional 10 years in the insurance industry. Gina is the owner of a home based medical billing and coding company, Advanced Reimbursement Solutions.

Visit http://www.all-things-medical-billing.com/ for more information on Medical Billing as a business or career. http://www.all-things-medical-billing.com/medical-billing-information.html has additional information on Medical Billing and some of the issues of concern to the Billing Specialist.





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A Patient's Guide to Medical Coding


Medical Coding is one of the growing sectors of the healthcare industry. Through Medical coding, specific numeric and alphanumeric codes are assigned to different medical procedures as well as services. This coded information is then used for billing purpose by the insurance companies. So in short, without medical coding, the major stakeholders of the healthcare industry such as doctors, hospitals and health care providers have minimal chances of getting paid.

Medical coding is not just important to healthcare providers and insurance companies. It is vitally important for the patients as well. Medical codes are primarily used to avoid giving details of the treatments and diagnosis, and determine their costs and reimbursement and develop a relationship between diseases and drugs. For patients, it is even more important to know about their diagnosis, the practitioner's services, and double-check their billing from healthcare providers as well as insurance providers.

There are a number of medical codes that are essential for the patients to know, especially for those patients who suffer from a chronic disease. The first of these is the CPT or current procedural terminology codes. These codes describe the services provided by the healthcare providers. Patients must know the relevant codes so that they can understand the services better and can also double-check and negotiate the bills and prices for the services they have taken.

Patients must also know about the Healthcare common Procedure Coding system or HCPCS Codes. These codes are used by Medicare for services outside the doctor's office, such as ambulance, medical equipment or supplies. Then, there is another coding system called International Classification of Functioning, disability and health or ICF, which describe the outcomes from disability.

National Drug Codes or NDC are another type of codes that are assigned by FDA to identify and report a unique drug. Then, there are the CDT codes for dental procedures and nomenclatures, which are specifically for dentists. Specific codes for psychiatric illness called DSM -IV-TR are also applied for psychiatric illnesses.

All these coding systems are important for patients who are undergoing some kind of treatment. That way, they are better able to understand their treatment and the services and drugs they are using. For insurance purpose, this is even more important. If you know about all these, it will be easier for you to confirm the entire billing involved in your treatment. Sometimes, medical coders as well as insurance companies commit grave mistakes during the billing of a certain patient's treatment, which is sometimes very problematic for the patient and his relatives. So, it is also important for patients to know what is going on during the billing process.




If you're ready to start your Medical Coding Training & Certification, we have more great tools and resources on our website http://www.medicalcodingtrainingcertification.com





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Lean Thinking With Focus on Medical Billing and Coding Services


Lean thinking is about mindset or the way of thinking of organizations to achieve a totally waste free operation that focuses on customer value. It involves cross functional orientation within organizations to improve efficiencies and achieve waste free operations. However, it is easier told than practiced!

It needs a house of lean tools laid on stronger organizational commitment to improve their level of service to the customers. It is more so challenging on the services industry when compared with the manufacturing since the process maturity levels on the services industry are still evolving. However setting aside the challenges, one would still find surprising similarities between services and manufacturing, that both involves complex interlinked processes managed by personnel to accomplish their tasks to yield end value to customers. Hence it necessitates a need to cognitively approach the success stories on the manufacturing side and apply those best practices with more rigor.

In the context of Medical Billing & Coding Service

To maximize value and reduce waste in the context of medical billing and coding services, the first step is to create a unit with lean thinking. It needs lots of communication from the strategic management team to the line personnel on the objectives of lean. This shall create a sense of belonging and brings down uncertainty around job losses. It needs to carry a strong and meaningful message that services differentiators can be accomplished only with personnel.

At a next level on the process side, the starting point need to be defining the critical to quality parameters for their customers that includes but not limited to,

* Expected financial accuracies and processing accuracies

* Turnaround time requirements

* Rework percentages

It is important that organizations assess themselves on their standings with respects to these parameters so that they will be able to define road maps. This includes doing a value stream mapping of their processes that will list the steps involved in accomplishing the end value desired by the customer.Being a federally regulated process, it becomes mandatory that organization assess their process efficiencies to identify and isolate value added processes from non value added processes. Imbalances here shall definitely create friction within the system. It needs classification of processes into,

* Core repeatable processes

* Core non repeatable processes

* Support and repeatable processes

* Support and non repeatable processes

Define Implementation approach to a successful lean program

It begins with defining a program charter to roll out and institutionalize a lean program. It involves programs to 1. Improve Quality, Eliminate wastes through Training Integrated Quality Assurance Framework.

It involves rolling out a training integrated quality framework. This includes combination of statistical tools and methods that results in identifying and isolating defects / wastes from the process. Statistical tools are extensively adopted to perform

1. Pareto analysis - to identify the vital few

2. Define Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPA)

3. 5 Why Analysis and

4. Time Trend Analysis

This QA framework helps in accomplishing the process within its control limits. However organizations need to appreciate those statistical tools assists only in identifying and isolating the outliers. But to improve quality, there needs to be very active participation from the training function since variations within billing and coding processes are very high.

2. Improve Quality, Eliminate wastes through Technology

Define claims scrubbing mechanisms on top of claims data so that common and more frequent errors can be automatically detected. This shall increase the velocity of the process and also reduce rework. For instance a claim for male insured with a diagnosis code related to gynecology is obviously incorrect and this can be caught upfront in the system instead of allowing it to traversing through different processes within the overall system and finally getting rejected for payment. This saves lot of payment rejection upfront. Hence a good lean program shall leverage the expertise from IT and operations team to define solution. Hence it becomes imperative that the medical billing and coding team to understand the way adjudication systems on the insurance companies work so they can build upfront claim scrubbers and pre edits.

3. Optimize Process overheads

It involves operations unit to do a comprehensive time trend analysis on operations data. This shall include incoming volume data, capacity utilization levels, throughput, TAT compliance etc. With proper incentive and remuneration program, organizations need to do plan for running the process with optimal utilization levels that shall remove over allocation of personnel to the processes. This approach reduces process overheads. Organizations need to understand overproduction is equally bad as under production.

Conclusion

Lean thinking is not new. However the dynamics of Health Care Industry keeps continuously changing and it places a need on the organizations to keep striving for innovations so they perform exceedingly well on customer satisfaction index. Innovations cease to exist if organizations fail to ask one fundamental question on an ongoing basis - Why am I doing it this way and am I doing it right?

Lean thinking facilitates organization to ask these fundamental questions, as it did before!




For more information on medical billing and coding services, Medical Transcription Services, Payroll Outsourcing, Please visit www.optisolbusiness.com/pro/bpo-services





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2012年5月25日 星期五

Bone Up Your OASIS C to Boost Your Home Health Coding Career


With so much attention on OASIS C process measures and communication requirements, spot on coding can be a tough story. It is no more than ever important to accurately document all the factors that you can provide on the OASIS. However, precise diagnosis coding is just one part of the maze.

Prior to OASIS C, it was slightly easier to see how the diagnosis codes you chose would affect your agency's reimbursement. These days, coding by itself does not often make the difference in dollars; in its place, code selection and proper OASIS scoring combine to present a solid picture of the care you give.

As an experienced player, you should see to it that your agency is in compliance with all of the coding regulations and that each episode is coded up front to best describe the patient's real health status. You should make an effort to capture all of the payment your agency is entitled to get and see to it that the coding matches the OASIS, plan of care, and bill.

You will have to do more than coding; you should check and validate the OASIS responses against the clinical record and plan of care to ensure everything is consistent and justified.

For more tips and tricks as far as home health coding is concerned, tune in to audio conferences. Such a conference will certainly ensure that you are up to speed with OASIS C, staging pressure ulcers correctly or for that matter handling any compliance issue properly. Even if you fail to attend one on the appointed date, CDs and PDF files are always there for your picking. And if that's not enough, you even stand to acquire CEUs on attending such a home health coding conference.




Audioeducator offers medicare services and provides advanced Learning Opportunities about OASIS C process through audio conferences through all types of audio conferences and exceptional series of training CD's, DVD's & Tapes.





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Specific Medical Codes Used In The United States


The American Medical Association developed the medical coding system that's in use in the United States. The codes are used to identify a medical practitioner's diagnosis, and treatments provided. These standardized medical codes help patients to check their diagnosis and it helps the health care insurers in reimbursing health care costs. The medical coding systems currently in use are:

CPT: These codes are known as Current Procedural Terminology Codes and are used to describe every type of service that a health care facility may provide to a patient. The health care service provider uses the list to submit to the health care payer for reimbursement. Patients can also use these to check the services rendered to them.

HCPCS: Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System codes are used by Medicare. The level 1 HCPCS codes are identical to CPT codes. Level II codes are used to identify any services related to healthcare that has been provided outside the healthcare facilities, like ambulance services, or medical equipment. HCPCS level II codes are codes that have not been catered for in CPT codes.

ICD: International Classification of Diseases codes are maintained in the United States by CDC and internationally by the World Health Organization. These codes keep changing over time and are found in patients' hospital records and on death certificates.

ICF: These codes have been recently added to medical coding and are used to describe patients' disabilities and how able they are to function in their environment. They refer to the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health.

DRG: These codes are used to group Diagnosis Related Groups and currently there are approximately 500 groups. Patients' diagnosis, treatment, age and other criteria's are used to group patients having the same diagnosis, treatment, etc. Medicare uses the DRG codes on the patient's record for purposes of reimbursement.

NDC: These are the National Drug Codes that have been developed by the Federal Drug Authority and since 1972 have required all prescription and insulin manufacturer to identify each of their products by a three segment unique number. The Federal Drug Authority maintains the updated list on its website.

CDT: Now dentists also have the ability of using codes to identify procedures conducted. The Code on Dental Procedures and Nomenclature has been specifically developed for this purpose.

DSM-IV-TR: This is a set of codes developed by the American Psychiatric Association to enable coding of psychiatric illnesses of patients, and are published and maintained by the association.

This is the list of medical codes that are currently in use in the United States by healthcare service providers.




If you're ready to start your Medical Coding Training & Certification, we have more great tools and resources on our website http://www.medicalcodingtrainingcertification.com.





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Neurology Coding - Diagnosis 348.8 is Invalid Now


The latest ICD-9 2010 changes went into effect on October 1 this year. Because of thisyou need to adjust the coding software that you use to reflect some new diagnosis codes for special neurological screenings.

Effective October 1, diagnosis 348.8 (other conditions of brain) has gotten the axe. However, ICD-9 2010 has brought forth a new fifth-digit replacement - 348.89. Since the descriptor remains the same, you'll be able to use it for the same circumstances as 348. 8.

What's more, coders previously reported V80.0 (Special screening for neurological, eye, and ear diseases; neurological conditions) along with the patient's symptoms such as 780.4 (dizziness and giddiness) or 784.0 (headache), before an MRI, MRA or another test to have a definitive diagnosis. You'll need to do away with V80.0 as the new ICD-9 codes have gone into effect. As per the changes, now you'll need to report:

* V80.01 --Special screening for traumatic brain injury

* V80.09 -- Special screening for other neurological conditions.

The replacements of V80.01 and V80.09 come with its own advantages, helping you tighten your reporting because they differentiate between screenings more specifically for traumatic brain injury (TBI) and other neurological conditions. So if you code for any of the following specialties - radiology, neurology, family practice, etc. - you'll find these new codes helpful.

Keeping up with the ICD-9 code changes can be a tough ask. But attending audio conferences might just ease up your job and help you get a better insight on neurology coding. Attending one will help you master the slew of neurological coding changes for the year 2010 and in the process help you avoid payment delays or denials. Go for an audio conference and see the difference it brings to your practice.




Offers health care audio conferences and advanced Learning Opportunities about neurology coding and ICD-9 Codes for medical coders and billers, in the health insurance company claim processors through all types of exceptional series of training CD's, DVD's & Tapes.





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2012年5月24日 星期四

Medical Coding Exam


Medical coding exam is a term that covers a number of different coding certification exams offered by the (AAPC) American Association of Professional Coders. Each certification exam covers a specific specialty, and tests for the knowledge required in that particular specialty.

The main certification is the CPC, and this is awarded to those passing a rigorous? test that involves:

Knowledge of anatomy, physiology, and medical terminology to correctly code for services and diagnosis.
Knowing how to update and integrate reimbursement rule changes into a providers billing and reimbursement process.
A thorough knowledge of coding rules and regulations for compliance and reimbursement.
Competency in accurately coding for services such as pathology and medicine, radiology, anesthesia, surgery, and patient evaluation and management.
Competency in providing accurate coding for diagnosis, procedures, and services in a doctor's office setting.

The medical coding exam is proctored and contains 150 multiple choice questions with an open code book allowed for reference.

The exam takes just under 6 hours for the student to complete, and 1 free "retake" is offered if the student should fail to pass the exam.

There is a $300.00 charge to take the exam, ($260.00) for AAPC members.

There are other variants of the medical coding exam that are offered by the AAPC:

Certified Professional Compliance Officer (CPCO)
Certified Professional Medical Auditor (CPMA)
Certified Interventional Radiology Cardiovascular Coder (CIRCC)
Certified Professional Coder-Payer (CPC-P)
Certified Professional Coder-Hospital Outpatient (CPC-H)

Requirements for the medical coding exam (Certified Professional Coder (CPC)

Two years? experience (unless a the student is a member of an apprenticeship program.
An associates degree? is strongly suggested before taking the medical coding certification exam.
Maintain a current membership with the AAPC.

After successfully passing the medical coding exam, coders will be required to demonstrate coding proficiency while actually on the job, to receive the full CPC credential. Those that have yet to do so, will be considered to have apprentice status. This will be updated to full CPC status when they have furnished proof of successful coding experience.

The CPC test is a rigorous exam with a high level of knowledge that must be demonstrated. However those coders that have the CPC credential make an average of 20% more than coders lacking CPC certification. This difference reflects the industries respect for the CPC credential as the gold standard for medical coders.

The AAPC medical coding exam is your ticket not only to better pay, but to the most highly respected medical coding certification in the industry. It's highly recommended that if you are serious about a medical coding career, you should consider passing the CPC exam to be your first priority!




Thinking about a career in medical billing, coding, or transcription? Then visit my blog Medical Billing and Coding Online where you will find lots of good information about training for and becoming a medical information professional!





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Common Codes Used In Medical Coding - CPT, HCPCS And More


When you walk out of a clinic after an appointment or you get discharged from a hospital where you were a patient, you will be handed a piece of paper with a set of numbers on them. If you are wondering what those numbers indicate, they are codes that describe your diagnosis and treatment. These are called CPT codes, used to describe your illness and your treatment, and are also sent to your medical insurance company for reimbursement.

CPT stands for Current Procedural Terminology which is used to describe every task or service performed by your medical practitioner. These include diagnostics, medical and surgical procedures. CPT codes were developed by the American Medical Association (AMA) and are regularly updated and maintained by them. Old codes no longer in use are discarded and new codes are added. These codes are used to maintain a patient's history and also for billing the patient's medical insurer. You must remember that all medical insurers do not pay the same amount for a medical procedure. For example, Company A may reimburse a doctor $100 for a medical checkup while Company B may pay $80 for the same checkup. Further, Medicare uses their own set of codes known as HCPCS, which are very similar to CPT codes.

There are thousands of CPT codes in use and these are updated periodically by the American Medical Association. If a patient wants to know what was their diagnosis and procedure performed on them they can visit the AMA website and lookup the codes. Since the AMA spends an enormous amount of money to update and maintain the CPT codes they hold the copyrights to it. No individual can download or use the codes without their authorization; for which they charge a fee. However people can look up individual codes to find out what medical services were provided to them. They can also track their medical history by cross checking previous bills with the CPT codes. Medical insurance companies have to pay AMA to get access to this rather large database.

HCPCS are codes used by Medicare and Medicaid and they are updated and maintained by them. The level I HCPCS codes are similar to the CPT codes. However there is a level II of HCPCS codes which are used by medical suppliers for providing services like ambulance services and medical equipment. As medical suppliers are not necessarily associated with a doctor's office Medicare and Medicaid deal with these bills separately as the doctor does not include them in his bill.




If you're looking for information about Medical Coding Certification & Training, we have more great tools and resources on our website http://www.medicalcodingtrainingcertification.com





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2012年5月23日 星期三

Anesthesia Coding - Get the Correct Codes For Transesophageal Echocardiography


The most common problem in anesthesia coding associated with billing and obtaining reimbursement for transesophageal echocardiography or TEE is determining whether the procedure is for diagnostic or monitoring purposes. It is often difficult to tell whether the TEE was diagnostic or not unless your physician identifies the study's purpose. If you wish to bill for a diagnostic TEE, attach a written report, or else it's unlikely to withstand the scrutiny of an audit.

CPT contains two sets of codes for diagnostic transesophageal echocardiography or TEE. For a diagnostic test, pay attention to whether the anesthesiologist places the probe, interprets and reviews the study, or provides both services. When your anesthesiologist places the probe and does not provide a written report, use the placement-only diagnostic TEE codes. Your physician sometimes might interpret the findings while another physician places the probe. Provided your anesthesiologist is the only physician to issue a written report of the diagnostic TEE, you would code for the "image acquisition, interpretation and report" only with 93314 for real-time TEE and 93316 for TEE for congenital cardiac anomalies.

Avoid truncated diagnosis codes in anesthesia coding. Make sure your anesthesiologist is as specific as possible when reporting diagnoses attached to TEE use. Merely linking the TEE code to a payable ICD-9 code is not sufficient. Clinical signs or symptoms must be present and documented.

Transesophageal echocardiography for monitoring is never paid nor is it ever unbundled. When TEE is used in dissection or with valvular repair, your anesthesiologist is diagnosing whether surgery fixed the lesion. Your anesthesiologist is then not monitoring, but telling the surgeon whether his repair has corrected the problem to an acceptable level. Here, he is playing an active role in management and doing more than just monitoring. If you include a full report in this case, you can bill a reimbursable code like 93312 or 93314, but make sure you do not label this report as monitoring, else you'll not be entitled to reimbursement.

Stay on top of the CPT codes with the latest updates and expert tips on anesthesia coding, by attending anesthesia coding seminars. 




Keep on updating your anesthesia coding knowledge with anesthesia coding seminars and many other medical coding audio conferences with premier coding experts, CDs, tapes and transcripts of coding training information by specialty.





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What to Expect From the New ICD-10-CM Medical Coding


With the ICD-10-CM implementation date on the horizon, there may be questions about this new medical coding system. Why is it needed? What are the changes? How will it affect my medical coding career? While you're very familiar with ICD-9-CM, you may wonder what the ICD-10-CM system is all about. Here's some helpful information:

What is ICD-9-CM? ICD-9-CM (International Classification of Diseases, 9th edition, Clinical Modifications) is a set of codes used by physicians, hospitals, and health care professionals to indicate the diagnosis for all patient visits. ICD-9-CM contains approximately 13,000 codes; these codes are mandatory for all health insurance claims in the U.S.

ICD-9 diagnosis codes consist of 3-5 numeric characters representing illnesses and conditions; alpha-numeric E codes describing external causes of injuries, poisonings, and adverse effects; and V codes describe factors influencing health status and contact with health services.

What is ICD-10-CM? ICD-10-CM is the long awaited diagnosis code revision to ICD-9-CM. This coding system contains approximately 68,000 codes. ICD-10 has been in use throughout the world for both morbidity and mortality statistics since 1994. It has been required for reporting mortality statistics in the United States since 1999.

The ICD-10-CM codes are very different from the codes included in the ICD-9-CM medical coding system. All codes for ICD-10-CM are alpha-numeric. There may be up to seven alpha-numeric characters - which will require extensive changes to billing software programs to accommodate the additional digits, as well as additional medical coding training to familiarize people with the new codes.

Why is the new ICD-10-CM coding system needed?

The ICD-9-CM system, which has been in use since 1979, has run its due course and provides the following limitations:


Limited Space - It is running out of numbers to assign for codes and in some cases, new code proposals have not been adopted because of limited space
Not Specific Enough - Its diagnosis codes do not describe the severity or complexity of the various disease conditions. This has resulted in increasing requests for additional documentation in order to support claims.
No Exchange of Information - It hinders the exchange of meaningful health care data with health care organizations and professionals around the world.

What are the benefits of adopting ICD-10-CM?

The anticipated benefits of implementing the new ICD-10 medical coding system include: expanded injury codes, grouped according to site rather than type of injury; combination of diagnosis/symptom codes; addition of sixth character with some codes extended out to the seventh character; laterality (left and right specific where applicable); V and E codes incorporated into the main classification; obstetric codes that identify trimester; addition of ambulatory and managed care encounter information; and expanded postoperative complication information is located within the individual chapters.

How does this affect my medical coding career?

As a medical coder, you will need to get a comprehensive overview of the significant changes in store for both diagnostic and procedural coding, along with detailed information on the impacts of the coding changes to your medical coding career. Because October 1, 2013 is the drop-dead date for compliance, all health care professionals - from medical coders to doctors - will need to be familiar with the new system. This means that you will need to enroll in an ICD-10-CM medical coding course to learn the new medical coding system, which consists of almost 55,000 more codes. While there's still a lot of time to prepare, you need to look ahead toward the upcoming changes.

The new ICD-10-CM medical coding system is an essential progression for the U.S. health care system - the current ICD-9-CM system has run out of space for new codes and limits the coding process. As a medical coder, you need to familiarize yourself with the vast new system and get the medical coding training necessary to make a smooth transition.




Heather H. Brunson is a lead marketing copywriter for Allied Medical School. Allied provides medical training programs that prepare students for careers in the medical billing, medical coding, and medical transcription fields. Online courses offer students a quick and convenient way to learn.





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Medical Coding From Home - Are Medical Coding Jobs at Home Possible?


Is medical coding from home possible? My experience medical coding at home.

With all the opportunities available in the health care field, few are as attractive for working from home as medical coding and medical billing. However as someone who performs medical coding at home, I don't really know how this can be possible without first earning the trust and confidence of the provider you work for. Any medical coding jobs at home you see advertised are typically not legitimate jobs once you investigate.

Good Communication

Medical coding from home is possible if you have a very accommodating employer or provide medical coding services as part of a medical coding and billing business. I perform medical coding from home as part of my medical billing and coding home business. The nature of the work lends itself well to work from home.

Because there are questions regarding patient encounters, it's very important to maintain good communications with the provider. This insures claims can be coded accurately and submitted promptly. When performing medical coding at home, it is very important that all communications be in accordance with the HIPAA privacy standard and HIPAA security standard to maintain patient confidentiality.

If you are knowledgeable on coding, being able to offer billing and coding services is a big plus to a potential client provider. I've found that smaller practices don't just want to just outsource their coding - they also want someone to take care of the billing.

Benefits

The great thing about medical billing jobs from home is the flexibility it allows you to work on your schedule. Not having to clock in to the normal office environment saves time and travel expense. It also allows me to work around my families schedule. However quick turn-around is important to insure claims are coded, entered, and submitted promptly.

Drawbacks

The downside of medical coding from home is that you have to set boundaries and not to let it interfere with your home life. If you have an active business there's a lot going on - Phone calls, in-coming faxes, emails, etc. There's always something that needs to be done. If you are not disciplined, this can intrude with your home and family life.

The Process

In my case, our providers send either audio or written dictation securely to my home office. This is usually sent on a daily schedule and has all the details of the procedures performed on each patient.

I then look up the correct diagnosis code and the applicable CPT treatment codes with necessary modifiers in my coding reference books. For each patient encounter, this information is documented on a super bill and entered into the practice management software from which an electronic claim is generated. The claims are submitted to the clearinghouse who then checks for errors and formats for transmission to the appropriate payer. Some days I may have up to 40 patient encounters to code and submit claims for. As you can see it's very important to stay on top of the coding to prevent getting a large back log of work.

To prevent claim rejection, it's important for the ICD-9 and CPT codes and modifiers be correct. If a doctor isn't very thorough, coding from the doctors dictation or notation can be very time consuming. However once you get to know the provider's preferences and habits, the process goes much more smoothly. I give feedback to the provider so we can make the process work as efficiently as possible.

In summary there are opportunities for medical coding at home due to the nature of the work. However having good communication with an accommodating provider is necessary to be successful.




Gina Wysor has over 10 years experience in the medical billing industry as well as an additional 10 years in the insurance industry. Gina is the owner of a home based medical billing and coding company, Advanced Reimbursement Solutions. Visit http://www.all-things-medical-billing.com for more information on medical billing and coding as a career or business. http://www.all-things-medical-billing.com/medical-billing-business.html has additional information on starting a medical billing business based on Gina's experiences.





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2012年5月22日 星期二

Get $125 Extra in Vasectomy-Related Payment With This 4-Step Coding Process


Turn to V25.x for your diagnosis code option.

Vasectomies are very common in most urology practices. But choosing the proper codes to report can sometimes prove very challenging, right from the pre-vasectomy "consultation" visit that most urologists perform. You could be costing your practice hundreds over the course of one year if you're not billing out each piece of the vasectomy process. Here are four steps to ensure that you capture all the reimbursement your urologist deserves.

1. Don't be in a hurry to assign consult codes for the first visit

Prior to performing a vasectomy process a urologist meets with the patient to discuss the procedure and makes sure that the patient understands the outcome of the procedure and then undergo this elective sterilization. You should report this office visit using the appropriate E/M code, says Kelly Young, a coder with Scottsdale Center for Urology in Scottsdale, Ariz.

The real challenge comes when you try to figure out whether you should report an office visit E/M code or a consultation code.

Depending on your urologist's documentation, you can choose from the consultation codes (99241-99245, Office consultation for a new or established patient...), a new patient (99201-99205, Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of a new patient...), or established patient (99211-99215, Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient...) codes.

Don't lose out on your Dollars: You would be sacrificing on your Dollars if you skip reporting the pre-vasectomy office visit. Suppose, your urologist performs a level-three new patient visit (99203), you'll earn $91.97 (the unadjusted fee for 99203, 2.55 RVUs, times the 2009 conversion rate of $36.0666) in addition to the procedure code, and if your urologist performs a level-three consultation, you'll earn $125.15 (the unadjusted fee for 99203, 3.47 RVUs, times the 2009 conversion rate of $36.0666) in addition to the procedure code.

Remember: If the patient is new to your office, report a new patient visit using codes 99201-99205. However, if the urologist (or another urologist in the same practice) has seen the patient within the past three years, report an established patient office visit (99211-99215), and not a new patient visit.

Beware: Don't let the term "consultation" in the physician's documentation trick you. Often practices, physicians, and even patients refer to the pre-vasectomy visit as a consultation. However, to report a consultation code (99241-99245), the visit must meet the requirements of a consultation. There must be a documented request from the requesting physician; a record of the urologist stating his findings, opinions, and advice in the patient's chart; and a report that's sent back to the requesting doctor.

Michael A. Ferragamo MD, FACS, clinical assistant professor of urology, State University of New York, Stony Brook says, "Since the recent rule changes for consultations come from Medicare 2006 policy changes (Transmittal 788) and since most men seeking vasectomies for sterilization do not have Medicare as their primary insurance carrier, the patients sent to urologists by physicians most often represent consultation requests, hence, they should be billed and coded accordingly if all criteria for a consultation are met."

Diagnosis aid: The most appropriate ICD-9 code for the pre-vasectomy examination, whether it's a consultation or a new/established patient visit is V25.09 (Encounter for contraceptive management; general counseling and advice; other).

Important point: Many payers have a perception that code V25.09 is a "family planning advice," and pertain only to the female partner, and hence, they will deny payment for any pre-vasectomy examination of the male when you use this diagnosis. So use V25.2 (Encounter for contraceptive management; sterilization, admission for interruption of...vas deferens) in its place, with this you can expect payment for a pre-vasectomy service in most cases.

Check, which diagnostic code is preferred by your payer. The Scottsdale Center for Urology uses V25.2 as the diagnosis code. However, "we bill... with V25.09," says Kim Kerckhoff, CCA, coder for Alpine Urology in Anchorage, Alaska.

2. Use modifier 57 for Same-Day E/M and Procedure

If your urologist performs the vasectomy procedure on the same day as the pre-vasectomy office visit make sure that you append modifier 57 (Decision for surgery) to the E/M code you report. Also ensure that the urologist's documentation supports a separate E/M code, the E/M service must go above and beyond the E/M that's inherent to the procedure.

Avoid bundled payment: Your urologist can conduct the service on separate days if you want to make sure that your payer will not bundle the pre-vasectomy visit with the vasectomy procedure. Many urologists do this anyway to give the patient time to review his options and make the final decision about surgery. Above that, your office will have time to review the patient's benefits.

Alice Kater, CPC, PCS, coder for Urology Associates of South Bend, Ind says, "We never perform the procedure the same day as the vas consultation. The patient and wife/partner will come in for the consult, view a movie, and speak extensively with the physician following the examination and review of systems. When they leave the physician, they schedule their procedure for the next available, and convenient, vas opening."

3. Select a Code Based on the Type of Procedure

You'll have to go through the documentation to see which technique your urologist used, so that you can report the actual vasectomy procedure. Then choose one of these three codes:


55250 - Vasectomy, unilateral or bilateral (separate procedure), including postoperative semen examination(s). "This CPT Codes is the most common code used for vasectomy for voluntary sterilization," Ferragamo explains.

55450 - Ligation (percutaneous) of vas deferens, unilateral or bilateral (separate procedure). "Coders rarely use this code for a vasectomy for voluntary sterilization," Ferragamo says.

55559 - Unlisted laparoscopy procedure, spermatic cord for a laparoscopic vasectomy.

Add V25.2 to the vasectomy procedure, says Kerckhoff.

Clue: You should report 55250, 55450, or 55559 just once per patient regardless of whether the urologist performs the procedure on one or both sides. The urologist usually, but not always, performs the procedure, cutting the vas deferens and suturing the ends, on both the left and right sides. So don't change your urology coding even if your urologist cuts and sutures only one side (for a patient having only one testicle).

Note: These codes also include the local or regional anesthesia that the urologist administers, so do not code any local anesthesia administered for those services separately.

Surgical trays: Use the HCPCS code A4550 (Surgical trays) or CPT code 99070 (Supplies and materials [except spectacles], provided by the physician over and above those usually included with the office visit or other services rendered [list drugs, trays, supplies, or materials provided]) for private or commercial payers, few of them reimburse for a surgical tray/supplies.

"Medicare will not reimburse for anesthesia administered by the surgeon or urologist, or for tray charges," Ferragamo warns. "However, there are a few commercial carriers that will still reimburse for local anesthesia administered by the urologist and for a tray charge. Check with the specific carrier. One may bill private or commercial carriers HCPCS code S0020 (Injection, bupivicaine HCL, 30 ml) for reimbursement of the anesthetic agent used," he adds.

There is no CPT code for laparoscopic vasectomy so when your urologist performs this procedure, usually at the same time a general surgeon is performing a laparoscopic hernia repair, report the unlisted code 55559.

Hint: Make sure that you submit a detailed report to your payer and compare, or benchmark, the laparoscopic vasectomy to 55550 (Laparoscopy, surgical, with ligation of spermatic veins for varicocele), with respect to the surgical work, technology, equipment used, and time involved.

4. Include Semen Analysis in the Procedure Code

After the vasectomy, the urologist must examine the semen to determine the eventual absence of sperm. These examinations are included in the procedure code, so your urologist should document the service, but you should not report them separately.

If your office laboratory is not credentialed (CLIA certification) to perform these post-vasectomy semen analyses, outside laboratory evaluations will be necessary and that would result in an additional cost to the patient. However, under these circumstances your urologist should never lower his fee or modify his urology coding. Practices often make special arrangements with most laboratories for a reduced fee for a limited semen examination looking only for the presence or absence of sperm.




Leesa A. Israel, CPC, CUC, CMBS, specializes in medical coding and reimbursement for urology and general surgery, as well as billing and collections policies and strategies for physician practices. More of her how-to medical coding and billing articles are available on Supercoder.com.





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