Title: Coding and Compliance
1Coding and Compliance
- Review for Provider Reappointments
2Course Objectives
- The purpose of this course and its follow-up test
is to provide physicians and other clinicians,
who are being re-appointed by UNC Hospitals, with
important information on three issues
3Course Objectives
- Why coding and compliance is important to you and
your practice - Keys to correctly coding hospital and office
visits - Evaluation and Management (EM) Services
- Teaching physician (TP) rules. In order to bill
for services when working with residents and
fellows, the teaching physician must abide by
federal and state laws and regulations
4Why coding and complianceis important to you and
your practice
5Reimbursement
Providing good care while billing accurately and
confidently requires
- Doing only what is medically necessary
- Documenting what you do
- Billing what you document
- Understanding and applying coding and compliance
conventions can improve the level of
reimbursement for UNC Faculty Physician practices
as well as the quality of the medical record
documentation.
6Why Compliance
- Good documentation and billing practices make for
good patient care - Office of Inspector General (OIG), Health Human
Services - Routine and probe audits by CMS contractors and
third parties
7Why Compliance
- Residents are paid through the hospital by Part A
Medicare. Medicare pays a portion of the
residents salaries based on the proportionate
share of Medicare at the teaching hospital - Teaching physicians (TP) are paid by Part B
Medicare on a fee-for-service basis - The government, through Medicare, will pay for
both resident and TP services if both
participate. If the TP does not participate in a
given patient service, the TP may not bill.
8Why Compliance
- Two problems have caused a majority of refunds
and penalties - The TP billed and he/she may have been present
and participated in the care, but TP presence was
not documented - The documentation in the note did not support the
level of service billed
9Keys to correctly coding hospital and office
visits - Evaluation and Management (EM) Services
10Choose the Outpatient Category
- Outpatient EM Categories
- Consultation
- New
- Established
11Use of Consultation Codes
- Outpatient consult codes 99241-99245, inpatient
consult codes 99251-99255 - Use when expert opinion or advice is requested by
an appropriate source involved in that patients
care - Does not include patients referred for
management of a condition or self-referred - Use outpatient consultation codes only one time
per request, subsequent visits are established
patient visits
12Use of Consultation Codes
- A consulting physician may initiate diagnostic
and/or therapeutic services at the same visit and
the initial visit remains a consultation - Written or verbal request must be documented in
the rendering physicians note and the
consultants opinion communicated by written
report to the requesting physician. The shared
medical record is sufficient communication for
providers in the UNC system - Medicare has not recognized consultation codes
since 2010, but Epic translates the consultation
codes to the appropriate EM category and level
for Medicare. - Providers retain Relative Value Units (RVUs)
associated with the consult for productivity
measures. - Please continue to bill consultation codes for
all payers when provided and documented.
13Documenting Consultations
Documentation of a consultation request must be
clearly stated in the note WRONG Mr. Patient
was referred by Dr. Jones for management of GERD
symptoms. RIGHT Mr. Patient is seen in
consultation at the request of Dr. Jones for
evaluation of abdominal pain. Please be sure to
include the referring provider in the in the
referring provider field. This will help in
communicating a letter to the provider that
requested a consult. A letter can be sent to the
requesting provider through the communications
tab in Epic.
14New Patient
- New Patient CPT codes 99201-99205
- Has not received any professional evaluation and
management (EM) services from the physician or
another physician of the same specialty who
belongs to the same group practice within the
past three years, including inpatient, outpatient
or emergency room - A patient would still be considered new if a
diagnostic procedure was billed without an EM
visit charge
15Established Patient
- Established Patient CPT codes 99212-99215
- Has received an EM service from the division
within the past three years including inpatient,
emergency room or inpatient or outpatient
consultations
16Visit Components
- Consults and new patient visits must
include all three of the following components
established patient visits must include any two
of the three - History
- History of present illness
Documenting History - Review of systems
History example - Past family and social history
- Physical examination 1995
Physical Exam -
1997 Single Organ Exams - Medical decision Making
- Diagnosis and management options
Documenting MDM - Amount and complexity of data reviewed
- Overall risk
Risk Table
Click these links for more information
17Visit Levels
- Billing at a higher level than actually provided
and/or documented is one of the two chief issues
contributing to CMS fraud allegation settlements - There is a laminated, pocket-sized physicians
coding card that may be a valuable guide to
correct coding. To request a copy of this card
please call 919-843-8638 - Questions on correct coding and compliance issues
should be directed to the Compliance Auditors at
919-843-8638 - Click on this link for documentation requirements
at various EM levels of service
18Visit levels based on time
- Document the total time of the visit
- Over 50 of an outpatient visit must be spent in
face-to-face counseling and treatment planning
and so documented. For Medicare patients, count
only face to face time between the Teaching
Physician and the patient - For inpatient count total for the day of
counseling, coordination of care and time on
floor in care of the patient
19Visit levels based on time (cont)
- The note must include a description of the
counseling and treatment planning - The physicians coding card contains minimum time
requirements for each visit level - Note that the minimum times are different for
each of the three categories of visits consults,
new patient and established patient - Click on this link for additional time-based
billing information
20Modifier 25
- Append a modifier 25 to an EM code if a
significant, separately identifiable EM service
is performed by the same physician on the same
day as a procedure or other service - The patients condition must require EM services
above and beyond what would normally be performed
in the provision of the procedure - The necessity for the EM service may be prompted
by the same diagnosis as the procedure - A new patient EM service is considered separate
from the same day surgery or procedureno 25
modifier needed
21Modifier 25
- For an established patient, if the EM service
results in the initial decision to perform a
minor procedure (0-10 days global period) on the
same day and medical necessity indicates an EM
service beyond what is considered normal protocol
for the procedure, the 25 modifier is appropriate - To determine the correct level of EM service to
submit, identify services unrelated to the
procedure and use as EM elements - The modifier 25 should be appended in the
modifier field on the level of service in Epic.
22Modifier 59
- Modifier 59 (distinct procedural service) is
being split into 4 new modifiers accepted by
Medicare effective 1/1/2015. The new modifiers
are - -XE Separate encounter (services that are
separate because they take place during separate
encounters) - -XS Separate structure (Performed on different
anatomic organs, structures or sites) - -XP Separate practitioner (services are distinct
because different practitioners perform them) - -XU Unusual non-overlapping services (services
that are distinct because they do not overlap the
usual components of the main service) - Beginning with date of service 1/1/2015, if you
assign a -59 modifier, also assign the
corresponding X modifier. The system will make
sure that the correct modifier gets to the
correct insurance carrier.
233. Teaching physician (TP) rulessupervision of
residents and billing Medicare and Medicaid
24Medicare TP Attestation Requirement
- The 11/22/02 revisions to the regulations provide
that, for EM services, the TP does not have to
duplicate any resident documentation - The TP must be present during the key portions of
the service and personally document his or her
presence. - The resident note alone, the TP note alone or a
combination of the two may be used to support the
level of service billed - Documentation by a resident of the presence and
participation of the TP is not sufficient - Documentation may be dictated and typed, or a
computer statement initiated by the TP
25Medical Student Involvement in EM Services and
Documentation Requirements
- The documentation of an E/M service by a student
that may be referred to by the teaching physician
is limited to documentation related to the review
of systems and/or past family/social history. - Any contribution and participation of a medical
student to the performance of a billable service
(other than the review of systems and/or past
family/social history which are not separately
billable) must be performed in the physical
presence of a teaching physician or a resident. - The teaching physician or resident must verify
and redocument the history of present illness,
perform and redocument the physical exam and
medical decision making. - These regulations are found http//www.cms.gov/Re
gulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/downl
oads/R2303CP.pdf
26Medicare Exception for Primary Care
- CMS does not require direct patient contact for
primary care, lower-level visits provided by
residents with more than six months training
working in approved primary care programs - Approved primary care centers at UNC
- Family Medicine
- General/Internal Medicine
- General Pediatrics
- Womens Primary Health
- Med Geriatrics
- For Addl Information Primary Care Exception
27Medicare Supervision Guidelines for Procedures
Performed with Residents
- TP must be present during critical and key
portions immediately available throughout
surgical procedures and endoscopic operations - TP decides what portions are key
- If present entire time, the residents note can
attest to that - If present for key portions only, TP must
document extent of involvement - Two overlapping surgeries
- Key portions must happen at different times
- Must be available to return to either
28Medicare Supervision Guidelines for Procedures
Performed with Residents
- Minor procedures of lt5 minutes
- Must be present the entire time
- Endoscopies (other than surgical operations)
- TP must be present for entire viewing, including
insertion and removal
29Medicare Supervision Guidelines for Supervision
of Specific Procedures
- Radiology/Diagnostic Tests
- Image and resident interpretation must be
reviewed by TP to be billable - TP may sign acknowledging agreement or edit a
co-signature only is insufficient - Psychiatry
- TP presence requirement met by concurrent
observation of the service by video or one-way
mirror - Must be present for entire period of time billed
if psychotherapy code is used
30Medicare Supervision Guidelines for Specific
Procedures
- Time-based procedures billed on TP time only
- Critical care
- Hospital discharge day management
- Prolonged services
- Care plan oversight
- EM counseling/coordination of care
- Specific complex or high-risk procedures require
continual personal TP supervision - Interventional radiologic/cardiologic codes
- Cardiac cath, stress tests, transesophageal
echocardiogram
31Medicare Supervision Guidelines for Critical Care
- Only the teaching physician time may be counted
toward critical care time. A combination of the
TPs documentation and the residents documenting
may support the critical care service. - The teaching physician medical record
documentation must provide the following
information - time the teaching physician spent providing
critical care, - that the patient was critically ill during the
time the teaching physician saw the patient, - what made the patient critically ill and
- the nature of the treatment and management
provided by the teaching physician. The medical
review criteria are the same for the teaching
physician as well as for all physicians. - This attestation will meet the TP requirements
for billing to Medicare. - Patient is critical with ______. I spent ___
minutes while the patient was in this condition
providing ______. I reviewed the residents
documentation and I agree with the residents
assessment and plan of care.
32Medicaid Requirements
- Medicaid requires that the TP be
"immediately available" to the resident and
patient and use "direct supervision" for
procedures. Direct supervision does not
necessarily mean that the TP must be present in
the room when the service is performed. The
degree of supervision is the responsibility of
the TP and is based on the skill, level of
training and experience of the resident as well
as the complexity and severity of the patient's
condition. Written documentation in the medical
record for Medicaid patients must clearly
designate the supervising physician and be signed
by that physician.
33Where To Get Help
- www.med.unc.edu/compliance/
- UNC FP Professional Coderscode inpatient
services and some outpatient procedures. (See
your division manager for your coders name.) - UNC FP Compliance Office procomplianceUNCHC_at_unche
alth.unc.edu - Laura Bushong, CPC, CEMC, Associate Director UNC
FP Compliance - Tracy Rentner, FNP, CPC, Compliance Consultant
- Dana Sheffield, CPC, Senior Compliance Analyst
- Kimberly Thompson, CPC, COC, Compliance Analyst
- Confidential Help Line 800-362-2921
- AMA CPT Manual