Billing for Prac Students

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Are you saying that you’re using unpaid students to do work that would regularly be done by a paid employee?


Or are you saying that you’re going to double dip into federal funds, with students getting loans, and then billing CMS? The basis of which results in private insurances disallowing this practice?




You can’t do what you’re saying. Pay your people. Don’t break the law.
 
Yeah, it's a no-go for a lot of payers, particularly those of us with patient populations that are heavily Medicare. One of the reasons why the cries of "we're just slave labor" from prac students and interns is stupid on it's face. In most settings, for the most part, prac students and interns are a huge drain on resources in terms of time and money. We'd need federal reform to change this, but it ain't coming any time soon.
 
Thanks for responses! To clarify, trying to figure out if there are ways to receive reimbursement from payors for students who are supervised for a paid practicum. Trying to also highlight benefits of having psychology trainees to a larger healthcare system.
 
We are starting up a Medicaid program that is administered by Magellan and based on the rate sheets, we can bill for them under supervisors NPI. I do pay my practicum people and since they tend to be very green masters students we start them off with providing support services mainly before taking on psychotherapy cases. Those types of services also have some billing codes associated with them and some may be compensated. The “healthcare” companies that manage this stuff are in the business of limiting treatment and have creative ways of making sure that needed services aren’t easily paid for so even if they make it look like they will pay, that doesn’t mean that it will ever actually happen.
 
Thanks for responses! To clarify, trying to figure out if there are ways to receive reimbursement from payors for students who are supervised for a paid practicum. Trying to also highlight benefits of having psychology trainees to a larger healthcare system.
I imagine it's likely to vary by payor, with most leaning toward the "we won't pay" group. But some might. Or private pay, which may not be an option in a larger healthcare system.

Maybe some will pay if the supervisor is in the room with the trainee when the service is being performed.

And yeah, this is why practica and internships are tough without some sort of federal/state grant support, particularly outside of the VA.
 
Thanks for responses! To clarify, trying to figure out if there are ways to receive reimbursement from payors for students who are supervised for a paid practicum. Trying to also highlight benefits of having psychology trainees to a larger healthcare system.
Testing or therapy pratica?

For testing, you could make a reasonable case for increased capacity for testing. Maybe you could get the student to give a structured background intake form, and bill for that. You'd still have to interview the patient, and have to eat the test administration time, but you can still bill for your intake, interpretation, and writing.

For therapy, maybe some increased capacity for group therapy, or maybe you could use them as a scribe, so you could see more patients/groups. I doubt you can bill for students doing 1:1 psychotherapy.
 
Testing or therapy pratica?

For testing, you could make a reasonable case for increased capacity for testing. Maybe you could get the student to give a structured background intake form, and bill for that. You'd still have to interview the patient, and have to eat the test administration time, but you can still bill for your intake, interpretation, and writing.

For therapy, maybe some increased capacity for group therapy, or maybe you could use them as a scribe, so you could see more patients/groups. I doubt you can bill for students doing 1:1 psychotherapy.
This. They may also be able to provide patient services that the staff psychologists don't have time for, even if it's at a loss for the hospital, which could improve patient satisfaction (and Press Ganey scores). I've often seen this with groups, like PsyDr mentioned.

And at VA, one of the selling points (other than healthcare training being one of VA's central missions) was basically, "if we train them, they're more likely to come back and work for us later."
 
I've seen externship programs where doctoral students are hired for staff positions (e.g., psychometrist) and told "what your training program thinks of the time you spend here is none of our business." I always had an arm's length relationship with these programs and can't comment on their legality or ethics.

When I co-treat or co-lead a visit with an extern, I bill for that time. I also bill for the time I spend either editing or rewriting trainee-written clinical reports. I don't bill for the trainee's time spent either writing the first draft or implementing my edits.

On our inpatient unit, my trainees each carry a small caseload. When first meeting a patient, they typically complete an interview and cognitive/emotional screen at bedside, as well as a collateral interview (if appropriate/feasible)--externs then send me their notes/a draft note based on that initial visit. I then meet with all patients seen by my supervisees during my own walking rounds and complete my own, independent brief screen (e.g., orientation, mood) and brief interview. I typically bill for these visits using a non-time-based code (e.g., 96156), incorporating information provided by the trainee. This is a scenario where partnering with trainees does increase my efficiency, while simultaneously allowing trainees to obtain supervised experience in a unique/acute medical setting (with the added bonus of giving them the opportunity to generate many integrated reports--typically at least one-to-two per day).
 
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