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How would a DO in FP bill for OMM? Would I need to do a DO FP inorder to do this? Could one go to an ACGME residency? Or is just graduating from a DO school and completing a FP residency enough?
Anyone know where I can find an answer to this question?
How would a DO in FP bill for OMM? Would I need to do a DO FP inorder to do this? Could one go to an ACGME residency? Or is just graduating from a DO school and completing a FP residency enough?
I don't know if you have to even be a DO or do a DO residency to be "allowed" to bill for this. You will have separate contracts and fee schedules with each payor, and they typically decide who and what they pay for. Medicare reimburses OMT, anywhere between $20 to $50 per procedure code. Concievably, if you were gouging medicare with OMT (hardly possible at those $$ numbers), and didn't have any evidence of board certification in Osteopathic Manipulation or that you lacked sufficient training in the procedure, you could get audited and your claims denied.
I think you could probably get away with it, even doing a ACGME residency, if you took a refresher course.
Hope that helped
You get reimburse by region. Roughly medicare/caid pay $40/REGION. So 4 regions (neck, thoracic, lumbar, sacrum/hip) = $320.
You get reimburse by region. Roughly medicare/caid pay $40/REGION. So 4 regions (neck, thoracic, lumbar, sacrum/hip) = $320. Have the patient come back after the first visit so that you get reimbursed. Other docs I know do a cash only process. They have a waiting list of 3-6 months and make $200-$300K/ year.
Easy to do if your good at OMM and can treat other basic stuff.
As a PMR doing Spine/Sports/Pain, I will use OMM and bill insurance/medicare.
Good luck.
NF
That is really good actually. I don't understand why more DOs don't take advantage of OMM. I had to go out of my way to ask my doc for OMM- and I would be more then happy to go back for another visit if she suggested it.
Is it seen as "unethical" if a physician asks you if you would like treatment? Does the patient have to come to the office with a particular chief complaint that warrants OMT in order for it to be "justified"?
Because if not I don't see why more DOs dont try and do some type of OMT on every patient.
I don't think it is necessarily fishing. DOs supposedly place extra emphasis on preventative medicine. Why would correcting somatic dysfunctions before they start giving you pain be unethical?
How would one transition from billing insurance to collecting cash? has anyone tried this? how many patients actually stay around?