I was told time starts the moment someone takes the patient back to the room. If you document well, using time could be easy to get to a 4 as well.
big difference over the long haul on level 3 vs. level 4.I'm in my 40s and now I have to learn this stuff all over again, grrrr. I wonder if it would be better to simply average Level 3 and Level 4 and just pay that on all visits, regardless of the visit content.
Do you not realize all the sucking and kissing up to the billers I had to do in my training to learn this stuff??? All gone to waste 🙁 -Now I have to read a 16-page document (thanks for sharing that BTW) with a font size of 4, LOL!!big difference over the long haul on level 3 vs. level 4.
i thought i may have been overbilling for the last decade or so. was always "kinda" worried about an audit. looks like that ship has sailed.
i know. we spent years trying to figure out the minutia of how many systems to include, how many points get, and that is all gone in 2 weeks. weird.Do you not realize all the sucking and kissing up to the billers I had to do in my training to learn this stuff??? All gone to waste 🙁 -Now I have to read a 16-page document (thanks for sharing that BTW) with a font size of 4, LOL!!
![]()
CPT® Evaluation and Management
On Nov. 1, 2019, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) finalized a historic provision in the 2020 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Final Rule.www.ama-assn.org
Seems like you cannot get to a level 4 via detailed history and physical exam, they basically don’t count for anything. Need medical decision making complexity, or total time spent (which seems to include reviewing records, face to face time, and importantly time documenting).
I thought one chronic illness with an exacerbation only counted as a level 3. It's actually a level 4?I didn't read the link as we've had a lot of stuff sent over by our billers but level 4 will be fairly easy. This can be done with both of the following:
1) 1 chronic illness with exacerbation OR 2 stable chronic illness
2) prescription drug management
That's it. Documentation should be way down overall, but possibly a bit more in the assessment/plan.
You can use time (total including reviewing records and documentation, not face to face) and reviewing labs/record but not required.
whats a chronic illness? LBP? are ddd and facet pain different? lots of ways to get to a level 4. everything is ambiguous. err on the side of overbilling.I thought one chronic illness with an exacerbation only counted as a level 3. It's actually a level 4?
Seems like it will all be based on medical decision making with the new e and m codes. Look at the table above, seelI thought one chronic illness with an exacerbation only counted as a level 3. It's actually a level 4?
from my reading of the AMA guidelines, it sounds like you need medical decision making rather, the “chronic illness with exacerbation” is just a description. Sounds like having 2, 3, or 3 (plus risk)of bullets below corresponds to a 99212, 99213, and 99214 respectively. Seems like every single test counts as 1 bullet, so if a cardiologist reviews an echo result, a BMP, and a CBC they automatically will reach a level 4. Not sure if me reviewing a lumbar MRI and a Utox every visit automatically fulfills 2 bullets every visit, will have to ask the hosptial billers.I didn't read the link as we've had a lot of stuff sent over by our billers but level 4 will be fairly easy. This can be done with both of the following:
1) 1 chronic illness with exacerbation OR 2 stable chronic illness
2) prescription drug management
That's it. Documentation should be way down overall, but possibly a bit more in the assessment/plan.
You can use time (total including reviewing records and documentation, not face to face) and reviewing labs/record but not required.
Not sure if me reviewing a lumbar MRI and a Utox every visit automatically fulfills 2 bullets every visit, will have to ask the hosptial billers.
Category 1: Test, documents, or independent historians
1. Review of prior external note(s) from each unique source*;
2. Review of the result(s) of each unique test*;
3. Ordering of each unique test*;
4. Assessment requiring an independent historian(s)
Seems like it will all be based on medical decision making with the new e and m codes. Look at the table above, seel
from my reading of the AMA guidelines, it sounds like you need medical decision making rather, the “chronic illness with exacerbation” is just a description. Sounds like having 2, 3, or 3 (plus risk)of bullets below corresponds to a 99212, 99213, and 99214 respectively. Seems like every single test counts as 1 bullet, so if a cardiologist reviews an echo result, a BMP, and a CBC they automatically will reach a level 4. Not sure if me reviewing a lumbar MRI and a Utox every visit automatically fulfills 2 bullets every visit, will have to ask the hosptial billers.
Category 1: Test, documents, or independent historians
1. Review of prior external note(s) from each unique source*;
2. Review of the result(s) of each unique test*;
3. Ordering of each unique test*;
4. Assessment requiring an independent historian(s)
Our hospital is interpreting this as yes it counts as reviewing result.I wonder if reviewing the prescription monitoring system counts as a “test.” It certainly takes up time and some amount of analysis.
Actually I read and reread the guidelines from multiple sources. It's confusing b/c 1 chronic illness with exacerbation only qualifies as a level three when talking about the problem list. However when referring to the risk category it counts as a level four. You're right in that 2 out of the 3 categories have to meet the level of coding. The 3 categories are 1) Problem points 2) Data points and 3) RiskI didn't read the link as we've had a lot of stuff sent over by our billers but level 4 will be fairly easy. This can be done with both of the following:
1) 1 chronic illness with exacerbation OR 2 stable chronic illness
2) prescription drug management
That's it. Documentation should be way down overall, but possibly a bit more in the assessment/plan.
You can use time (total including reviewing records and documentation, not face to face) and reviewing labs/record but not required.
This thread confirms my long held thoughts on medical coding, it is ridiculous. As a group physicians are not stupid people. We have years of education and have earned doctorates. Despite this, medical coding is so convoluted that even well intentioned physicians can misunderstand and miscode. If the system is so complicated that the average doc can't understand it then it is obvious that the system is broken. End of rant....
You may be right but the more important question to ask is what would you replace it with?This thread confirms my long held thoughts on medical coding, it is ridiculous. As a group physicians are not stupid people. We have years of education and have earned doctorates. Despite this, medical coding is so convoluted that even well intentioned physicians can misunderstand and miscode. If the system is so complicated that the average doc can't understand it then it is obvious that the system is broken. End of rant....
Actually I read and reread the guidelines from multiple sources. It's confusing b/c 1 chronic illness with exacerbation only qualifies as a level three when talking about the problem list. However when referring to the risk category it counts as a level four. You're right in that 2 out of the 3 categories have to meet the level of coding. The 3 categories are 1) Problem points 2) Data points and 3) Risk
In your example above you are using "1 chronic illness w/exacerbation or 2 stable chronic illness" as fulfilling a level 4 for the risk category. Oddly enough it only meets a level 3 for the problem point category. The prescription drug management is also a level 4 risk. So you have documented 2 separate items that qualify as a level 4 for the risk category. You still need something that qualifies as a level 4 for your problem point or data point categories as 2/3 categories must be met
A system without 69,000 diagnosis codes and 70,000 procedure codes. Simple office visit codes that encourage thought and time spent with patients. I'm certain that the talent here at SDN could come up with something in short order.You may be right but the more important question to ask is what would you replace it with?
an oldie, but a goodieA system without 69,000 diagnosis codes and 70,000 procedure codes. Simple office visit codes that encourage thought and time spent with patients. I'm certain that the talent here at SDN could come up with something in short order.
A system without 69,000 diagnosis codes and 70,000 procedure codes. Simple office visit codes that encourage thought and time spent with patients. I'm certain that the talent here at SDN could come up with something in short order.
Forget the police, defund the AMA!AMA receives 'royalties' for CPT codes north of $150,000,000 per year...….CPT codes will only expand in girth :/
i dont think they get paid for f/u visits after surgery...it's global and a waste of time for them or their NP's/PA'smaybe they should...
and maybe ortho docs who literally see patients for 5 min can stop billing level 5s.
a few years ago, I saw the schedule for a busy ortho practice. guy does 7 min appointments. the appointments were booked as "NPE - Right(or left) knee. 99205" or "Right/Left knee. 99215"I have seen the billing at a huge ortho practice when I was recruited to go there, they bill 99205 and 99214 pr 99215 on everyone
How many patients/day would you say?a few years ago, I saw the schedule for a busy ortho practice. guy does 7 min appointments. the appointments were booked as "NPE - Right(or left) knee. 99205" or "Right/Left knee. 99215"
Optho's see like 60-80 patients/day in clinic. Ortho seems safe from an audit (from a volume standpoint)
a few years ago, I saw the schedule for a busy ortho practice. guy does 7 min appointments. the appointments were booked as "NPE - Right(or left) knee. 99205" or "Right/Left knee. 99215"