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Yes, all but the resident clinic at the university in my state from what I have seen.Most hospital outpatient offices do, don’t they?
Yes, all but the resident clinic at the university in my state from what I have seen.Most hospital outpatient offices do, don’t they?
You can just see office visits and hit 10k wrvu if you can bill g2211 and get the 2021 e and m wrvu schedule.
It is only 105 office visits a week for 48 weeks at an average of 2 wrvu per encounter.
Complete and utter BS. Transparent excuse to refuse to pay for a covered service, and to cut reimbursement for primary care. They could by the same rationale not bill for any CPT, or could offer only the Medicare conversion factor for $/wRVU. The whole reason hospitals pay higher than that is because they’re able to take it in on facility fees and ancillaries.This is what my admin replied to me about g2211.
" We made an administrative decision last year not to bill the G2211 code across the system. Our rationale was this: reimbursement for this code is only $14.92. The work RVU value is 0.33. Thus for example in your situation we would pay you $25.08 per code and only recoup $14.92 for a loss of $10.16 each time billed. This does not include the staffing cost to code, bill and collect. Therefore, we could not justify and ROI for this code."
So unless your wRVU is less than $40, it doesn’t make financial sense for them to do it for hospital employed docs.
This is what my admin replied to me about g2211.
" We made an administrative decision last year not to bill the G2211 code across the system. Our rationale was this: reimbursement for this code is only $14.92. The work RVU value is 0.33. Thus for example in your situation we would pay you $25.08 per code and only recoup $14.92 for a loss of $10.16 each time billed. This does not include the staffing cost to code, bill and collect. Therefore, we could not justify and ROI for this code."
So unless your wRVU is less than $40, it doesn’t make financial sense for them to do it for hospital employed docs.
This is what my admin replied to me about g2211.
" We made an administrative decision last year not to bill the G2211 code across the system. Our rationale was this: reimbursement for this code is only $14.92. The work RVU value is 0.33. Thus for example in your situation we would pay you $25.08 per code and only recoup $14.92 for a loss of $10.16 each time billed. This does not include the staffing cost to code, bill and collect. Therefore, we could not justify and ROI for this code."
So unless your wRVU is less than $40, it doesn’t make financial sense for them to do it for hospital employed docs.
This is what my admin replied to me about g2211.
" We made an administrative decision last year not to bill the G2211 code across the system. Our rationale was this: reimbursement for this code is only $14.92. The work RVU value is 0.33. Thus for example in your situation we would pay you $25.08 per code and only recoup $14.92 for a loss of $10.16 each time billed. This does not include the staffing cost to code, bill and collect. Therefore, we could not justify and ROI for this code."
So unless your wRVU is less than $40, it doesn’t make financial sense for them to do it for hospital employed docs.
Our hospital actually worked out a deal with medicaid where they get paid more than most insurances. Most hospitals do this from what I've readWell medicaid also doesnt justify the $/RVU. Are they also going to have you stop seeing medicaid patients?
This is what my admin replied to me about g2211.
" We made an administrative decision last year not to bill the G2211 code across the system. Our rationale was this: reimbursement for this code is only $14.92. The work RVU value is 0.33. Thus for example in your situation we would pay you $25.08 per code and only recoup $14.92 for a loss of $10.16 each time billed. This does not include the staffing cost to code, bill and collect. Therefore, we could not justify and ROI for this code."
So unless your wRVU is less than $40, it doesn’t make financial sense for them to do it for hospital employed docs.
Are you a critical access hospital? Most likely reasonOur hospital actually worked out a deal with medicaid where they get paid more than most insurances. Most hospitals due this from what I've read
F*ck them. Tell them to pound sand and submit YOUR claims, on YOUR behalf, as YOUR medical judgment requires them to. They don't get to tell YOU how to bill, YOU get to them them how to bill based upon your skill and experience. If they don't like it, they can attend medical school.
Don't let them push you around.
I don't.So it sounds like I am the only one who doesn't bill G2211. Do all of you bill G2211 as hospital employed ?
If anyone deserves to bill G2211, it is you.I don't.
Awww I like to see this. Reaching across the isle with an olive branchIf anyone deserves to bill G2211, it is you.
Maybe.You’re leaving a lot of money that you earned on the table for no reason
😊 thanksIf anyone deserves to bill G2211, it is you.