hippopotamusoath
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- Nov 13, 2022
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I'm wondering how everyone here interprets the 90833 psychotherapy add-on code. If I am working on cognitive distortions or introducing the CBT model, it's simple--I document the therapy and move on.
But I am finding a lot of my therapeutic work is supportive. I'm failing to see why almost every 30 minute follow-up with a psychiatrist wouldn't have a 90833 attached to it? I have not been coding that way, but the more I think about it, I wonder if I should.
For the people who see 30 minute followups--what percentage are coded with +90833? How do you personally decide which ones qualify and which ones don't? The community standard for "therapy" from a LCSW or whomever is actually quite low. It seems like the average psychiatrist is probably delivering something that qualifies as supportive therapy nearly 100% of the time.
Obviously, I don't want to up-code, but I also don't want to under-code, and it seems like there's a strong case to be made for calling the average 30-minute interaction with a psychiatrist (of which maybe 5 minutes are about medications) as easily qualifying as supportive therapy. 100% of the time I am displaying unconditional positive regard, active listening, helping with re-framing etc. for the sake of the patient, and I think that has value.
Anyway, just curious to hear if anyone else has thought about this and how they've decided to code. Does anyone basically code every visit as 99213 or 99214 + 90833?
But I am finding a lot of my therapeutic work is supportive. I'm failing to see why almost every 30 minute follow-up with a psychiatrist wouldn't have a 90833 attached to it? I have not been coding that way, but the more I think about it, I wonder if I should.
For the people who see 30 minute followups--what percentage are coded with +90833? How do you personally decide which ones qualify and which ones don't? The community standard for "therapy" from a LCSW or whomever is actually quite low. It seems like the average psychiatrist is probably delivering something that qualifies as supportive therapy nearly 100% of the time.
Obviously, I don't want to up-code, but I also don't want to under-code, and it seems like there's a strong case to be made for calling the average 30-minute interaction with a psychiatrist (of which maybe 5 minutes are about medications) as easily qualifying as supportive therapy. 100% of the time I am displaying unconditional positive regard, active listening, helping with re-framing etc. for the sake of the patient, and I think that has value.
Anyway, just curious to hear if anyone else has thought about this and how they've decided to code. Does anyone basically code every visit as 99213 or 99214 + 90833?