Are you a 'gold star' ASC coder?

Understand ‘significant’ and ‘separate’ to earn a gold star.

Knowing when to report modifiers and choosing the best one for each situation can be an easy trip-up for coders. If you find yourself especially befuddled by modifier 25 (Significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management service by the same physician on the same day of the procedure or other service), keep reading for real-world tips that will help you code confidently every time.

Starting point: Remember you can only consider reporting modifier 25 when coding an E/M service. If the procedures you’re reporting don’t fall under E/M services, check whether the encounter qualifies for modifier 59 (Distinct procedural service) instead.

1. Verify That Service Is Significant

As CPT’s Appendix A explains, a significant and separately identifiable service “is defined or substantiated by documentation that satisfies the relevant criteria for the respective E/M service to be reported.” Ask yourself two questions when deciding if your case meets the criteria:

  • Could the complaint or problem stand alone as a billable service? A single trigger point injection (20552, Injection[s]; single or multiple trigger point[s], 1 or 2 muscle[s]), for example, qualifies as a stand-alone service you might see in conjunction with an E/M visit.
  • Do you have a different diagnosis for the portion of the visit unrelated to the initial service? For example, the patient might be in the office for a planned knee injection, but also complains of shoulder pain during the visit.

Reporting an E/M code with modifier 25 would be appropriate for the services performed and documented concerning the shoulder.

If you can answer “yes” to either question, you’re one step closer to reporting modifier 25.

Example: “My physicians complete a lot of lumbar and cervical injections that have a 0-day global period,” says Mary Baierl, RHIT, CPC, CCA, CMT, a coder with BayCare Clinic, Pain Management and Rehabilitation Medicine in Green Bay, Wis. “When they evaluate the patient in the office, offer an injection, and have time to do the injection that day, we code the injection and include office visit E/M code with modifier 25 as a separately identifiable service.”

2. Check for Additional Work

If the diagnosis remains the same, Quita Edwards, CCS-P, CPC, COSC, CPC-I, owner of CASE Contracting Services in Fort Valley, Ga., says you have a third question to ask: Did your orthopedist perform extra work that went above and beyond the typical pre- or postoperative work associated with the procedure code? Another affirmative answer points you to modifier 25.

Example: A patient comes to your office for a scheduled joint injection. She has received injections to treat knee pain due to osteoarthritis but they don’t provide long-term relief. During the appointment your physician says she needs to begin thinking about surgical intervention. He spends between 30 and 40 minutes discussing the risks and benefits of surgery so the patient can make an informed decision.

Even though the diagnosis you report for the injection and the E/M service will be the same, you can separately report the two services in this case. “The physician spent enough time discussing the surgery to count as significant and separately identifiable from the injection,” Edwards explains. “You can bill an E/M code with modifier 25 based on the amount of time he spent, even though he didn’t evaluate the patient.”

3. Look for Pre-Planning

Modifier 25 is meant for those “oh, by the way” type situations, not procedures that are tied to previous services. Consider these scenarios and whether you think they merit modifier 25, then watch the Medical Coding News for our experts’ recommendations.

Scenario 1: Your orthopedist sees Mrs. Jones in the office and gives her a prescription for pain medication to help her wrist pain. He says that if this doesn’t help, he’ll give her a wrist injection when she returns. Mrs. Jones returns to the office two weeks later for the injection. Your physician completes another evaluation prior to administering the injection.

Scenario 2: Your physician treats Mrs. Adams for a minor shoulder injury. She returns a few days later because her arm was snatched during activity and she’s experiencing significant pain. The physician completes a full evaluation before prescribing treatment.

Scenario 3: Your surgeon completes total hip arthroplasty on Mr. Brown. Six weeks after the surgery, Mr. Brown returns to your office and sees a different physician because of an ankle sprain.

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Don’t forget to include the code for the arthrocentesis.

Question: A new patient sees the orthopedist because of shoulder problems. The physician schedules an MRI and the patient returns the following week to discuss the findings. The physician had already reviewed the films and goes over them in depth with the patient. He also administered a shoulder joint injection to help relieve the patient’s pain.

What diagnosis should we report with the E/M service to reflect the amount of time spent reviewing films and counseling the patient and to distinguish it from the injection?

West Virginia Subscriber

Answer: Select a diagnosis based on your provider’s documentation, such as rotator cuff tear (840.4, Sprains and strains of shoulder and upper arm; rotator cuff [capsule], or 727.61, Rupture of tendon, nontraumatic; complete rupture of rotator cuff). Include that diagnosis with …

… the appropriate E/M code for your physician’s service (99211-99215, Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient …). Append modifier 25 (Significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management service by the same physician on the same day of the procedure or other service) to the E/M code.

Also report 20610 (Arthrocentesis, aspiration and/or injection; major joint or bursa [e.g., shoulder, hip, knee joint, subacromial bursa]) with 719.41 (Pain in joint; shoulder region) for the shoulder injection.

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Check your 2010 consultation coding savvy.

Find out if you’re set to properly code your physician’s consultation services this year by tackling three problems and their solutions.

Check With Your MAC for Guidance

When your physician sees a Medicare inpatient and would have used an inpatient consultation code, this year you should report an initial hospital care code (99221-99223). If the E/M service and documentation do not meet the requirements of an initial inpatient hospital care code, however, your coding will now depend on your Medicare Administrative Contractor’s (MAC) or carrier’s policy.

Problem: The lowest initial hospital care code (99221) requires a detailed history and detailed exam. When your physician’s documentation does not reach this level, there is a question as to what CPT codes you should use.

Option 1: Some MACs/carriers have stated that you should use the subsequent hospital care codes (99231-99233). “Our MAC (Highmark) has actually stated to not use 99499 (Unlisted evaluation and management service) for consultations and to use subsequent care codes,” says Barbara J. Cobuzzi, MBA, CPC, CENTC, CPC-H, CPC-P, CPC-I, CHCC, president of CRN Healthcare Solutions, a coding and reimbursement consulting firm in Tinton Falls, N.J., and senior coder and auditor for The Coding Network. She adds that instructions about whether or not to use 99499 seem to be MAC-by-MAC specific right now.

Option 2: Other MACs, however, have instructed practices to use the Not Otherwise Classified (NOC) code 99499, says Quinten A. Buechner, MS, MDiv, CPC, ACSFP/ GI/PEDS, PCS, CCP, CMSCS, president of ProActive Consultants in Cumberland, Wis.

For example, WPS Medicare states on its Web site: “Many providers have questioned the use of a subsequent care code when the provider does not meet the requirements of an initial care code. Wisconsin Physicians Service (WPS) Medicare advises the use of Not Otherwise Classified (NOC) code 99499 as stated in the Internet-Only Manual (IOM).”

“Check with your contractor,” Buechner advises. “Code 99499 is the correct coding choice by CPT rules.” Some payers, such as Highmark, don’t seem to like that coding, however, so you need to know what code(s) your payers want you to use.

Important: Because five levels of inpatient consults are now billed using only three levels of inpatient E/M visits, some practices are seeking crosswalks that refer them from consult codes to E/M codes. But you should not rely on any such guides as the final word. Instead, when the practitioner performs an E/M service, report the code “that most appropriately describes the level of services provided,” notes MLN Matters article MM6740.

Stick With Two Letters for Admitting Physician

Admitting physicians now have a new modifier for their initial inpatient service. As of Jan. 1, if you’re billing for the admitting physician you must append modifier AI (Principal physician of record) to the initial visit code. This will denote the admitting physician who is overseeing the patient’s care, “as distinct from other physicians who may be furnishing specialty care,” according to CMS Transmittal 1875.

Example: A trauma surgeon admits from the emergency room a patient who was involved in a motor vehicle accident and calls in an orthopedic surgeon to perform a consult for multiple fractures in the patient’s leg. The trauma surgeon would report 99221-99223 (Initial hospital care, per day, for the evaluation and management of a patient …) with modifier AI appended. The orthopedic surgeon then bills 99221-99223 with no modifier for his initial examination of the patient whether the visit represents a consultation or a new visit.

Remember: The new modifier is made up of two letters. “Some people are interpreting the new modifier as a one,” Cobuzzi says. “But it’s two letters, A and I,” she reminds coders. Think: A-eye.

Skip 99241-99255 for Medicare, Even as Secondary

Don’t even think about billing a consult to Medicare — even if the claim is to a Medicare secondary payer (MSP).

The challenge: Medicare may have scratched consultations codes off its list of payable services, but many other insurers did not follow suit. This dual system leaves you in a quandary when your physician performs a consultation, and the primary non-Medicare insurer pays for the consultative service, but the secondary payer is Medicare.

The MSP “will not pay for consults,” says Samantha Daily, a medical biller for a practice in Portland, Ore.

Official word: MLN Matters article MM6740 indicates the following: “In MSP cases, physicians and others must bill an appropriate E/M code for the services previously paid using the consultation codes [99241-99255, Office or other outpatient consultation …]. If the primary payer for the service continues to recognize consultation codes” you should bill for secondary payment from Medicare in one of the following two ways:

  • Bill the primary payer using an E/M code (not a consultation code), and then report the amount paid by the primary payer, along with the same E/M code, to the MSP for determination of whether additional payment is due; or
  • Bill the primary payer using a consult code, and then report the amount paid by the primary payer, and change the code to the non consult E/M code (that is equal to the consultation code/service documented and paid), to the MSP for determination of whether you are owed additional payment.

Potential snag: In some cases the physician may not know whether a hospitalized patient is on Medicare or another insurance when he documents his consultation and determines code assignment for the billing department. You will need to be able to glean an appropriate E/M code from your physician’s consult documentation if the patient ends up also having Medicare as secondary insurance.

Medical Office Billing & Collections Alert

Be a hero. Join the coding community at the Supercoder Fan Page. There, you can find a FREE webinar from Jen Godreau about consult coding.

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Test your 2010 consultation coding understanding with these questions.

Consultation coding has every practice on edge this year. Ensure that you’ve got a handle on this complicated coding and billing situation by trying your hand at this question.

Question: When a visit with a Medicare inpatient that would normally have been coded as a consultation does not meet the requirements of an initial inpatient hospital care code, what should you report?

Click ‘read more’ for answer …

Answer: Check With Your MAC for Guidance

When your physician sees a Medicare inpatient and would have used an inpatient consultation code, this year you should report an initial hospital care code (99221- 99223). If the E/M service and documentation do not meet the requirements of an initial inpatient hospital care code, however, your coding will now depend on your Medicare Administrative Contractor’s (MAC) or carrier’s policy.

Problem: The lowest initial hospital care code (99221) requires a detailed history and detailed exam. When your physician’s documentation does not reach this level, there is a question as to what CPT codes you should use.

Option 1: Some MACs/carriers have stated that you should use the subsequent hospital care codes (99231-99233). “Our MAC (Highmark) has actually stated to not use 99499 (Unlisted evaluation and management service) for consultations and to use subsequent care codes,” says Barbara J. Cobuzzi, MBA, CPC, CENTC, CPC-H, CPCP, CPC-I, CHCC, president of CRN Healthcare Solutions, a coding and reimbursement consulting firm in Tinton Falls, N.J., and senior coder and auditor for The Coding Network. She adds that instructions about whether or not to use 99499 seem to be MAC-by-MAC specific right now.

Option 2: Other MACs, however, have instructed practices to use the “Not Otherwise Classified” (NOC) code 99499, says Quinten A. Buechner, MS, MDiv, CPC, ACSFP/ GI/PEDS, PCS, CCP, CMSCS, president of ProActive Consultants in Cumberland, Wis. For example, WPS Medicare states on its Web site: “Many providers have questioned the use of a subsequent care code when the provider does not meet the requirements of an initial care code. Wisconsin Physicians Service (WPS) Medicare advises the use of Not Otherwise Classified (NOC) code 99499 as stated in the Internet-Only Manual (IOM).”

“Check with your contractor,” Buechner advises. “Code 99499 is the correct coding choice by CPT rules.” Some payers, such as Highmark, don’t seem to like that coding, however, so you need to know what code(s) your payers want you to use.

Important: Because five levels of inpatient consults are now billed using only three levels of inpatient E/M visits, some practices are seeking crosswalks that refer them from consult codes to E/M codes. But you should not rely on any such guides as the final word. Instead, when the practitioner performs an E/M service, report the code “that most appropriately describes the level of services provided,” notes MLN Matters article MM6740.

AUDIO: What surgical coders need to know about the 2010 consult revisions.

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Reading 44373’s code descriptor is key to getting your G Tube claim right.

Question: The gastroenterologist goes to the hospital to treat a patient that had recently been admitted because his gastrojejunostomy tube had migrated to his stomach. After performing a problem focused interval history and exam, the gastroenterologist decides to perform an EGD to reposition the tube. I cannot find a code for repositioning a G tube; how should I code this scenario?

Answer: Judging by your encounter description, the patient’s percutaneous jejunostomy tube (J tube) slipped and became a percutaneous gastrostomy tube (G tube). On the claim, report the following:

  • 44373 (Small intestinal endoscopy, enteroscopy beyond second portion of duodenum, not including ileum; with conversion of percutaneousgastrostomy tube to a percutaneous jejunostomy tube) for the EGD;
  • 99231 (Subsequent hospital care, per day, for the evaluation and management of a patient, which requires at least 2 of these 3 key components: a problem focused interval history; a problem focused examination; medical decision making that is straightforward or of low complexity …) for the E/M;
  • modifier 25 (Significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management service by the same physician on the same day of the procedure or other service) appended to 99231 to show that the E/M and tube fix were separate services; and
  • 536.42 (Disorders of function of stomach; gastrostomy complications; mechanical complication of gastrostomy) appended to 44373 and 99231 to represent the patient’s condition.

Explanation: The descriptor for 44373 might be a bit misleading, but it mentions only “tube conversion.” The tube does not necessarily have to be new.

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