Hint: Gathering upfront pay and watching E/Ms make a difference.

Children need physicals to participate in their favorite sports year round, but the demand can grow with warm weather approaching. Ideally, the need for sports physicals should provide the opportunity to offer complete age-appropriate medical exams following the American Academy of Pediatrician’s Bright Futures Guidelines. If your practice runs into reimbursement obstacles for full-scale physicals, however, follow our experts’ advice to code correctly and still stay in the game.

Tackle Coverage Issues

Choosing the diagnosis code for a sports physical is fairly easy. You’ll use V70.3 (Other medical examination for administrative purposes).

Choosing the best CPT code for a sports physical is a bit trickier. “I struggle with this because the service rendered is preventive, but doesn’t meet the criteria (in my opinion) of the preventive medicine E/M codes,” says JoAnne M. Wolf, RHIT, CPC, coding manager for Children’s Physician Network in Minneapolis, Minn.

Here’s why: In most cases, a child coming for a sports physical doesn’t have a chief complaint, so it seems inappropriate to code from the 99201-99215 range (codes for an office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of a new or established patient), Wolf points out.

Although the preventive medicine E/M codes 99381-99397 (codes for initial or periodic comprehensive preventive medicine evaluation and management of an individual) satisfy the requirements for sports physicals, they also seem inappropriate. When the patient only requests a sports physical, the service you provide doesn’t meet the codes’ comprehensive nature.

“Physicals are a very hard topic to discuss because some insurances will not cover them at all and some will cover them in different ways,” says Susie Stokes, CMC, CMOM, practice manager of Morgan Pediatric Group in Smyrna, Tenn.

Common guidelines can include:

  • One per calendar year
  • One per year following the patient’s birthday
  • One after one year and one day after the last physical.

Other complications can arise because of the sports organizations’ rules. For example, Stokes says most school sports in her area require a physical after May 1 of the current year. If the child had a physical before May 1 and the sports league requires it after May 1, the parents have a dilemma: They don’t want to pay for another physical and the insurance provider will not pay.

“In this case we go ahead and sign the form and date it the date of the physical with all the information,” Stokes says. “Then if the association wants another physical, the school explains it to the parents so we don’t look like the bad guys.”

Good practice: Your first step should be to ask patients to pay cash for the sports physical (especially those with insurance you know doesn’t cover the service). If the parent insists that insurance will cover the exam, assure the family that your practice will file a claim and reimburse the parent if insurance does pay.

Pitch Preventive Visit Instead

If the patient’s insurance includes a yearly preventive medicine service, you can offer that service in lieu of the sports physical and maximize the patient’s benefits — pluskeep your coding clean. AAP recommendations supportthis approach.

“Many of our clinics will perform the full preventive medicine service at the time the patient presents for a sports physical,” says Wolf. “Adolescents and teens are age groups that do not tend to come in regularly for their preventive services, so our clinics try to take advantage and get the complete well visit done at that time.”

New tactic: Your coding will change if you’re able to provide a preventive care visit. Choose the best code from 99381-99385 (Initial comprehensive preventive medicine evaluation and management of an individual …) based on the patient’s age for a new patient or from 99391-99395 (Periodic comprehensive preventive medicine reevaluation and management of an individual …) based on the patient’s age for an established patient.

You also have two choices for the preventive examination’s diagnosis. Select V20.2 (Routine infant or child health check) for children up to age 18. For those over 18, shift to V70.0 (Routine general medicalexamination at a health care facility).

Catch Extra Services

Watch for additional coding opportunities with these patients, because a sports physical might extend to include other services.

If the pediatrician provides a problem-oriented E/M service for a separate, significant problem in addition to the sports physical or preventive medicine service, you also can code for it.

Next step: Once you select the appropriate E/M code, 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 that E/M code and include documentation supporting the care as an additional service.

You should be able to link the E/M code to a specific diagnosis for the problem addressed, such as 493.00 (Extrinsic asthma; unspecified) for asthma that is well controlled with medication or 314.01 (Attention deficit disorder; with hyperactivity) for ADHD managed with stimulant medications.

Head Off the Competition

Another challenge with sports physicals lies in the ever-growing number of “retail” clinics that offer quicker testing and less costly services. Stokes and Wolf agree,however, that convenience doesn’t equal quality.

“We don’t do what people call the quick sports physical,” Stokes says. “We understand the parents want something fast, but we’re clearing these kids to play sports and we have to take the appropriate amount of time to make sure they’re in good health to play.”

“Many of the primary care pediatric clinics in our network have countered the retail clinics by offering ‘walk-in’ services during regular clinic hours,” Wolf adds. “They also offer extended weekend and evening hours.”

Pediatric Coding Alert, Editor: Leigh DeLozier, CPC

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You may need to append modifier 25, depending on payer policies.

Question: Our physician billed 90634, 90710, and 90606 for vaccines given to a 5-year-old patient. The insurance company denied payment and said they required a modifier. What should we have done differently?

New Hampshire Subscriber

Answer: According to standard CPT coding, vaccine codes do not require modifiers on the associated E/M code. However, you might need to include modifier 25 (Significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management service by the same physician on the same day of the procedure or other service) if your insurance company requires it — which might be why you received a denial.

Well check: If your physician administered vaccines on the same day as a well visit, code the well visit with the appropriate code such as …

… 99393 (Periodic comprehensive preventive medicine reevaluation and management of an individual including an age and gender appropriate history, examination, counseling/anticipatory guidance/risk factor reduction interventions, and the ordering of laboratory/diagnostic procedures, established patient; late childhood [age 5 through 11 years]). You might need to append modifier 25 if vaccinations are given, depending on the payer’s guidelines.

Sick visit: If the child visits because of another problem and receives immunizations during the visit, report the vaccines with the appropriate office visit code from 99212-99214 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient …).

Then report the vaccine codes: 90634 (Hepatitis A vaccine, pediatric/adolescent doage-3 dose schedule, for intramuscular use), 90696 (Diphtheria, tetanus toxoids, acellular pertussis vaccine and poliovirus vaccine, inactivated -D-TaP-IPV], when administered to children 4 through 6 years of age, for intramuscular use), and 90710 (Measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella vaccine [MMRV], live, for subcutaneous use).

@ Pediatric Coding Alert

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Limit 96040 to Trained Counselor

Question: May we report 96040 if our physician is performing genetic counseling?

Answer: You should report 96040 (Medical genetics and genetic counseling services, each 30 minutes face-toface with patient/family) only for a trained genetic counselor’s services. (Currently, the American Board of Genetic Counselors [ABMG] certifies genetic counselors in the US and Canada.) Don’t use 96040 for genetic counseling by a physician or nonphysician who is not a genetic counselor.

Although nothing precludes a physician from also being a genetic counselor, CPT states that if a physician provides genetic counseling to an individual, choose the appropriate E/M code. If the physician counsels a patient without symptoms or an established disease, CPT points you instead to 99401-99402 (Preventive medicine counseling …).

Before reporting 96040, you also should watch for services such as “obtaining a structured family genetic history, pedigree construction, analysis for genetic risk assessment, and counseling of the patient and family,” CPT states. The counselor may provide the services during one or more sessions and may review medical data and family information, conduct face-to-face interviews, and provide counseling. Report 1 unit for each 30 minutes of documented service.

If the patient receiving genetic counseling lacks symptoms, you should consider a V code. There are specific V codes for patients who have been tested and have a genetic probability:

• V84.01 — Genetic susceptibility to malignant neoplasm of breast

• V84.02 — Genetic susceptibility to malignant neoplasm of ovary

• V84.03 — Genetic susceptibility to malignant neoplasm of prostate

• V84.04 — Genetic susceptibility to malignant neoplasm of endometrium

• V84.09 — Genetic susceptibility to other malignant neoplasm.

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