Title: ASC CODING AND BILLING: KNOWING WHAT’S IMPORTANT
1(No Transcript)
2ASC CODING AND BILLING KNOWING WHATS
IMPORTANT
The basics of ambulatory surgery center (ASC)
coding and billing arent hard to master, but
they do differ from physician and facility
requirements. The following overview will help
you know whats most important in the ASC
setting. ASCs use a combination of hospital and
physician billing. Although ASCs use CPT and
HCPCS Level II codes to bill most of their
services (as do physicians), some payers will
allow an ASC to bill ICD-10-CM procedure codes
(like a hospital). Some payers even base implant
reimbursement on revenue code classification. One
of the most fundamental differences between
billing for professional services and billing for
ambulatory surgery center services is the concept
of the global surgical package. The global
package applies to the professional component of
a surgical service that is performed when using a
surgical CPT code. On the professional side, this
typically encompasses a 90-day follow-up. In the
ASC billing methodology, no such surgical package
exists. Therefore, each time a patient enters the
operating room represents a unique and separate
encounter and has no historical economic
relationship to previous encounters. This is a
very important difference and very often leads to
the need for qualifying modifiers. Those
modifiers tend to clarify a situation such as
return to the operating room on the same day or
return to the operating room by another doctor on
a different date. Its important to use the
proper form when submitting claims. Medicare pays
for ASC services under Part B and requires the
CMS-1500 claim form. Some third-party carriers
will accept the CMS-1500 form, while others allow
the UB04.
3ASC CODING AND BILLING KNOWING WHATS
IMPORTANT
- Approved List of Surgical Procedures
- For Medicare patients, you cannot perform just
any procedure in the ASC setting. Medicare has an
approved list of procedures for the ASC that
CMS has determined not to pose a significant
safety risk, and that is not expected to require
an overnight stay following the surgical
procedure. The list of approved procedures is
based on the criteria - They are NOT emergent or life-threatening (for
example, a heart transplant or reattachment of a
severed limb). - They CANNOT be performed safely in a physicians
office. - They can be elective.
- They can be urgent.
- Procedures also do not involve major blood
vessels or result in major blood loss, and cannot
involve prolonged invasion of a body cavity. - Medicare publishes this list of covered
procedures annually. Updates are published
quarterly, or as necessary. The file consists of
two addenda listing approved surgical procedures
and covered ancillary services.
4ASC CODING AND BILLING KNOWING WHATS
IMPORTANT
- Medicare Claims Submissions
- There is a separate set of billing rules for
ASCs. While some issues may be addressed by CMS,
most billing guidelines are best obtained from
your local carrier or intermediary. Some
carriers/intermediaries issue very detailed
guides (e.g., Trailblazer), while others may
simply provide a list of links to the CMS website
(e.g., Empire). To reiterate, an ASC must not
report separate line items, HCPCS Level II codes,
or any other charges for procedures, services,
drugs, devices, or supplies that are packaged
into the payment allowance for covered surgical
procedures. The allowance for the surgical
procedure itself includes these other services or
items. - References
- Brenda Chidester-Palmer (2012, Oct 01). Retrieved
from https//www.aapc.com/blog/24327-asc-coding-a
nd-billing-know-whats-important/ - Medicare Claim Processing Manual. Retrieved from
https//www.cms.gov/Regulations-and
Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/downloads/clm104c14.pdf