Title: Understand Split OB GYN Billing to Avoid Duplicate Billing
1(No Transcript)
2Understand Split OB GYN Billing to Avoid
Duplicate Billing
Challenges of OB GYN Billing Coding and billing
for maternity obstetrical care are quite a bit
different from the rest of the medical
specialties. Maternity care services typically
include antepartum care, delivery services, as
well as postpartum care. Depending on the
patients circumstances and insurance carrier,
the provider can either, submit all rendered
services for the entire nine months of services
on one CMS-1500 claim form or submit claims based
on an itemization of maternity care service. The
challenges of maternity obstetrical care billing
doesnt end here, billing team has to deal to
patients where split OB GYN billing is involved.
In this article, we considered two billing
scenarios where split OB GYN billing is required
to avoid duplicate billing. Multiple Providers
Render Maternity Care Assume a scenario where
multiple providers render portions of maternity
care for the same patient. In such scenarios, one
physician treats the patient at the beginning of
her OB care, but as she develops complications
and is referred to a specialist for the remainder
of her care, you need to split billing to avoid
duplicate billing.
3Understand Split OB GYN Billing to Avoid
Duplicate Billing
- While billing in such scenarios check whether the
obstetrician and the specialist are seeing the
patient for the same condition, which would be
concurrent care. Or the specialist is dealing
only with the complication while the obstetrician
is dealing only with routine antepartum care. - In most cases, the maternal-fetal specialist sees
her once or twice for the complication and sends
her back to the obstetrician for the rest of the
care. Later in the pregnancy, another
complication arises, and she goes back to the
maternal-fetal specialist. - And while this may seem like concurrent care, it
really is not because the physicians are
different, the diagnosis codes being used are
different, and the regular obstetrician will bill
for the routine antepartum services only. This
means that they are not duplicating services. - If this is the situation, you could make a case
for the obstetrician still billing the global
obstetric package if he goes on to deliver the
baby and take care of the patient in the
postpartum period because he is providing routine
antepartum care. - When the patient goes to see the specialist, that
physician will bill the individual E/M visit
(99202-99215), not antepartum care, and will be
reporting the complication as the diagnosis.
Alternatively, you could make a case for
splitting the global package and having the
obstetrician just bill for the antepartum care
alone using 59425 (Antepartum care only 4-6
visits) or 59426 (Antepartum care only 7 or more
visits) if he transfers care to the specialist
for the rest of the pregnancy.
4Understand Split OB GYN Billing to Avoid
Duplicate Billing
- Switched Insurance Carriers Mid-Pregnancy
- You might came across a scenario where an
obstetric patient changes her insurance carrier
mid-pregnancy. Lets say an obstetric patient
attended 11 visits and then she changed her
insurance carrier, she is still antepartum with
possibly 15 more visits to go. This is a split OB
GYN billing scenario where you have to split the
bill among two payers along with the delivery and
postpartum care. - When a patient changes insurance carriers in
mid-pregnancy, the global obstetric code becomes
obsolete. You have to use the code 59425 (4 to 6
antepartum visits) or code 59427 (7 antepartum
visits) to bill each carrier separately and then
bill the current payer for the delivery and
post-partum care using the code 59410, if it is
an uncomplicated vaginal delivery. - In the above split OB GYN billing scenario where
an obstetric patient attended 11 visits and then
she changed her insurance carrier, you should
bill 59426 (Antepartum care only 7 or more
visits) to the first insurance company and 59425
(Antepartum care only 4-6 visits) to the second
if four to six visits are its responsibility. If,
by the time she delivers, your OB GYN sees her
only three times under the second insurer, you
should report the appropriate established patient
E/M service code (for example, 99212) for each
visit instead of using 59425.
5Understand Split OB GYN Billing to Avoid
Duplicate Billing
- In addition, you should report the appropriate
code for delivery with postpartum care such as
59410 (Vaginal delivery only with or without
episiotomy and/or forceps including postpartum
care) to the second payer. - In case of any confusion, always talk to
insurance carriers and get their requests in
writing. Inform the insurance plans medical
director about the recommendations, also the
implications for incorrect coding. - We shared information on split OB GYN billing for
provider education, you can always refer to
billing guidelines or talk to an insurance rep
for detailed guidance. Medical Billers and Coders
(MBC) is a leading medical billing company
providing complete medical billing and coding
services. - We can assist you in OB GYN billing and help you
avoid any duplicate billing in such billing
scenarios. To know more about our billing and
coding services, email us at info_at_medicalbillersa
ndcoders.com or call us at 888-357-3226. -