Title: Fall Coding Workshop
1Fall Coding Workshop
- Evaluation and Management Services
- Documentation Guidelines
- Facilitated by
- JoAnne M. Wolf, RHIT, CPC
1
2Objectives and Agenda
- To network with colleagues
- Gain a better understanding of the E/M
Documentation Guidelines including billing E/Ms
based on time and consultation codes - Understand the importance of having an effective
compliance program - Obtain useful tools to implement a process of
review and education in your clinic
3Resources
- CPT 2008 and CPT Assistant
- Specialty societies
- American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP)
www.aafp.org - DHS (Medical Assistance)
- www.dhs.state.mn.us
- CMS Documentation Guidelines
- www.cms.hhs.gov/MLNProducts/Downloads/1995dg.pdf
- www.cms.hhs.gov/MLNProducts/downloads/eval_mgmt_se
rv_guide.pdf - Local Part B Medicare Carriers
- www.wpsmedicare.com
4Why is Documentation Important?
- Patient Care
- Good documentation
- Allows healthcare professionals to evaluate and
plan the patient's immediate treatment, and
monitor his/her healthcare over time - Provides communication and continuity of care
among healthcare professionals - Supports appropriate utilization review and
quality of care evaluation
5Why is Documentation Important?
- Billing and Coding
- Good documentation
- Allows the medical record to serve as a legal
document to verify the care provided - Provides payers with proof that the services
youve provided and have been reimbursed for have
been accurately reported - Receipt for services paid
- Supports the level of E/M code billed
- Supports accurate and timely claims review and
payment
63 Basic Rules for Providers
- Do whats best for the patient
- Document everything you do
- Code and bill according to what is documented
- Golden Rule
- If it wasnt documented, it
wasnt done
7E/M COMPONENTS
8E/M Components
- Components of an E/M service
- History
- Exam
- Medical Decision Making
- Counseling
- Coordination of Care
- Time
- Nature of the presenting problem
- Key components
9E/M Components
- E/M levels are chosen based on the three key
components - History (extent)
- Exam (extent)
- Medical Decision Making (complexity)
- E/M levels may be chosen based on time if more
than 50 of the visit was spent in counseling and
coordination of care - The nature of the presenting problem is only used
to assist the provider in determining the level
10History
- Chief Complaint (CC)
- A brief statement of why the patient presents to
you - History of Present Illness (HPI)
- Consist of elements described by the patient of
the illness or injury (location, quality,
severity, duration, timing, context, modifying
factors, and associated signs and symptoms) - Review of Systems (ROS)
- A series of questions asked of the patient
relating to 14 body systems (constitutional,
eyes, ENT/mouth, card/vasc, resp, GI, GU,
musculoskeletal, skin, neuro, psych, endo,
hem/lymph, allergy/immuno) - Past / Family / Social History (PFSH)
11History
- Review of Systems (ROS)
- Different from the HPI in that the ROS is a
series of questions asked of the patient or
parent relating to body systems - At least one system needs to be documented in
order to report beyond a level one new patient
visit (99201) - The documentation must show that the provider has
posed a question to the patient - Words such as Denies headache or symbols such
as - pain or cough would indicate that
the patient responded to questions posed by the
provider
12History Documentation Tips
- History of Present Illness (HPI)
- Must be documented by the billing provider and
cannot be referred to - Review of Systems (ROS)
- Preferred documentation include a separate ROS
section in your note - Can be documented by ancillary personnel
(nursing) - A complete ROS (10 or more systems) is required
for a comprehensive history needed for 99204 or
99205 (level 4 or 5 New pt clinic visit) and for
99222 or 99223 (highest 2 levels of Initial Hosp
HPs) - Documentation requirements can be met for a
complete ROS if all positive responses, pertinent
negatives and then a statement that includes the
words Complete, All, or Remainder is
documented - Examples Complete ROS otherwise negative, All
systems negative other than above, Remainder of
systems negative - Past / Family / Social History (PFSH)
- In addition to past medical history, family and
social history are both required for a
comprehensive history
13Exam
- There are two sets of guidelines developed by CMS
for use and adopted by all major carriers - 1995 Guidelines
- 1997 Guidelines
- Difference between the guidelines primarily lies
with the exam component - The 1997 guidelines require more detail in the
documentation, but allow for comprehensive levels
for single system exams - Either set of guidelines can be used
- Use should be consistent
14Exam
- 1995 Guidelines
- Consist of 7 Body Areas
- Head, including face Neck
- Abdomen Genitalia
- Chest, including breasts/axillae Back,
including spine - Each extremity
- Consist of 12 Organ Systems
- Constitutional (vitals, gen app) Eyes
- Ears, nose, mouth, throat Respiratory
- Cardiovascular Skin
- GI GU
- Musculoskeletal Neuro
- Hem/Lymph/Immuno Psych
15Exam
- The extent of the exam is determined by the
number of body areas or organ systems that are
documented - Problem-focused 1 body area or organ system
- Expanded problem-focused 2-7 with brief
descriptions - Some clinics have adopted a definition of 2-4
systems for expanded - Detailed 2-7 with detailed descriptions
- Some clinics have adopted a definition of 5-7
systems for detailed - Comprehensive 8 or more organ systems
- A comprehensive exam (8 or more organ systems) is
required in order to report - A level 4 or 5 new patient clinic visit (99204 or
99205) - A level 2 or 3 initial hospital HP (99222 or
99223)
16Exam Documentation Tips
- OK to use check boxes on a preprinted encounter
form - Be specific and dont leave out elements of the
exam if performed - Additional documentation is needed if a notation
of abnormal or an abnormal box for the exam on
a form is checked - An abnormal notation without elaboration is
insufficient
17Medical Decision-Making
- Coders use a point system to determine the
complexity of the medical decision-making - Consists of three elements
- Number of diagnoses or treatment options
- More points are given for new problems, less for
established problems - Amount and complexity of the data to be reviewed
- Points are given for the ordering or reviewing of
labs, x-rays, and other diagnostic tests - Risk of complications and/or morbidity or
mortality - Based on the presenting problem(s), diagnostic
procedure(s) ordered, or management/treatment
options
18Medical Decision-Making
- Number of diagnoses or treatment options
- More points are given for new problems, less for
established problems - New problems are defined as new to the treating
provider - New exacerbations are also defined as new
problems (asthma) - Work-up planned includes diagnostic testing or
further examinations - Amount and complexity of the data to be reviewed
- 1 point for lab or x-ray regardless of the
quantity of testing - Tests in the medicine section include PFTs,
pulse ox, allergy testing - Risk of complications and/or morbidity or
mortality - See Table of Risk
19Medical Decision-Making
- Table of Risk
- This table was developed for use for the Medicare
population - Some clinics have added to the presenting
problems or expanded on this list for pediatric
cases - Example Under moderate risk for presenting
problem, for acute complicated injury, the table
lists head injury with brief loss of
consciousness as an example - Discussed with Emergency room providers who
determined that any head injury of a child is
considered moderate risk (these patients are not
often able to verbalize their symptoms vertigo,
nausea, etc.) - Some problems can be low, moderate or high
depending on the severity (example asthma)
20MDM Documentation Tips
- Points can be counted for the Data element if the
documentation shows the following - Visualization of x-ray films
- Chest x-ray film shows no infiltrates
- X-ray read normal exam
- Decision to obtain old records or records from
another hospital/clinic - Will get records from patients hospitalization
at . - Review and summarization of other records
- Discussion of case with another healthcare
provider - Discussed the psych testing results with Dr.
XXX - These are elements often performed, but rarely
documented.
21Choosing an E/M Level
- What type of service was performed?
- What is the place of service?
- Is this a new patient or established?
- What is the extent of the history and exam and
the complexity of the MDM? - Any modifying factors (eg, time)?
22Choosing an E/M Level
23CLINIC E/M SERVICES
24Established Patient Visits
- CPT Codes 99211-99215
- Five Levels of Care
- Only 2 of 3 key components (history, exam, MDM)
need to be met to bill at a particular level for
established patient visits
25Established Patient Tips
- Most Often Missed Elements
- A clear chief complaint
- ROS
- Pre-ops HPI
- MDM data elements
26New Patient Visits
- CPT Codes 99201-99205
- Five Levels of Care
- All 3 key components (history, exam, MDM) need to
be met to bill at a particular level for new
patient visits
27New Patient Visits
- Definition A new patient is one who has not
received any professional service (face-to-face
service that is reported by a specific CPT code)
from the provider or another provider of the same
specialty who belongs to the same group practice,
within the past 3 years
28New Patient Visits
- Example of a patient whose services would be
reported with an established pt E/M code - Pt has been previously seen (in the past 3 years)
by you or another provider of your same specialty
in your group - Examples of patients whose services would be
reported with a new pt E/M code - Pt has been previously seen (in the past 3 years)
by a provider of another specialty in your group
and now is being seen by you - Pt has never been seen by any of your groups
providers - It has more than three years since the patient
has been seen by any provider in your group
practice
29New Patient Tips
- Most Often Missed Elements
- ROS
- Family or social history elements
- MDM data elements
- Because all 3 key components are needed at a
particular level in order to bill, each
subcomponent of history becomes very important
30HOSPITAL E/M SERVICES
31Hospital E/M Services
- Initial Hospital Care
- CPT Codes 99221-99223
- Three Levels of Care
- Even the lowest level (99221) requires
- Detailed history (includes 2-9 systems in ROS)
- Detailed exam (includes detailed description of
2-7 body areas/organ systems) - All 3 key components (history, exam, and medical
decision-making) need to be met to bill at that
level - Per day codes All E/M services (on the same
calendar day) related to the admission (including
other sites of service) are considered part of
the initial HP
32Hospital E/M Services
- Initial Hospital Care
- Because all 3 key components need to met, each
subcomponent of history becomes extremely
important - Only a 99221 can be billed (regardless of the
complexity of the case) if the following are not
documented - A complete ROS (10 systems)
- All 3 PFSH subcomponents (past medical, family
and social history) - Difference in fee schedule amt between 99221 and
99223 is about 100.00 - The ROS and either the family or social history
are elements that are missed the most
33Hospital E/M Services
- Subsequent Hospital Care
- CPT Codes 99231-99233
- Three Levels of Care
- Only 2 out of 3 key components (history, exam,
MDM) need to be met to bill at that level - Only a interval history is required (CC should
still be doc) - PFSH is not a required subcomponent for
99231-99233 - Per day codes only one subsequent care visit
may be reported per calendar day regardless of
times seen - Biggest issue with subsequent visits
Handwriting - If 3 auditors are unable to read the handwriting,
then the documentation cannot be considered
34Hospital E/M Services
- Discharge Day Management
- CPT Codes 99238 and 99239
- Services include final exam of the pt, summary of
hospital stay and discharge orders/instructions - Difference between 99238 and 99239 is the amount
of time spent - 99238 up to 30 minutes
- 99239 more than 30 minutes
- Documentation of time is required to bill this
code - If time is not documented, service should be
down-coded to 99238
35Hospital E/M Services
- Initial Observation Care
- CPT Codes 99218-99220
- Pt designated as being in observation status
- Lowest level (99218) has same requirements as
99221 (detailed history and exam) - All 3 key components (history, exam, and medical
decision-making) need to be met to bill at that
level - Per day codes All E/M services (on the same
calendar day) related to the admission (including
other sites of service) are considered part of
the initial obs.care code - Cannot be billed based on time as there is not
time element associated with these codes
36Hospital E/M Services
- Subsequent Observation Care
- Use established patient outpatient/ clinic E/M
visit codes (99211-99215) - Only on the middle day of a 3 calendar day stay
- If the pt is discharged on the day following the
admission for observation, use the observation
discharge day code (99217) on day 2 - If the provider performs both the initial care
and the discharge care on the same calendar day,
then report the combo codes (99234-99236)
37Hospital E/M Services
- Discharge Observation Care
- CPT Code 99217
- Services include final exam of the pt, summary of
hospital stay and discharge orders/instructions - Only one level of observation discharge care
- No time element
- Use this code on the last day of a 2-day
observation stay
38Hospital E/M Services
- Initial Discharge Same Day
Observation Care or In-Patient - CPT Codes 99234-99236
- Pt designated as being in observation status or
admit and disch from the inpt setting on same
date - Medicare 8 hour rule
- Lowest level (99234) has same requirements as
99221 or 99218 (detailed history and exam) - Report these codes when both the initial obs care
and disch. obs care is performed on the same
date - These codes include both the initial and
discharge services - Documentation of both services should be clear
39Hospital E/M Services
- 2007 RVU info
- Initial IP Care Initial Observ Care
- 99221 2.24 99218 1.64
- 99222 3.14 99219 2.71
- 99223 4.58 99220 3.82
- Subsequent IP Care Initial/Disch Observ Care
- 99231 0.94 99234 3.30
- 99232 1.68 99235 4.35
- 99233 2.40 99236 5.42
- Discharge Day Mgmt Discharge Observ
Care - 99238 1.73 99217 1.74
- 99239 2.50
40Hospital E/M Services
- Scenario 1
- Patient is seen in clinic on Mon. and admitted to
the teaching service at XXXXX Hosp. Provider
does not see pt at hosp until Tues AM and then
does the admission HP (det hx and exam, mod
MDM). Pt is seen daily (prob foc hx and exam,
low MDM) and discharged on Frid. - Coding? _________________________________________
- __________________________________________________
______________________________________________ - Scenario 2
- Patient is admitted to observation from ER at
1130pm Mon. Provider sees pt for admission HP
(det hx and exam, mod MDM) on Tues morning and
later that same day at 530pm performs discharge
management of over 30 minutes. - Coding? _________________________________________
- ____________________________________________
41CONSULTATION CODING AND DOCUMENTATION
42Consultations
- CPT Definition
- A consultation is a type of service provided by
a physician whose opinion or advice regarding
evaluation and/or management of a specific
problem is requested by another physician or
other appropriate source. - The consultant may initiate diagnostic tests
and/or therapeutic services at that consultation
visit - The request for the consult and the communication
of the consultants opinion/advice back to the
requesting provider must be documented
43Consultations
- Consultation CPT Codes
- Office / Other Outpatient
- 99241-99245
- Initial Inpatient
- 99251-99255
44Consultations
- Additional Coding/Documentation Guidelines
- To report the consult codes, there must be
documentation of the 3 Rs - Request for opinion or advice
- Render the opinion
- Respond back to the requesting provider
- If the 3 Rs are not documented, then use the
appropriate E/M based on setting and type of
service
45Consultations
- Request for opinion or advice
- This request must be documented in the patients
medical record and specific to the requesting
provider - Seen at the request of the attending is not
sufficient - Example Johnny is seen in consultation at the
request of Dr. Primary Pediatrician for
evaluation of XXXXX - There should be documentation of the request by
the requesting provider in the patients chart - Shows the intent of the requesting provider
46Consultations
- Render opinion or advice
- The level of consult billed should be based on
the 3 key components (history, exam and MDM) - Documentation of all 3 of the 3 key components
need to be met to report a particular level of
service - If more than ½ the consult was spent in
counseling or coordination of care, then the
level may be billed based on time - Face-to-face time for clinic/outpatient consults
- Face-to-face and floor time for inpatient
consults
47Consultations
- Respond back to the requesting provider
- This response often is in a letter format
- A CC at the end of the note is sufficient
documentation that a copy of the note was sent to
the requesting provider
48Consultations
- New patient clinic visit vs. consultation
- Use new patient visit codes if
- Consultation documentation requirements are not
met (the 3 Rs), - Patient is self-referred, or
- Patient is transferring care (example patient
just moved here and is transferring care to your
clinic) - Use the consultation codes if
- Another provider is requesting an opinion or
advice - AND consultation documentation requirements are
met (the 3 Rs)
49BILLING BASED ON TIME
50Billing Based on Time
- The level of E/M can be chosen based on the
amount of time spent face-to-face with the
patient rather than how much history and exam is
done and the complexity of the MDM - When more than half of the time spent is in
counseling and/or coordination of care - Level is chosen based on the total face-to-face
time - When time is documented
51Billing Based on Time
- Only face-to-face time can be used when reporting
clinic or outpatient visits (99201-99215) - Non-face-to-face time spent before and after the
patient encounter cannot be included in the time
component - Unit/Floor time can also be used for inpatient
visits (99221-99223 and 99231-99233) - Emergency department visits cannot be billed
based on time
52Billing Based on Time
- Clinic/Outpatient Visits
- New Patient Visits Established Patient Visits
- 99201 10 minutes 99211 5 minutes
- 99202 20 minutes 99212 10 minutes
- 99203 30 minutes 99213 15 minutes
- 99204 45 minutes 99214 25 minutes
- 99205 60 minutes 99215 40 minutes
- Clinic Consultations
- 99241 15 minutes
- 99242 30 minutes
- 99243 40 minutes
- 99244 60 minutes
- 99245 80 minutes
53Billing Based on Time
- Hospital Inpatient Visits
- Initial Hospital Care Subsequent Hospital Care
- 99221 30 minutes 99231 15 minutes
- 99222 50 minutes 99232 25 minutes
- 99223 70 minutes 99233 35 minutes
- In Patient Consultations
- 99251 20 minutes
- 99252 40 minutes
- 99253 55 minutes
- 99254 80 minutes
- 99255 110 minutes
54Billing Based on Time
- Documentation must show the following
- Total face-to-face or unit/floor time
- That more than ½ of the visit was spent in
counseling or coordination of care - Does not have to be exact minutes spent
- Provider may simply state that more than ½ the
visit was spent in counseling - A summary of the discussion
- Any key elements of the visit performed (history,
exam, medical decision-making)
55Billing Based on Time
- -EXAMPLE-
- Patient is accompanied by Mom and Dad. Both
parents have numerous questions regarding the
patients new diagnosis of XXXXXX. We discussed
at great length the prognosis and treatment plan.
No exam done.
Assessment XXXXX Disease
Plan Will plan to follow
patient every 3 months to evaluate and change
plan of care as needed. Parents should continue
current meds XXXX as prescribed earlier. If
symptoms become acute, they should present to the
Emergency Room. More than ½ this 40 min. visit
was spent discussing above. Signed, Dr.
Pediatric Specialist - Coding?
- __________________________________________________
_ - __________________________________________________
_
56Billing Based on Time
- Issues
- Underreporting of levels documentation
requirements - Possible Solutions
- Educate providers on when to bill based on time
- Providers should get into the habit of noting the
time when they enter an exam room - Make it easier for providers to document the time
- Provide templates for when provider is
transcribing - If using preprinted encounter forms or an EMR,
include a box for providers to check and include
the time element - Example
- More than half of this _______ minute visit was
spent in counseling and/or coordination of care - Any Other Questions?
57COMPLIANCE BASICS
58Questions to consider?
- What are the most utilized CPT codes in your
clinic? - E/M codes tend to be the most utilized by primary
care based practices and many specialties - Do you review the utilization of E/M levels
reported by your providers? - If you do, how often?
- Are there providers in your clinic that tend to
only report one level of E/M code? - Do you provide comparisons by provider or against
national data?
59Questions to consider?
- When was the last time your providers received
coding education? - Do you employ a certified coder?
- CPC through the American Academy of Professional
Coders (AAPC) - CCS-P through the American Health Information
Management Association (AHIMA) - Do you provide opportunities for continuing
education for the coders you employ? - Do you know your compliance risk?
- Do you have a documented compliance plan in place
at your clinic?
60Compliance Plan
- Why have a compliance plan?
- Reduces your compliance risk by protecting your
practice from potential erroneous or fraudulent
conduct - Promotes adherence to statutes and regulations
- Helps to streamline business operations
- Minimize billing mistakes
- Speed and optimize proper payment of claims
- Reduce the chances of an audit (CMS, OIG, MA)
61Compliance Plan
- Preventive Medicine for Your Clinic
- OIGs Compliance Program for Individual and Small
Group Physician Practices - Published in the Federal Register, Volume
65, No. 194, Thursday, Oct. 5, 2000 Pages 59434 -
59452 - http//oig.hhs.gov/authorities/docs/physician
.pdf
62Compliance Plan
- 7 basic elements of an effective compliance plan
- Implementing written policies
- Designating a compliance officer or contact
- Conducting comprehensive training and education
- Developing accessible lines of communication
- Coordinating internal monitoring and auditing
- Enforcing standards through well-publicized
guidelines - Responding to offenses and developing a CAP
63Compliance Plan
- Conducting internal monitoring and auditing
- Documentation review should be done for all
providers in your practice - Should be done on a routine basis (annually)
- Random sample or- focused audit
- Recommend 10 charts per provider
- Easy to calculate percentages
- Gives a good picture of the providers
documentation - New providers to your practice
- Review documentation for the first several weeks
- Let it be a surprise
64Compliance Plan
- Conducting training and education
- Documentation guidelines education should be
provided to all providers in your practice - Provide comprehensive orientation for new
providers to your practice - Prior to their start date
- Include review of your charge ticket and billing
process - Assess new providers for their level of
understanding of coding and documentation - Provide educational opportunities for coding and
business office staff
65Compliance Plan
- Developing open lines of communication
- Staff meetings
- Keep employees updated on compliance activities
and clinic policies - Establish a day-to-day billing feedback process
for when a coding, documentation, or billing
mistake or concern is detected - Develop a standard feedback form
- If using an EMR, utilize email to provide feedback
66Effective Billing Feedback Loop
Service is provided
Code(s) entered into PMS
RESULT - Behavior is changed
Claim is sent to payer
Feedback is given
Clinic receives EOB Payment/denial
Denials are researched
67E/M Utilization Data Review
- What is Clinic E/M Utilization Data?
- CPT codes
- 99201 99205 New Patient Visit codes
- 99211 99215 Established Pt Visit codes
- 99241 99245 Outpt Consultation codes
- Total number of each level of E/M
- Also known as bell curve data
68E/M Utilization Data Review
- Why review E/M Utilization Data?
- E/Ms are the most highly utilized codes for most
clinic-based practices - Payers are reviewing this data (so you should
too) - E/M UR data can pinpoint potential problem areas
- Can identify a potential compliance risk
- Can identify potential lost revenue
69E/M Utilization Data Review
- How should E/M utilization data be reviewed?
- Do this review routinely (recommend quarterly, or
at least annually) - Provide comparisons
- Compare each provider to clinic as a whole
- Compare clinic as a whole to national data
- Part B Extract Summary System (BESS) data file
- E/M codes by specialty 2006 data (excel
spreadsheet) - Give a visual picture (use bar graphs)
70E/M Utilization Data Review
71E/M Utilization Data Review
- Most common undercoding 99213 / 99214
- Average difference in reimbursement ? 34.00
- Pediatric Clinic Undercoding Impact
- 6 mo utilization of 99214 in 2005 589
- Increasing the of 99214 to 20
- 3,000 X 34.00 102,000 (204,000 annually)
72Take Home Messages
- Documentation and coding is important and makes a
difference - An effective compliance plan is essential and can
affect your clinics overall revenue - Because E/M codes make up the bulk of the revenue
coming into the clinic, it is essential to be
sure your providers are billing appropriately
through documentation review and education - Investing in this review and education will
result in a good return on your investment
73JoAnne M. Wolf, RHIT, CPCCoding Manager
- Coding Consultation Services
- (612) 813-5972
- Joanne.Wolf_at_ChildrensMN.org