Many physicians and coders think longer documentation means charging higher level visits. Fortunately, that is not always the case. You can document less as long as you are documenting the correct and necessary information.
Medical decision making drives the level of office visit
The medical decision-making portion of evaluation and management guidelines is what ultimately determines the level billed. Higher complexity in decision making justifies higher levels.
Evaluation and Management visits have three main components:
- History
- Physical exam
- Medical decision making.
For established patients, guidelines state that only two of these three need to be met for a given level. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services advises to let medical decision making drive the visit.
What does “Medical decision making should drive the visit” really mean?
This is such a grey area in the guidelines that it is causing practices to over-bill or undercharge, which will ultimately cause them to fail an audit.
CMS stated, “It would not be medically necessary or appropriate to bill a higher level of evaluation and management service when a lower level of service is warranted. The volume of documentation should not be the primary influence upon which a specific level of service is billed.” (Medicare Claims Processing Manual 30.6.1)
Many practices are so confused about what this means, that they just pick the middle level and call it a day. Those practices need clarification and education on how to get to the correct level for the service performed. MEREM can help!
Below are some examples to remember when choosing the level of an office visit to the bill.
- If the provider is seeing an established patient who is coming in for a recheck, ask yourself is the patient’s diagnosis improving or worsening?
– If the problem is improving, the level of service will likely be a level 2 (99212).
⁃ If the problem is worsening, the level of service is likely a level 3 (99213).
- For established patients coming in with a new problem, these level of service is likely a level 3 (99213) or level 4 (99214). The final level for this patient will depend on the diagnosis and treatment performed during the service.
- Code 99215 is used to report High MDM. 99215 is reserved for those patients who require extensive workup regarding Chronic Illnesses with severe exasperations or acute illness or injuries that threaten loss of life or bodily function. Management options for these patients may include IV drug therapy, Emergency Surgery or a DNR status because of poor prognosis.
Let MEREM Health help you conquer the challenges of coding your office visits. Call us to get a free quote at 205-329-7519.