CMS does not expressly
mention that the physician must see the patient on the discharge date in order
to bill a discharge code. Watch your steps for next day discharge.
Reporting
discharged services are not as straightforward as they seem; even skilled
coders don’t get it right sometimes. Staying clear of these four common
mistakes in your facility claims can save you thousands of dollars.
Who
bills when multiple physicians are involved
During a patient care, several
physicians might be involved, and each of them might try to bill for the
discharge. If you read the Medicare Claims Processing Manual, you’ll find that only
the attending physician should bill for the discharge day management service.
Physicians or non-qualified practitioners, other than the attending physician,
will have to use Subsequent Hospital Care (CPT® code range 99231- 99233) for a final
visit.
Heed this: To help distinguish from other physicians who might become
involved in the patient’s care, the admitting physician should add modifier AI (principal physician of record) to the
relevant admission code.
When is a patient not eligible for discharge code
There could be many scenarios when a patient may not be eligible
for a discharge code. For instance, you should never report a discharge code if
the patient never made the exit from the emergency room or was never admitted
as an inpatient. Instead, the applicable ED service code (99281-99285, Emergency department visit for the evaluation and management of a
patient …) should be used. One more instance could be that a patient
has been admitted as an inpatient, however, at the last hour, the patient is
changed to an observation case. In some cases, the documentation for such cases
may be delayed.
Next day discharge ensnare
A patient treats a patient on Monday and says that she can go home
the following day if she doesn’t have any more vomiting or pain. If the
physician does not see the patient on Tuesday, some coders will feel hesitant
to bill a discharge on the date that the physician does not see the patient.
But note that CMS does not anywhere mention that the physician
must see the patient on the discharge date to bill a discharge code.
Medicare
Claims Processing Manual reads: “The E/M discharge day management visit
shall be reported for the date of the actual visit by the physician or
qualified non-physician practitioner even if the patient is discharged from the
facility on a different calendar date.”Although the patient’s actual day of
discharge is Tuesday, all the work was completed on Monday.
Remember: In the manual, CMS leaves it open for interpretation so till the
time it clarifies it, follow your local MAC’s advice on coding discharges.
Nonphysician practitioners can perform
the discharge
Even a non-physician practitioner can perform the discharge,
provided all of the rules are met.
Coding discharge inappropriately and not following correct guidelines
could mean leaving your facility’s much deserved money on the table. Your
facility needs to have a finely honed process involving coding, billing and compliance
to ensure that the initial claim goes out correctly and gets paid correctly.
You could look at Inpatient
Facility Coding and Reimbursement Alert to help you establish the process and guide you on the essentials
for successful inpatient coding and pay.
ReplyDeletenice ..thanks for sharing such a wonderful information..keep update with your blogs..
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