Pediatric Coding Alert

Reader Questions:

Observation POS Is Always Outpatient

Question: A pediatrician admitted and discharged a patient to observation status for 12 hours in the emergency department. We reported the service as 99235 with a place-of-service (POS) code 23. The carrier told us to use 22 instead. Why?


Washington Subscriber
Answer: You should assign observation codes with a place of service of 22 (Outpatient Hospital), not 23 (Emergency Room - Hospital).

Reason: The patient's status - not his physical location - determines the POS. Even though the patient is physically in an emergency department, when the pediatrician registers him to observation status the patient is considered a hospital outpatient. The physician can perform observation anywhere: in a room, a clinic or a hallway.

Watch out: Double-check your observation code. You should use 99235 (Observation or inpatient hospital care, for the evaluation and management of a patient including admission and discharge on the same date ...) if the pediatrician admits and discharges the patient on the same date. But if the 12-hour observation occurs on different dates, you should instead report the admission with 99218-99220 (Initial observation care, per day, for the evaluation and management of a patient ...) and the discharge with 99217 (Observation care discharge day management ...).

Variation: Some insurers may want you to use 99218-99220 for same-day observation admits and discharges. These payers follow Medicare's interpretation that the initial observation care code represents a full day of care.
You’ve reached your limit of free articles. Already a subscriber? Log in.
Not a subscriber? Subscribe today to continue reading this article. Plus, you’ll get:
  • Simple explanations of current healthcare regulations and payer programs
  • Real-world reporting scenarios solved by our expert coders
  • Industry news, such as MAC and RAC activities, the OIG Work Plan, and CERT reports
  • Instant access to every article ever published in Revenue Cycle Insider
  • 6 annual AAPC-approved CEUs
  • The latest updates for CPT®, ICD-10-CM, HCPCS Level II, NCCI edits, modifiers, compliance, technology, practice management, and more

Other Articles in this issue of

Pediatric Coding Alert

View All