• If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ & read the forum rules. To view all forums, post or create a new thread, you must be an AAPC Member. If you are a member and have already registered for member area and forum access, you can log in by clicking here. If you've forgotten the password it can be reset on our sign in section by entering your registered Email Address or Username here. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below..

Wiki GYN exam w/abnormal findings

asehr

Networker
Messages
28
Location
Lake Luzerne, NY
Best answers
0
Does anyone know where I can find "specific" guidelines for an abnormal finding on GYN exam? Does it include patient complaints and/or physical findings on exam? Example, if we have a patient coming for annual exam, but complains of dyspareunia, physical exam is normal, is that considered an abnormal exam based on patient complaint? Or, a patient comes in for annual exam, physician notes "extremely dense breasts" on exam, is that an abnormal finding (my physicians say that is considered to be a variation of normal, depending on the patient)?
Any help would be appreciated!
 
Coding

Does anyone know where I can find "specific" guidelines for an abnormal finding on GYN exam? Does it include patient complaints and/or physical findings on exam? Example, if we have a patient coming for annual exam, but complains of dyspareunia, physical exam is normal, is that considered an abnormal exam based on patient complaint? Or, a patient comes in for annual exam, physician notes "extremely dense breasts" on exam, is that an abnormal finding (my physicians say that is considered to be a variation of normal, depending on the patient)?
Any help would be appreciated!

See the linked article below....hope this answers your question:
http://news.aapc.com/the-a-b-c-ds-of-mammography-coding/
 
abnormal vs normal

I was wondering the same thing with the new "with abnormal findings" - only for routine adult exam.
If the patient presents for a routine exam, but they have a history of hyperthyroidism (controlled, but needing a refill while she's here) - does it become an abnormal exam?

my thought is if the exam is normal (no issue's even though she has a disease) - to bill it as normal without abnormal findings.
 
An abnormal finding is exactly what it states, an abnormal finding. Something discovered by the provider in the course of examining a patient with no symptomatic concerns, All persisting issues are stated as stable? Refilling meds for a chronic problem is not abnormal. A patient that presents for a preventive but then has a symptomatic issue is also not an abnormal finding. A provider that feels a lump that U.S. unknown to the patient is an abnormal finding. Or a patient with no complaints that has a high blood sugar reading that the provider discovers is an abnormal finding.
 
Top