• 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 Billing 96372

Messages
3
Location
Farmington, NH
Best answers
0
Can 96372 be billed without the J code? For instance if a patient supplied their own medication bought through their pharmacy. We have billed with .01 on the J code but want to clarify if it is needed for payers. Thank you
 
Whether or not you should bill the J code depends on the payor policy. From my experience, Medicare & most carriers want the J code. Basically, they want to ensure the medication being injected would be covered under the policy.
When the patient supplies the meds (like your case), billing the J code with .01 is the right way to go. Even if the carrier doesn't require it, I don't recall it ever being an issue.
 
We bill 96372 when we give testosterone or b12 shots. It hits an edit in our billing system for no j code but we bypass it then it processes just fine with the payers.
 
We give testosterone shots at our practice, patients provide their testosterone. We bill J code with 96372, insurance pays the injection for it.
 
This probably a silly question but I am brand new and wondering. Can you bill an E&M code with a 96372 if a psychiatrist is giving the injection?
You absolutely can, but the caveat is, is it reimbursable with the E&M? If the patient is just coming in for the injection then no, it wouldn't be reimbursable because it's not separately identifiable from the E&M. If the patient was receiving counseling or something along those lines and then also received an injection then that may be separately identifiable from the E&M, so you'd want to add the modifier 25 to the E&M. Some payers still bundle 96372 and the E&M together even with the modifier 25, and some payers want a different diagnosis between the 2 CPT codes. Hope this helps!
 
Top