• 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 Anesthesia billing for Colon Screenings

tpontillo

Guest
Messages
202
Location
Clewiston, FL
Best answers
0
I dont have any experience when it comes to anesthesia billing but I need some information on those who do bill it. The question is if a patient has a colon for a screening colonoscopy what do you bill for the anesthesia. The doctor and the facility billed the
V76.51 and the anesthesiologist billed 455.0. The op report states pt came in for a screening colonoscopy and the doctor did see hemorrhoids with no complications. Doctor and facility both billed V76.51 as primary and were paid 100%. The anesthesiologist billed the 455.0 and is going towards deductible. I need to know what is the proper way of coding the anesthesiology. Would they have to bill the V76.51 also?

Also for a screening colonoscopy does it warrent having two anesthesiologists? The patients are being billed for an anesthesiologist and a CRNA.

Any help on this would be very much appreciated. I am trying to help a patient but before I call the anesthesiologist I want to know what I am talking about.
 
Anesthesia for screening colonoscopy

When we bill for anesthesia for the colonoscopy, we would bill 00810 (the anesthesia cross-code for any of the colonoscopy codes). In our practice, if the provider notes screening colonoscopy and then a finding, we would bill the v76.51 primary, the finding secondary. The problem comes when either the provider doesn't note that it started as a screening or if the provider noted the patient was having symptoms (rectal bleeding, change in bowel habits, etc). When the patient is having the colonoscopy because of a sign/symptom, it becomes diagnostic and we don't apply the v76.51 code.

I hope this helps

Kellie, CPC, CANPC
 
Top