• 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 Observation vs. E/M codes

Nancy Russo

Guest
Messages
1
Best answers
0
When the MD is seeing an established patient in the hospital setting (excluding a patient who came in via the ED), who is not an in-patient, and we are monitoring them for an issue. Is this an Obs charge or an E/M charge? When should Observation codes be used?
 
When the MD is seeing an established patient in the hospital setting (excluding a patient who came in via the ED), who is not an in-patient, and we are monitoring them for an issue. Is this an Obs charge or an E/M charge? When should Observation codes be used?

If the doctor who is seeing the patient is the admitting doctor - the doctor who placed the patient into Observation, then he/she would be billing with the OBS charges. If the doctor who is seeing the patient is someone who was called in for a consult or is not the admitting doc, they would be billing with the regular outpatient codes - 99201-99205 or 99212-99215. Observation codes are used only by the admitting/attending physicans, so if your doc is there PCP, then use the office visit codes.
 
Top