vbrownlee
New
I work in a pediatric office and took over coding from an outsourced billing office who was not giving any feedback on levels of service. Now that I am doing so, I'm finding our providers have been billing 99214s on many encounters that don't qualify. They are becoming discouraged and don't like my answer that if they spent the time and documented that, we could bill the level 4. They are hoping for other tips on how to reach this level of MDM and I'm not sure how to help them.
For example, a concussion without loss of consciousness. Does the PECARN exam count as a piece of data, and even if it does, I'm not sure where they get the other two (besides a historian, but then still need one more). I think the thing we are divided on is the risk category. From my coding perspective, the risk of treatment is what this criteria is based on, and not the risk of the problem, which I feel is how my providers think of it. Sure, the risk of a concussion could be severe, but strictly "taking it easy and not participating in sports for week, and returning with concerning symptoms" is not moderate level.
Does anyone have any tips or suggestions for me?
For example, a concussion without loss of consciousness. Does the PECARN exam count as a piece of data, and even if it does, I'm not sure where they get the other two (besides a historian, but then still need one more). I think the thing we are divided on is the risk category. From my coding perspective, the risk of treatment is what this criteria is based on, and not the risk of the problem, which I feel is how my providers think of it. Sure, the risk of a concussion could be severe, but strictly "taking it easy and not participating in sports for week, and returning with concerning symptoms" is not moderate level.
Does anyone have any tips or suggestions for me?