• 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 Who is responsible for the code? Provider or Coder

jmartin106

Contributor
Messages
14
Location
Chilton, TX
Best answers
0
We have a new billing company that keeps changing the codes selected by our providers, which is causing dissatisfaction among our providers. I think we may stop using them, but I want to know who is legally responsible for the codes on the claims being submitted, is it the provider or the coder? Is there any official documentation for this?
 
We have a new billing company that keeps changing the codes selected by our providers, which is causing dissatisfaction among our providers. I think we may stop using them, but I want to know who is legally responsible for the codes on the claims being submitted, is it the provider or the coder? Is there any official documentation for this?


What changes are they making? Do you have any examples?

If your provider is putting diagnosis codes on the claim that have Excludes1 conflicts or if the CPT codes have NCCI edits, the biller won't even be able to submit the claim without fixing the issue. It will get bounced back from the clearinghouse.
 
Is what they are changing it to the correct coding though? :)
Just because something is changed and the provider doesn't like it is not enough. It would require auditing and checking.
The provider is responsible for their billing and coding however, there is also responsibility on coders, billing and coding companies, etc. It depends on the extent and what it is.

 
Is what they are changing it to the correct coding though? :)
Just because something is changed and the provider doesn't like it is not enough. It would require auditing and checking.
The provider is responsible for their billing and coding however, there is also responsibility on coders, billing and coding companies, etc. It depends on the extent and what it is.


Exactly. Providers are responsible for their claims, but billers and coders are also responsible for the information they are submitting.

At the recent Healthcon Regional in Philly, I attended a session about billers and coders potential legal liability, presented by Robert Liles of Liles Parker. It was fascinating, yet also a little scary to see the specific citations of the legal risk that we bear too!
 
Providers are responsible for accurately documenting what happened during an encounter. Coders are responsible for translating that documentation into CPT, ICD-10 and ASA codes (used in anesthesia coding). Providers most often do not benefit from selecting codes, as they are not familiar with the coding conventions and/or guidelines that certified coders must abide by. If the billing company is changing codes and providers are not happy with this, request the billing company annotate when and why they are changing codes for about one week. Then, review their findings with the providers. Most often, codes are changed for the right reasons that providers are unaware of.
 
Last edited:
Top