Hint: Coders shouldn't be interpreting test results to get quick diagnosis codes.
As your practice continues to prepare for the ICD-10 transition, it's important to still remain up-to-date on the ICD-9 coding rules, which remain in effect until Oct. 1, 2013. Read the following diagnosis coding questions submitted by our readers and check out our expert answers below.
Leave Diagnosing Patients to the Doctor
Question 1: If the physician hasn't indicated ECG results in his final diagnosis, should I code the findings? The doctor wrote a complete interpretation on the strip. He says "yes," because usually he has another diagnosis to justify the ECG.
Answer 1: The bottom line is if the test is positive, you should report the findings from the electrocardiogram (ECG) as the final diagnosis. If the test is negative, you should report the indications. For you to report positive findings from the ECG, the physician must document the findings as a final diagnosis. Choosing a diagnosis based on the patient's test results -- even when that diagnosis seems obvious-- is inappropriate and possibly fraudulent coding. CMS describes its guidelines for this issue in Transmittal AB-01-144 (Sept. 26, 2001) in which the agency states that a physician must confirm a diagnosis based on the test results.
This CMS transmittal goes on to say that if the test results are normal or nondiagnostic, you should code the signs or symptoms that prompted the test -- in other words, the indications. Similarly, the ICD-9 coding guidelines for diagnostic testing instruct you not to "interpret" what a study says, but rather to rely on the physician's stated diagnosis. If the ECG findings seem like an important component of the case -- and may play a role in substantiating the medical necessity for the visit-- you should query the physician regarding the diagnosis.
Heads up: Choose the CPT ECG code based on how much of the ECG service the physician's office provided. If the physician's office provided the entire service (both technical and professional components), assign 93000 (Electrocardiogram, routine ECG with at least 12 leads; with interpretation and report).
Code the technical component only as 93005 ( tracing only, withoutinterpretation and report). If the physician provided only the professional component, use 93010 ( interpretation and report only).
Don't Let Diabetes Dx Trip Up Your Claims
Question 2: Our physician treated a patient with diabetes, but he was actually seeing the patient to treat a complication of the diabetes, diabetic neuropathy. During his evaluation, the physician also noted that the patient had joint inflammation. Should we report the neuropathy complication only, or several of the ICD-9 codes?
Source URL :- http://www.supercoder.com/coding-newsletters/my-part-b-coding-alert/diagnosis-coding-quiz-are-your-dx-coding-skills-up-to-snuff-take-this-quick-quiz-to-find-out-107415-article
As your practice continues to prepare for the ICD-10 transition, it's important to still remain up-to-date on the ICD-9 coding rules, which remain in effect until Oct. 1, 2013. Read the following diagnosis coding questions submitted by our readers and check out our expert answers below.
Leave Diagnosing Patients to the Doctor
Question 1: If the physician hasn't indicated ECG results in his final diagnosis, should I code the findings? The doctor wrote a complete interpretation on the strip. He says "yes," because usually he has another diagnosis to justify the ECG.
Answer 1: The bottom line is if the test is positive, you should report the findings from the electrocardiogram (ECG) as the final diagnosis. If the test is negative, you should report the indications. For you to report positive findings from the ECG, the physician must document the findings as a final diagnosis. Choosing a diagnosis based on the patient's test results -- even when that diagnosis seems obvious-- is inappropriate and possibly fraudulent coding. CMS describes its guidelines for this issue in Transmittal AB-01-144 (Sept. 26, 2001) in which the agency states that a physician must confirm a diagnosis based on the test results.
This CMS transmittal goes on to say that if the test results are normal or nondiagnostic, you should code the signs or symptoms that prompted the test -- in other words, the indications. Similarly, the ICD-9 coding guidelines for diagnostic testing instruct you not to "interpret" what a study says, but rather to rely on the physician's stated diagnosis. If the ECG findings seem like an important component of the case -- and may play a role in substantiating the medical necessity for the visit-- you should query the physician regarding the diagnosis.
Heads up: Choose the CPT ECG code based on how much of the ECG service the physician's office provided. If the physician's office provided the entire service (both technical and professional components), assign 93000 (Electrocardiogram, routine ECG with at least 12 leads; with interpretation and report).
Code the technical component only as 93005 ( tracing only, withoutinterpretation and report). If the physician provided only the professional component, use 93010 ( interpretation and report only).
Don't Let Diabetes Dx Trip Up Your Claims
Question 2: Our physician treated a patient with diabetes, but he was actually seeing the patient to treat a complication of the diabetes, diabetic neuropathy. During his evaluation, the physician also noted that the patient had joint inflammation. Should we report the neuropathy complication only, or several of the ICD-9 codes?
Source URL :- http://www.supercoder.com/coding-newsletters/my-part-b-coding-alert/diagnosis-coding-quiz-are-your-dx-coding-skills-up-to-snuff-take-this-quick-quiz-to-find-out-107415-article
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