Pages

99215 CPT® Code Description, Progress Notes, RVU, Distribution.

Posted by HEALTH FOR ALL

This 99215 CPT® lecture reviews the procedure code definition, progress note examples, RVU values, national distribution data and explains when this code should be used in the hospital setting. CPT stands for Current Procedural Terminology.  This code is part of a family of medical billing codes described by the numbers 99211-99215.  CPT® 99215 represents the high (level 5) office or other outpatient established office patient visit and is part of the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS).  This procedure code lecture for established office patient visits is part of a complete series of CPT® lectures written by myself, a board certified internal medicine physician with over ten years of clinical hospitalist experience in a large community hospitalist program.   I have written my collection of evaluation and management (E/M) lectures over the years to help physicians and  non-physician practitioners (nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, certified nurse midwives and physician assistants) understand the complex criteria required to stay compliant with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and other third party insurance companies.

Make sure to also review my detailed lectures on CPT® 99213 and  CPT® 99214, both part of my  complete collection of CPT® lectures organized in one easy-to-find resource on Pinterest. You don't need to be a Pinterest member to get access to any of my CPT® procedure lectures. As you master these E/M procedure codes, remember, you have an obligation to make sure your documentation supports the level of service you are submitting for payment. The volume of your documentation should not be used to determine your level of service. The details of your documentation are what matter most. In addition, the E/M services guide says the care you provide must be "reasonable and necessary" and all entries should be dated and contain a CMS defined legible signature or signature attestation, if necessary.

99215 MEDICAL CODE DESCRIPTION


My interpretations discussed below are based on my review of the 1995 and 1997 E&M guidelines, the CMS E&M guide and the Marshfield Clinic audit point system for medical decision making. These resources can be found in my hospitalist resources section. The Marshfield Clinic point system is voluntary for Medicare carriers but has become the standard audit compliance tool in many parts of the country. You should check with your own Medicare carrier in your state to verify whether or not they use a different criteria standard than that for which I have presented here in my free educational discussion.  I recommend all readers obtain their own updated CPT® reference book as the definitive authority on CPT® coding.  I have provided access through Amazon to the 2015 CPT® standard edition pictured below and to the right. CPT® 99215 is an office or other outpatient procedure code and can be used by any qualified healthcare practitioner to get paid for their office or other outpatient established patient services. The American Medical Association (AMA) describes the 99215 CPT® procedure code as follows:

Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient, which requires at least two of these three components:  A comprehensive history; A comprehensive examination; Medical decision making of high complexity.  Counseling and/or coordination of care with other providers or agencies are provided consistent with the nature of the problem(s) and the patient's and/or family's needs.  Usually, the presenting problem(s) are of moderate to high severity.  Physicians typically spend 40 minutes face-to-face with the patient and/or family.
An established patient is defined as an individual who has received professional services from a doctor or another doctor of the exact same specialty and subspecialty who belonged to the same group practice within the past three years.

This medical billing code can be used for time based billing when certain requirements are met. However, documentation of time is not required to remain compliant with CMS regulations.  If billed without time as a consideration, CPT® 99215 documentation should comply with the rules established  by the 1995 or 1997 guidelines referenced above. The three important coding components for an established outpatient clinic note are the:
  1. History
  2. Physical Exam
  3. Medical Decision Making Complexity
For all established office patient billing codes (99211-99215), the highest documented two out of three above components determines the correct level of service code. Compare this with the requirement for the  highest documented three out of three above components for new office patient care encounters (99201-99205).  Again, only the highest two out of three components are needed to determine the correct level of care for CPT® 99215. The following discussion details the minimum requirements necessary to remain compliant with CPT® 99215.    In addition, as with all E/M encounters, a face-to-face encounter is always required.  However, in the case of outpatient clinic codes, Medicare does allow incident to billing, where the the service is provided by someone other than the physician.  If certain requirements are met, the physician may collect 100% of allowable charges in these situations.  Services billed incident to are billed under the physician's provider number.
  • Comprehensive history:  Requires 4 or more elements of  the history of present illness (HPI) OR documentation of the status of THREE chronic medical conditions. At least one item from two of three components from past history (illnesses, operations, injuries, treatments), social history or family history is also required. In addition, a complete review of systems is also required (10 or more organ systems). 
  • Comprehensive examination:  The CMS E&M services guide on pages 31 and 32 describes the acceptable body areas and organ systems for physical exam.  Either a general multi-system examination or complete examination of a single organ system (with other symptomatic or related body area(s) or organ system(s)--1997 guidelines) is acceptable.  For a general multi-system examination,  1997 guidelines require documentation of at least two bullets each in at least nine organs systems or body areas (described on pages 52-55 in E/M services guide) while 1995 guidelines require findings from about 8 or more of the 12 organ systems, not otherwise specified.   Requirements for a complete single organ exam are discussed in the  E/M services guide from pages 57-82. 
  • Medical decision making of high complexity (MDM):  This is split into three components. The 2 out of 3 highest levels in MDM are used to determine the overall level of MDM. The level is determined by a complex system of points and risk. What are the three components of MDM and what are the the minimum required number of points and risk level as defined by the Marshfield Clinic audit tool? 
    • Diagnosis (4 points) 
    • Data (4 points) 
    • Risk (high); The risk table can be found on page 37
The medical decision making point system is highly complex. I have referenced it in detail on my E/M pocket cards described below. These cards help me understand what type of care my documentation supports. I carry these cheat sheet cards with me at all times and reference them all day long.  As a hospitalist who performs E/M services almost exclusively, these cards have prevented me from under and over billing thousands of times over the last decade.

CLINICAL EXAMPLES OF 99215


What are some progress note documentation examples for a CPT® 99215, the level 5 established patient visit in an office or other outpatient setting?  Most doctors use the subject, objective, assessment and plan (SOAP) note format.  A 99215 note could  look like this:
S)  Abdominal pain.  RLQ.  Started yesterday.  Constant.  8/10.  Associated fever  (at least 4 HPI).  No nausea, chest pain, dizziness, shortness of breath. In the absence of these pertinent positives and negatives, all other ROS were reviewed and were otherwise negative (at least 10 ROS ). Nonsmoker.  No personal history of colitis.  (At least one element each from 2 of 3 past history, social history and family history).
O) 120/80   80    Tmax 98.9 (three vital signs = one bullet).  alert, memory intact, mild acute distress; no icterus, pupils symmetric, poor dentition, oropharynx normal, no thyroid masses, trachea midline, no neck adenopathy, no groin adenopathy, normal respiratory effort, normal breath sounds, normal heart tones without murmur or JVD, no leg edema, positive bowel tones, guarding RLQ; no palpable masses or organomegally, lungs clear; no skin rashes, no induration.   (at least 2 bullets each in nine areas/systems)
A) Nothing needed
P)  Nothing needed
In this example  history (subjective) and physical (objective) meet the requirements to get paid for a 99215.  Remember, the highest  2 out of 3 components determine the highest level of service for established patients in the clinic or other outpatient setting.  Do note that linking an ICD code to a CPT® medical code is required for all visits submitted to CMS for reimbursement.  Therefore, most progress notes should provide at least one ICD code  to clearly indicate a purpose for the visit.  I suspect this is necessary  to meet the reasonable and necessary threshold, unless that can be inferred from other chart documentation.  Medicare doesn't want to pay for doctors to talk about politics with their patients.  There must always be an approved ICD code linked with the CPT® medical code when billed to CMS and most other insurance companies.

I think it's always a good habit to include at least on ICD code in your note documentation, even though it's not technically required for established patient clinic follow-up visits that can achieve compliance with history and physical elements alone.  It is required, however, to submit for payment and to link with a CPT® code.  Most of the time, if you are documenting a physical exam of this intensity, an assessment and plan is necessary to provide good patient care and followup.  That doesn't mean it is technically required by the 2 out of 3 rules of E/M.

Remember, the highest supported level of documentation for 2 out of 3  from  history, physical and medical decision making on established clinic patients will determine the overall level of CPT®  code service.   For history, four elements of the HPI  (character, onset, location, duration,  what makes it better or worse etc...) or  documentation of  the status of three chronic medical conditions PLUS at least 10 additional review of systems PLUS at least one item each from two of three elements of past medical, family, and social history is required for this level five  progress note.  For physical exam, using 1997 E/M guidelines, documentation of 2 bullets each from at least nine organ systems or body areas is required.  Remember, documentation of three vital signs can count as one bullet element.   Here is another clinical example of a SOAP note for a CPT® 99215 established patient clinic visit:
S) Cough resolved; No SOB; No CP.  No fever.  No sputum.  All other systems were otherwise reviewed and are negative (at least 10+ ROS).  Stopped taking lisinopril due to cough.   Smoker. (at least one element each from two of three for past medical history, family history, social history).
O) 120/80   80    Tmax 98.9 (three vital signs = one bullet)  alert, memory intact, no acute distress; no incterus, pupils symmetrical, poor dentition, oropharynx normal, no thyroid masses, trachea midline, no neck adenopathy, no groin adenopathy, normal respiratory effort, normal breath sounds without wheezing,  normal heart tones without murmur, no leg edema, positive bowel tones, guarding RLQ; no palpable masses or organomegally,  with guarding; lungs clear; heart no murmur, no skin rashes, no induration,RRR; legs no edema; skin no rash, eyes, no icterus, no JVD, alert, mild distress.   (at least 2 bullets each in nine areas/systems)
A) HTN-stable, no changes planned.
     DM-stable, no changes planned.     
     COPD with recent cough-stable, no changes planned. (the status of three chronic medical conditions in place of HPI)
P)  Start ARB instead due to ACE cough.
As you know, documenting the status of three chronic medical conditions can substitute for the HPI. Add in  at least 10 review of systems and one element each from two out of three for past medical, family and social history and this is the minimum history documentation required for CPT® 99215.  With at least 2 bullets documented in each of 9 areas  in the general multi-system physical exam, this note is complete and accurate and meets documentation requirements to get paid for a 99215.   All physical exam components offer value to the encounter to exclude potential complications of therapy or to search for evidence of decompensation of disease.  This note meets criteria for 99215 based on the E/M rules for history and physical exam but not for medical decision making.  But remember, for outpatient established clinic patients, only two out of three components from history, physical and MDM are required to be at the highest level.  The medical decision is a level 4 based on 4 points for diagnosis (HTN, DM, COPD, cough) and moderate risk (prescription drug management by starting an ARB). Is it reasonable and necessary to do a complete history and complete physical if medical decision making is not a level 5.

Some may argue it isn't, but the clinician has an obligation to provide the level of service they believe is necessary to provide the highest quality care.  Smokers with COPD, DM and HTN have multiple potential complications and a cough is a symptom with a broad differential diagnosis and a marker for other potential complications of disease or therapy.  I would have no problem justifying a complete history and complete physical in a smoker with multiple chronic medical conditions.  Conservative management (not ordering a CXR or lab or EKG with personal interpretation which would increase the data portion to a level five) should  not be punished by a lower payment (level four vs level five outpatient established clinic visit).  This note complies with a level five note based on history and physical and should be billed as a level 5 note.  Not doing so is fraud.  Both over coding and under coding should be avoided by mastering the E/M rules.   I would have no problem justifying the intensity of this level of history and physical to an auditor.  Providing documentation of a differential diagnosis and all  the potential systemic complications of therapy or disease progression may also help solidify your  level of service.  Here is another clinical progress note example of appropriate documentation for a CPT® 99215:
S)  Cough started 2 months ago;  Constant.  Worse with smoking.  Nonproductive.  Better with inhalers.  Associated with wheezing (at least 4 HPI).  No SOB; No CP.  No weight loss.  No sweats No fever.    All other systems were otherwise reviewed and are negative (at least 10+ ROS).  No FH of lung cancer.   Smoker. (at least one element each from two of three for past medical history, family history, social history).  
O) 120/80   80    Tmax 98.9 (three vital signs = one bullet).  Wheezing present.  symmetric chest expansion.  Normal cardiac exam. 
A) 1)  Cough, new problem. (4 points for new diagnosis, more workup planned on diagnosis section of MDM)
P) EKG obtained.  Tracing personally reviewed and normal.  CXR and lab ordered and pending.  (This plan gets 4 points for data component of MDM with 2 points for independent visualization of EKG and one point each for ordering lab and and radiology)
This note meets criteria for the highest level established outpatient clinic note based on history and medical decision making.  Physical exam does not meet the threshold for a 99215 but it does not have to in this case.  Remember, the two out of three rule for history, physical and MDM.  The history meets based on at least 4 HPI, at least 10 ROS and at least 2 from past medical, social or family history.  Medical decision making is the highest level based on data and diagnosis, with 4 points each. The risk table does not apply in this example. All elements are reasonable and necessary based on physician expertise and differential diagnosis possibilitiesA new problem such as a cough can be a manifestation of multiple systemic conditions and a complete ROS can be justified in any audit situation.

The complicated  table of risk, one of the elements used to determine overall complexity in medical decision making, can be reviewed once again on page 37.  It does not apply to this progress note example, but it's important to be aware of how it can be used in everyday clinical coding decisions.  What I have on my quick reference E/M  card below only represents examples of moderate and high risk elements due to space limitations. I rarely use low risk in the table for any progress note because I'm just not smart enough to memorize it.  I generally only use the table of risk when determining moderate and high risk encounters.  In addition, most of my patients in the hospital present with moderate or high risk complexity. However, I have linked to it on page 37 above for your quick reference.  I suggest you print it for quick reference in the office setting.    Here is another clinical example that meets minimum  documentation requirements  for a CPT® 99215:
S)  SOB.  Started one hour ago.  Severe.  Constant.  Associated with 2 word dyspnea.  Not better with home inhalers. Better with laying still.   No chest pain.  No associated cyanosis (at least 4 HPI).  All other ROS were otherwise reviewed and negative (at least 10 + additional ROS).  Still smoking.  Takes duoneb and Advair  (one element each for social history and medical history).
O) O2 sat 83% on home O2 of 3 liters.  HR 100.  BP 100/70  Temp 101.9  RLL crackles, with, no wheezing 
A) 1) Fever with hypoxemia, suspected pneumonia.  Get CXR and admit to hospitalist.   (4 points in the diagnosis component for a new problem with more work-up planned (fever)).  
P)  Admit to hospitalist (high risk for acute or chronic illness that poses a threat to life or bodily function for respiratory distress).  
This patient meets criteria for a level 5 established outpatient clinic note based on history and medical decision making.  It contains all the necessary HPI, ROS and PMFSH components. The statement indicating all other ROS were were reviewed and otherwise negative is allowed to substitute for individually documenting each element of the ROS process.  This is allowed based on E/M guidelines published by CMS.  In addition, the MDM is a level 5 progress note based on diagnosis (4 points) and high risk.  Notice the volume of documentation matters much less than the quality of what is written to support the E/M charge appropriate for the visit.

In my discussions above, I have detailed several examples of the minimum documentation required to meet compliance for a level five established patient clinic visit.  When would a hospitalist bill an established patient clinic procedure code in the hospital setting?

USING ESTABLISHED PATIENT CLINIC CODES IN THE HOSPITAL SETTING


The CPT® medical billing code group 99211-99215 should used by hospitalists and other physicians or non-physician practitioners in the hospital setting under certain circumstances.  I have previously discussed all the possible admission codes that could be used in the hospital setting  These established patient clinic and other outpatient visit codes are included as possibilities.  I have provided a detailed discussion of  that decision tree analysis at the link provided just above.  However, I will discuss the pertinent portions of that analysis here.

For patients admitted observation status, the attending physician should choose from the observation group of medical codes 99218-99220 for the initial encounter, 99224-99226 for observation status follow-up codes, and 99217 for observation discharge.  Under certain situations, same day admit and discharge billing codes 99234-99236 or critical care procedure codes may also apply too.  This is not the case for consultants taking care of observation status patients.  What codes should a consultant use in an observation status situation?  This is where the correct code decision can get very complicated.  Medicare no longer recognizes consult procedure codes. Consultants should pick the appropriate level of service from the established outpatient clinic code group 99211-99215 as their initial encounter and for all subsequent care visits (including the day of discharge) IF the patient has been seen previously  by the physician or a physician partner of theirs in the same group and exact same specialty within the previous three years, unless documentation supports the use of critical care codes or until the patient becomes inpatient status.

If the patient has not been seen in the last three years by the same physician or partner physician in the same group and exact same specialty, the consultant should use the new patient clinic code group 99201-99205 on their initial date of service and then choose a code from the established outpatient code group 99211-99215 for all subsequent observation services, including the day of discharge.  Remember, all hospital observation CPT® code groups are reserved only for the attending physician.

The above discussion relates to Medicare because Medicare does not accept consult codes.  Other insurances may still accept consultation codes.  In that case, the consultant should chose a level of service from medical code group 99241-99245 (outpatient consult codes) as the initial encounter and then pick a billing code from the established patient clinic codes 99211-99215 for all subsequent care visits, including the day of discharge,  while the patient is hospitalized for observation services.  If the patient is formally admitted inpatient, the consultant should use the inpatient subsequent care codes 99231-99233 for all subsequent face-to-face encounters.

DISTRIBUTION OF ESTABLISHED PATIENT CARE CODES 


What is the distribution of CPT® code 99215 relative to other levels of service in this medical code group?  The graph below was published in  May, 2012  by the OIG in a report titled Coding Trends of Medicare Evaluation and  Management Services.  You can find these tables and charts starting on page 9 of this link provided here.   As you can see, between 2001 and 2010, the distribution of established patient office visits has shifted higher.  The proportion of  level four 99214 and level five 99215 reimbursements has increased by 15% and 2% respectively, while the proportion of level three  99213 services billed for payment has decreased by 8% between 2001 and 2010.  On an absolute percentage basis, in 2010, CPT® code 99215 was being billed 5% of the time, up from 3% of the time ten years previously.

E/M-Established-Patient-Clinic-Outpatient-Distribution-Curve-Graph

 photo efd067cb-81b9-4b36-a65a-61723256119a_zps2d121e07.jpg

Here is data from the most recent 2011 CMS Part B National Procedure Summary Files data (2011 zip file) showing how many CPT® 99215 encounters were billed and the dollar value of their services for Part B Medicare.    As you can see in the image below, E/M code 99215 was billed 9,694,388 times in 2011 with allowed charges of $1,316,879,153.56 and payments of $935,217,434.74.

2011 Medicare Part B National Procedure Summary File 99211-99215 CMS 2011

RVU VALUE 


How much money does a CPT® 99215 pay?  That depends on what part of the country you live in and what insurance company you are billing.  E/M procedure codes, like all CPT® billing codes, are paid in relative value units (RVUs).  This complex  RVU discussion has been had elsewhere on The Happy Hospitalist. For raw RVU values, for 2016 a CPT® 99215 is worth 3.13 total RVUs for facility services and  4.07 total RVUs for non-facility.   The work RVU for 99215 is valued at 2.11.  A complete list of RVU values on common hospitalist E/M codes is provided at the linked URL.  What is the Medicare reimbursement for CPT® code 99215? In my state, a CPT® 99215 pays just over $105 (facility) and $136 (non-facility) in 2016.  The dollar conversion factor for one RVU in 2014 is $35.8043.

My coding card taught me that I should be billing for the work I'm providing and it has taught me how to document appropriately. You can see many more of my E/M lectures by clicking through to the link provided here.  If you need bedside help determining what level of care you have provided, I recommend reviewing the pocket card described below.

LINK TO E/M POCKET CARD POST

EM Pocket Reference Cards Using Marshfield Clinic Point Audit

Click image for high definition view


Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar