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06/11/2012

Prevent hiccups in your payments when CMS begins enforcing the HIPAA 5010 standard for all electronic claims July 1 by asking direct questions of your clearinghouse or payers to guarantee your claims will be paid. Some health plans are accepting claims as 5010-compliant during the Jan. 1 through June 30 discretionary period that may no longer pass muster on July .

06/11/2012

Keep updated on brewing drug shortages and develop a contingency plan to mitigate their damaging effects on your practice. The number of drug shortages has skyrocketed in recent years. More than 200 drugs are on the shortages lists, not including vaccines, immune globulin and other biologics. 

06/11/2012

Your longstanding but technically illegal habit of allowing non-physician staff to log into CMS’ web-based Provider Enrollment Chain and Ownership System (PECOS) using the physician’s username and password soon will become legal under a new surrogate program. But you must first learn to navigate the program’s multiple registration scenarios.

06/11/2012

A physician or coder might be tempted to assign a higher level of service to a claim that uses one comment in a physician’s documentation for the history of present illness (HPI) and review of systems (ROS), but that practice can lead to denials.

Practices continue to struggle with whether one physician comment in his documentation can count in the HPI and ROS, as evidenced by a recent string on the Part B News listserv.

06/11/2012

Fix the weaknesses you’ll inevitably find during a security risk analysis (SRA) to protect patient information, meet meaningful use and keep providers’ $18,000 bonuses.

Finding and mending faults when safeguarding protected health information (PHI) is required by measure 15 of CMS’ electronic health records (EHR) incentive program.

06/11/2012

This chart shows the overall denial rates of seven observation codes, comparing the 2009 rate with the 2010 rate for each code. The numbers, based on the latest Medicare claims data available, do not reflect the new codes for subsequent observation care (99224-99226) since they were not introduced until 2011. Note: The seven codes included below were not replaced by any of the new observation codes in 2011, meaning they all still apply today.

06/11/2012

How do you avoid E/M denials when using modifier 25 (Separately identifiable E/M service) and a surgical code? For example, is there a reason for denying claims billed as 99213 (Level 3 E/M, established patient) with modifier 25 and 20610 (Arthrocentesis, aspiration and/or injection; major joint or bursa)? CMS is denying our claims because the “new code edit guidelines are not met for the use of this modifier.” Is that right? How do you document the services so the claims get paid?

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