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10/21/2015

National Government Services (NGS) announced Oct. 21 it has “identified a claims-processing issue” that has influenza and pneumococcal vaccines “denying in error,” apparently because of the recent change in diagnosis coding standards from ICD-9 to ICD-10.

“A system error impacted providers who submitted claims for these services in which they reported ICD-10-CM diagnosis code Z23,” announced the bulletin from NGS, the contractor for Medicare A and B in Jurisdiction K (Connecticut, New York, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont) and Jurisdiction 6 (Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota).

The affected codes are:

  • G0008 (Administration of influenza virus vaccine);

  • G0010 (Administration of hepatitis b vaccine);

  • G0009 (Administration of pneumococcal vaccine);

  • 90630 (Influenza virus vaccine, quadrivalent (IIV4), split virus, preservative free, for intradermal use); 90669 (Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, 7 valent, for intramuscular use);

  • 90670 (Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, 13 valent, for intramuscular use);

  • 90686 (Influenza virus vaccine, quadrivalent, split virus, preservative free, when administered to individuals 3 years of age and older, for intramuscular use), 90732 (Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine, 23-valent, adult or immunosuppressed patient dosage, when administered to individuals 2 years or older, for subcutaneous or intramuscular use);

  • 90739 (Hepatitis B vaccine, adult dosage (2 dose schedule), for intramuscular use); 90740 (Hepatitis B vaccine, dialysis or immunosuppressed patient dosage (3 dose schedule), for intramuscular use), 90743 (Hepatitis B vaccine, adolescent (2 dose schedule), for intramuscular use); 90744 (Hepatitis B vaccine, pediatric/adolescent dosage (3 dose schedule), for intramuscular use);

  • 90746 (Hepatitis B vaccine, adult dosage (3 dose schedule), for intramuscular use); and

  • 90747 (Hepatitis B vaccine, dialysis or immunosuppressed patient dosage (4 dose schedule), for intramuscular use).

NGS says it is making a “mass adjustment” to denied claims and providers need not resubmit or appeal them but should watch NGS website and email updates for further developments. – Roy Edroso (redroso@decisionhealth.com)

10/19/2015

You’ll find the final rules governing meaningful use reporting in 2015 to be a tad less laborious than previous versions, even if the seven-month wait for the late-breaking regulations left you a bit weary.

10/19/2015
The recent discovery of new hacking threats to medical devices and systems is a reminder that you should go beyond the four walls of your offices when you perform your security risk analysis under HIPAA.
10/19/2015

Providers will have large loads to lift to transition to meaningful use stage 3 by 2018 — the last year before the merit-based incentive payment system (MIPS) replaces the current electronic health record (EHR) programs.

10/19/2015

You can join the tide of providers who are getting paid for transitional care management (TCM) services by sticking to tried-and-true claims submission strategies, such as filing the claim with the correct date of service and holding to a contingency plan if the patient is readmitted.

10/19/2015

The age-old provider practice of initialing changes to the medical record instead of adding a full signature has been sanctioned by CMS.

10/19/2015

More than a dozen specialty providers billed transitional care management (TCM) services in 2014, with internal medicine setting the bar for highest utilization among physician groups and about average denial rates.

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