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Coding Pearls

Coding

E/M Coding: Level 4 and Level 5

by Dr. Michael Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“Based on your experience with the new E/M guidelines, is it possible and appropriate for a podiatrist to bill a level 4 or 5 if the documentation is supported? These higher levels have always been taboo (especially level 5). Some patients are at a higher risk with diabetes, chronic non-healing ulcers and wounds etc. Some patients need amputations. Based on the documentation, I believe achieving these higher levels is possible.”
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Coding

Trauma Coding: Fracture Codes and E/M 2021 Updates

by Dr. Michael Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“In the past, it has been postulated that a doctor had the option of using a fracture code or using E/M codes to bill for fracture care. With the upcoming changes to E/M reimbursement, it would seem that billing using E/M codes might make for sense for fracture care. Are there any thoughts on these changes upcoming for 2021?”
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Coding

Clarification on Nursing Home Billing

by Dr. Michael Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“In a nursing home, if you are rendering a service where the E/M is a systemic condition and separately identifiable, can you bill the E/M code and the procedure? I believe you cannot. My biller and a webinar speaker both feel that you can. Their thought is that as long as you have different diagnoses for the office/nursing home visit and routine foot care, it will be allowable. For example, you could bill E/M 99307, CPT 11056, and CPT 11721 and the diagnosis codes are G20 (Parkinsons), L84 (corns and calluses), I73.89 (PVD), B35.1 (mycotic nails), M79.674 and M79.675 (pain toes). I would put the G20 on the E/M 99307, L84 and I73.89 on CPT 11056 and B35.1 and M79.674, M79.675 on CPT 11721. Any thoughts on this issue would be helpful.”
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Coding

Denial of Reimbursement for SNF Patient Care

by Dr. Michael Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“This past summer, one of my patients who was suffering from a diabetic foot ulcer was admitted to a skilled nursing facility (SNF) following a hospital discharge. During her admission to the SNF, I continued to care for her in my office, including ulcer debridement and radiographs. Medicare is denying payment for her ulcer debridements (CPT 97597) as well as the technical component of her radiographs (CPT 73630-TC) on the grounds that “all SNF Part A inpatient services are paid under a prospective payment system (PPS)” and that “services that are considered within the scope or capability of SNFs are considered paid in the PPS rate.” In other words, Medicare considers the care that I rendered to be bundled with the payment to the SNF for admission, and therefore the SNF should have been doing it themselves, and that if I want payment I need to bill the SNF since they–in Medicare’s view–outsourced the ulcer care to me. While I fully expect the SNF to balk at any requests for payment from me, and I believe it might still be worth my time to appeal to an Administrative Law Judge, I would like to know if anyone has experienced this? In the future, if I am going to care for the ulcers of my patients when they are admitted to SNFs, is there anything I can arrange with the SNF or with the patient to ensure I am compensated for their care?”
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Coding

Global for Tenotomy Surgery

by Dr. Michael Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“Can someone please clarify the postoperative global period for a percutaneous flexor tenotomy for flexible hammertoes? I thought the postop global for CPT 28010 was ten days. I discovered that it is 90 days! Is it really the same as a bunion correction? I performed an in office flexor tenotomy successfully on one foot and now the patient requests correction for the other foot. I understand how a longer global period would discourage so called “serial surgeries” for higher reimbursements for multiple procedures on one foot. But on the opposite foot as well?”
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Coding

Debridement vs Trimming

by Dr. Michael Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“All the nails were trimmed in length with a sterile nail nipper. The leading edges were debrided with the nail bur and electric podiatry drill. The debris under the edges of the great toenails was derided with the sterile curette. Is this nail trimming (CPT 11719) since we DID NOT debride the entire nail (just edges and under toe) or can we bill as CPT 11721?”
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Coding

Deconstructed Lapidus Bunionectomy

by Dr. Michael Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“A friend of mine is encouraging me to change how I bill for my Lapidus bunionectomy. I typically bill this using CPT code 28297. I am being told that I should think about billing this “alternatively” as: 1) CPT 28740 2) CPT 28292 Thoughts on this?”
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Coding

The Basics of L3260

by Dr. Michael Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“I am reading conflicting information regarding the dispensing of a post-operative/cast shoe. Medicare never seems to pay for this but commercial carriers usually do. I am reading that this shoe is NOT separately payable when it is dispensed in conjunction with a surgical procedure code. You cannot have the patient sign an ABN and charge the patient for the shoe. Please clarify the dos and don’ts of using the L3260 HCPCS code.”
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Coding

Coding Pearls: How to Code for Treating a Paronychia

by Dr. Michael Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“I need some clarification on the proper coding for a paronychia on an established patient office visit. I’ve received mixed advice over the last year or so. Anything from CPT 10060 alone, to adding CPT 64450 and CPT 99212. I just want to be correct.”
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Coding

Coding Pearls: Unsuccessful Hardware Removal

by Dr. Michael G. Warshaw, DPM, CPC

“I attempted to remove a screw under local anesthesia in the office setting that was placed during a bunion correction about 10 yrs ago. I was unsuccessful and the patient will need to undergo the procedure in the operating room. How would I bill this visit? It was a new patient to the office.”
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