Thank you for your subscription!

Medicare and other health care auditors across the country are using three forms when performing...Read More
This is Part III of a series. In the previous issue, (Part II), we covered more information...Read More
This is Part II of a series. In the previous issue, (Part I), we discussed the concept of...Read More

Other Topics

Here are three forms (2 pages each) that are currently being utilized in medical oncology audits...Read More
Medical Oncologists need to begin a process to define the value of meaningful data through the...Read More
Both the Senate and the House of Representatives have voted to delay a 25% Medicare pay cut to...Read More
Physicians and patients have one definition of value, while insurance companies have another. But,...Read More
Coding flaws are causing big problems for oncologists across the country. You know it, we know it....Read More
We work with medical oncologists/hematologists across the country in both the private practice and...Read More
Neltner Billing and Consulting recently submitted documents to the AMA suggesting that the...Read More

Follow Me

News

NewspaperThere is so much buzz about health care in the media today, and there are a multitude of issues. Everyone has their own "spin". What do you believe? Whom should you believe?

We listen to it all then try to boil it down and give our readers some side bars and tidbits that we believe can help them in their everyday practice of medicine.

This section of the Neltner Billing and Consulting website includes news articles we develop that cover current health care topics. We try to solve problems and often ask for opinions and assistance from our readers in order to help us. If you have a  topic you'd like us to cover in our News section or in The Billing Brieftm, or you would like a free subscripton to The Billing Brief, contact us via email.

You will also see publications such as white papers, abstracts and peer-review articles that we write included in this section of our website.

News Stories

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

AMA Rejects Request For New Hem/Onc CPT Codes

 

Neltner Billing and Consulting recently submitted documents to the AMA suggesting that the infusion coding oncology and hematology rely on for appropriate payment of professional physician work and practice expense is failing in its purpose. Along with those documents we made requests for revised CPT coding to better reflect the work physicians are truly performing.

Unfortunately, the CPT Panel rejected our requests for the following reasons - with which we disagree:

  1. They feel the existing E/M codes adequately describe physician services.

  2. They feel our proposal lacked specialty society support. 

1) We disagree and maintain that the existing E/M codes do not represent the professional work value associated with oncology/hematology treatment planning. They do not include specific bullet points or measures which can be scored to attribute to the level of service indicated. We have evidence that auditors continually fail to recognize the physician work associated with oncology/hematology planning in that levels of service are down-coded because credit is not properly attributed to the medical decision making. Auditors use medical necessity as the overarching criteria for down-coding the level of service, relying on the incorrect premise that a new problem, diagnosis or complication must be present in order to bill a level five service.

Auditors fail to recognize that a comprehensive review and exam combined with the high medical decision-making elements associated with administering drugs that cause extensive toxicity qualify as a level five service - even in a stable, chronically ill patient. The misunderstanding associated with what truly constitutes a level five service provides additional evidence that there is a need for separately reportable codes to identify the treatment planning elements of oncology and hematology encounters. The AMA coding in the infusion coding preamble discusses the highly complex nature of oncology care. Therefore, one code cannot come close to offering evidence of the different levels of care required to identify the correct treatment planning code for different levels of care.

2) With respect to a lack of support from specialty societies, we did receive and review the comments provided by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the American Society of Hematology. While these societies ultimately don't support the specific code requests, both expressed agreement with our contention that the physician work is not adequately captured with the existing E/M codes, nor is it included in the drug infusion codes. (Both societies indicated that a single code to represent oncology treatment planning would be more favorable rather than the proposed tiered set of codes.) With due respect, we do not believe that either ASCO or ASH understand what is happening in the community. After all if 95% of their members are under-coding - and hence, devaluing their service - who is going to complain? What we are experiencing is that auditors are looking at level five notes and calling them level three services.

Physicians across the US continue to down-code for fear of audits, and the work to defend their choice of high complex coding is under attack by carriers who use tactics of three formal reviews that will result in a lot work to defend an additional $40 payment per code. Also, these auditors and their processes do not allow a change in policy if you do actually win at the highest appeal. We have specific documentation to support this concern.

That is why we believe new coding with better definitions will resolve the concern.

Where do we go from here?

What we have done is ask the AMA to synchronize our coding request with the coding request proposed in 2004 by the Drug Administration work group (as suggested by ASCO and ASH). We would be pleased to have the Panel consider the proposed codes in a condensed format, represented by some variation of codes, rather than the series of codes originally requested. This would also be more consistent with the perspectives of ASCO and ASH.

We are hoping to hear back from the AMA and request reconsideration for this coding effort to be placed on the February 2010 agenda of the CPT Panel Executive Committee.

Stay tuned.

Comments

Currently, there are no comments. Be the first to post one!
Post Comment
Name
 *
Email
 *
Website (optional)
Comment
 *

Allowed tags: <a> link, <b> bold, <i> italics