CMS recently published a fact sheet outlining an update coming from all seven Medicare administrative contractors to the local coverage determinations for skin substitute grafts/cellular and tissue-based products for the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers and venous leg ulcers, which will be effective January 1, 2026. Note : To access this free article, make sure you first register here if you do not have a paid subscription.
Clinics, specialty groups, and ambulatory care centers are facing systemic strains from the outpatient healthcare infrastructure, according to the Outpatient Pressure Index 2025 published by CERTIFY Health.
As we approach the end of the year, take a moment to refresh yourself on the ins and outs of the primary code sets an outpatient coder needs to understand and use in their role. This article provides a brief overview of three code sets that will serve as a review for veteran coders or a solid base of information for new coders.
Social determinants of health (SDOH) are critical for the well-being of the patient and are often more important than what occurs in physician’s offices, laboratories, operating rooms, and other clinical settings. Accurately capturing SDOH and providing education on doing so are equally critical for patient care, quality reporting, and reimbursement.
CMS released its 2026 Outpatient Prospective Payment System final rule on November 21. The document finalizes many proposed policies, including increasing the payment rate, expanding the agency’s method to control unnecessary increases in the volume of outpatient services, revising the Ambulatory Surgical Center Covered Procedures List criteria, and setting the payment rate for the intensive outpatient program.
Accurate provider documentation is the foundation of compliant coding, appropriate reimbursement, and defensible claims. Yet, in a rapidly changing healthcare landscape, even highly skilled clinicians can find it difficult to stay current.
After a few years of confusion about how providers should document time for level-based evaluation and management services, the consensus can be summarized as “make it make sense,” according to a review of guidance issued by all seven Medicare administrative contractors.
A recent cross-sectional analysis published in JAMA Psychiatry examined the breakdown of what percentage of mental health outpatients received their care in-person, via telehealth, or a hybrid. Note : To access this free article, make sure you first register here if you do not have a paid subscription.
Providers will have more opportunities to report +G2211, the complexity of care HCPCS add-on code. Effective January 1, 2026, providers will be able to report the code with evaluation and management encounters in more settings, CMS announced in the final 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule.