The Affordable Care Act provides preventive and early diagnosis healthcare services for free to anyone with a health insurance policy. This article provides coding specialists with guidance to ensure they’re documenting these services correctly so that providers are compensated properly.
In an environment where there is continuous development of new technology for the treatment of medical conditions, the AMA created a third category of CPT codes. Category III codes are a set of temporary codes for reporting emerging technology, services, and procedures. Note: To access this free article, make sure you first register here if you do not have a paid subscription.
Accurate medical coding for dermatological procedures is essential for proper payment and compliance. This article provides a detailed overview of coding guidelines for excisions and repairs, ensuring that healthcare professionals correctly report these procedures.
CMS recently published its HCPCS Quarterly Update, which brings 148 HCPCS Level II code additions, discontinuations, and revisions. The changes became effective April 1.
The nearly 40,000 new National Correct Coding Initiative edits might seem overwhelming at first, but a divide-and-conquer strategy for the next update can make it more manageable. CMS added dozens of CPT codes to the procedure-to-procedure edits that went into effect January 1, 2025, and medically unlikely edit file that went into effect April 1.
Train new coders to follow CMS’ rules when they find CPT guidance that doesn’t match Medicare’s requirements. This article discusses how the CPT manual’s instructions to report modifier -99 (Multiple modifiers) don’t match instructions from CMS and some Medicare administrative contractors.
Selecting a level of medical decision-making (MDM) is confusing and complicated. In this article, Terry Tropin, MSHAI, RHIA, CCS-P, defines key MDM terms and describes a simplified system for selecting a level of MDM.
A study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that even when patients agreed to be charged for queries sent though a portal, only a tiny fraction of these asynchronous encounters were billed. This article covers why e-visits may be difficult to bill.