Allergy Coding Alert
Follow 2 Important Lessons to Code Nebulizer Education Accurately
Get the pay you deserve for inhaler demonstrations
Don’t let your allergist’s or nurse’s time spent educating patients on proper nebulizers go to waste. Instead, ensure you receive appropriate reimbursement by following these two simple steps for using 94640 and 94664.
Tip 1: Identify a Distinct Service
Some payers will reimburse only for the nebulizer treatment (94640, Pressurized or nonpressurized inhalation treatment for acute airway obstruction or for sputum induction for diagnostic purposes [e.g., with an aerosol generator, nebulizer, metered dose inhaler or intermittent positive pressure breathing (IPPB) device]) but not the teaching (94664, Demonstration and/or evaluation of patient utilization of an aerosol generator, nebulizer, metered dose inhaler or IPPB device), writes Anika Potts, office administrator at Kids First Pediatric Group in Stockbridge, Ga.
Try this: You could append modifier 59 (Distinct procedural service) to 94664 when appropriate, says Christina T. Todd, CCS-P, director of medical review and compliance at EHS Inc. in Hunt Valley, Md. “We’ve had better success getting paid for the separate teaching session since we started reporting 94664-59.”
Here’s why: When you report same-session nebulizer treatment and training, you may use modifier 59 to designate 94664 as a distinct procedural service from 94640, coding experts say.
Caution: Not all payers require modifier 59 on the nebulizer demonstration code, experts say. But you might have to use the modifier if an insurer includes the training in the treatment.
Why: The National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) considers 94664 a component of 94640. Therefore, private payers may adopt the CMS edit and include the demonstration in the training.
Tip 2: Use Modifier 59 for Different Procedure
You can use modifier 59 to unbundle the demonstration (94664) from the treatment (94640). “Under certain circumstances, the physician may need to indicate that a procedure or service was distinct or independent from other services performed on the same day,” according to CPT guidelines.
Remember: Modifier 59 may represent one of the following relationships between the two procedures/services:
• different session or patient encounter
• different procedure or surgery
• different site or organ system
• separate incision/excision
• separate lesion
• separate injury.
Example: An established patient presents in respiratory distress. You evaluate the patient and administer a nebulizer treatment using a unit dose of Albuterol.
After the patient recovers, you prescribe a new inhaler. A nurse demonstrates proper inhaler technique, has the patient practice using the inhaler and corrects the patient’s misuse.
Solution: You could code the encounter as:
• 99212-99215 with modifier 25 to notify carriers that this was a significant, separately identifiable office visit
• 94640 for the nebulizer treatment
• 94664 with modifier 59 to report the distinct procedural training administered by the nurse
• J7613 for the drug administration of 1 unit dose, 1 mg, of Albuterol
ICD-9 code:
• 493.02 (Extrinsic [...]
- Published on 2005-09-18
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