Anesthesia Coding Alert

Documentation:

Get the Details You Need by Crafting Clear Queries

Tip: Start by educating yourself to avoid losing credibility.

Crafting an easily understood, concise query when you have questions for your providers is a skill every coder should polish.

Writing effective queries helps you and your providers. How? Asking questions shows providers where they can improve their documentation – which helps you code more accurately in the end. Bolster your skills with advice that Leonta Williams, RHIT, CPCO, CPC, CEMC, CHONC, CCD, CCDS, offered during a presentation at this year’s virtual HEALTHCON conference.

Get Clear on What a Query Is

You write a query when something about the physician’s documentation is confusing, conflicting, or lacking in detail.

First step: Before you submit a query, brush up enough on your clinical skills to understand what you’re reading, Williams stresses. If you submit a query about clinical information you should know, “that lessens your credibility” in your practice, she said.

Send a query when the documentation seems to be missing a key fact. For example, the note may contain signs and symptoms, but not a documented condition. (And, you’re pretty sure the provider isn’t waiting on lab or biopsy results.) Or the note might contain what appears to be conflicting information. Or perhaps you need additional information in order to assign the correct ICD-10-CM code. You might even be dealing with a paper record that contains illegible handwriting.

Follow CMS Query Guidelines

Williams says your query forms should:

  • Be clearly and concisely written
  • Present the facts and identify why the clarification is needed
  • Present the scenario

Query forms should not:

  • Be designed so that the only thing needed is a physician’s signature
  • Indicate any financial impact

Rumors abound that some physicians are asking coders to mention reimbursement dollar amounts in their queries. Make sure you steer away from that practice and follow CMS guidelines to remain compliant. Never mention dollar amounts in your queries, Williams stresses.

Include These Elements – in Writing

Written queries are best, but they can be verbal as long as you document the verbal exchange. Queries can even be conducted over email — provided your practice’s email system is secure and HIPAA-compliant.

The form should list the following:

  • Patient’s name
  • Date of service
  • Medical record number
  • Provider’s name
  • Name and contact of the individual sending the query
  • Date of query
  • Statement of the issue (in the form of a question or request for additional information)

Word your query carefully so that you “don’t box the provider in,” Williams said. Steer clear of “leading” queries that give providers only one way to answer the question. Williams provided the following example of a leading query:

Was the patient given IV fluids because she was dehydrated? Instead ask, Why was the patient given IV fluids?

Queries should be “non-leading,” even if you think you know what the provider meant to document. You might ask for an addendum or provide multiple-choice options that include an “other” option to help the provider articulate their thinking in the medical note. Pay close attention to the headings you use for queries, Williams cautioned, because sometimes headings can cause the query to be leading.

Final tip: “Avoid the words ‘you’ and ‘but’ in your queries,” Williams advised. Such language can sometimes provoke a defensive reaction. Instead consider: “Please provide the patient’s condition necessitating the infusion of the 1000 ml of normal saline administered.”


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