Remember: You will pay special attention to MDM and time in 2021. Starting on Jan. 1, 2021, new and established patient/ outpatient evaluation and management (E/M) codes 99202-99215 will see some much-anticipated updates. It’s best to go ahead and prepare now so that your cardiology practice isn’t taken by surprise when these changes go into effect next year. Shatter the following myths you prepare for the 2021 E/M changes. Editor’s note: This is a part of an ongoing series appearing this year in Cardiology Coding Alert to prepare you for the upcoming 2021 E/M changes. Stay tuned for more information. Grasp Basis of 2021 E/M Office/Outpatient Code Selection Myth 1: Nothing is changing with the E/M leveling criteria in 2021. Reality: Currently, for new patient office/outpatient codes (99202-99205) and established patient office/outpatient codes (99212-99215), you use three key components, history, examination, and medical decision making (HEM) to select the appropriate E/M service level. But, starting on Jan. 1, 2021, CPT® will remove history and exam as key components for codes 99202-99215. Instead, your code selection will be based upon the MDM level or the total time the physician spent with the patient on that date of service. Don’t miss: CPT® will also update and revise their guidelines, which will further explain how coders should handle MDM and time in 2021. See Which Codes Will Be Impacted Myth 2: In 2021, you should base the service level of codes from all of the E/M categories on MDM or time. Reality: The new criteria for basing the E/M level on either MDM or time only applies to office/outpatient codes 99202-99215. The leveling rules for E/M codes in other categories will remain the same. Remember Importance of History and Exam Myth 3: Since history and exam will no longer be key components for determining the level of E/M codes 99202-99215, it won’t be necessary for the provider to perform a history and exam. Reality: The history and exam will still be important, and they are still needed elements, says Raemarie Jimenez, CPC, CIC, CPB, CPMA, CPPM, CPC-I, CCS, senior vice president of product at AAPC and coding liaison to the AMA CPT® Editorial Panel. They just won’t be counted towards the E/M component. “When you look at the revised CPT® code descriptors for 99202-99215, the code descriptor includes ‘which requires a medically appropriate history and/or examination,’” Jimenez says. “So, they still understand from a clinical perspective, the history and exam play a critical role in understanding what’s going on with the patient. It’s just not going to be bulleted, counting elements. It’s whatever the provider feels is necessary to adequately treat that patient for what the presenting problem is or the reason for that encounter.” You can find a lot of information in the history and exam that helps to support the information for MDM, according to Jimenez. Examples of this include the severity of the condition, which is going to be supplemented by the information found in the history and exam. Also, the status of a condition. Is it a chronic illness? It is stable? Is it exacerbated? Is it not improving? So, in some instances, we are going to be able to glean that information from the history and exam. “As a coder, you are going to be looking at the entire record to get a total picture,” Jimenez says. “I wouldn’t just skip those elements [history and exam] in the medical record and move straight into medical decision making because that information is still important.” Know Timeline for Deleting 99201 Myth 4: We should not bill 99201 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of a new patient, which requires these 3 key components: A problem focused history; A problem focused examination; Straightforward medical decision making …) anymore because it’s been deleted. Reality: Code 99201 will not be deleted until Jan. 1, 2021, so you can continue to report this code until then. Why will 99201 be deleted in 2021? Because both 99201 and 99202 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of a new patient, which requires these 3 key components: An expanded problem focused history; An expanded problem focused examination; Straightforward medical decision making…) involve the exact same type of MDM, having two codes with a straightforward level of MDM was deemed unnecessary. Also, 99201 is not an often-used code, so it makes sense to delete it. Bottom line: You should continue to report 99201 until its deletion date of Jan. 1, 2021. Conquer New Time Guidelines in 2021 Myth 5: The definition of time has not been redefined for the new and established patient outpatient/office codes in 2021. Reality: Starting in 2021, if you use the total time the provider spent with the patient on that date of service to level the service for codes 99202-99215, then you should know that CPT® will be replacing the words “typical time” with the words “total time spent on the day of the encounter,” along with changing the standard time thresholds for each of the codes. The typical time currently included in the code descriptors only reflects face-to-face time. But since most office visits have some pre- and post-visit time involved, too, the change to total time on the date of the encounter will allow you to include those times in your code selection. Here is a chart that outlines the current typical times as well as the times you’ll see in 2021: Don’t miss: You’ll be able to include such factors in your time calculation as ordering medications, tests, or procedures, and time spent personally doing preauthorization work — as well as reviewing records before you see the patient on the same calendar date.