Question:
Georgia Subscriber
Answer:
CMS and many other payers don't pay for 99360 (Physician standby service, requiring prolonged physician attendance, each 30 minutes [e.g., operative standby, standby for frozen section, for cesarean/high risk delivery, for monitoring EEG]), so the physician may not be able to charge for standby time.Some payers might pay on 99360, however. If a third party payer does reimburse for 99360, then be sure the physician has documented the standby service with something such as: I was requested by [DOCTOR'S NAME] to be on standby for trauma surgery performed on [PATIENT'S NAME] on [DATE]. I arrived at the facility at [ARRIVAL TIME] and departed at [DEPARTURE TIME].
Note:
When standby care is requested, both the requesting physician and providing physician must document the need for standby care regardless of whether a claim for reimbursement is submitted.If you submit a claim, be sure to follow the CPT® guidelines for 99360, which include:
Important:
If the physician is called upon during the procedure to actually assist with or perform a procedure, you should bill for the service provided rather than reporting the standby service using 99360.