Once you’ve answered the quiz questions, compare your answers with the ones provided below. Answer 1: More formally, as CPT® guidelines put it, the ROS “helps define the problem, clarify the differential diagnosis, identify needed testing, or serves as baseline data on other systems that might be affected by any possible management options.” As a coder, however, you know that the ROS plays a different role. “To guide a patient’s E/M, you need a reasonably thorough ROS,” says Mary I. Falbo, MBA, CPC, CEO of Millennium Healthcare Consulting Inc. in Lansdale, Pennsylvania. The extent of the review will, of course, be dependent on the chief complaint and presenting problems. Answer 2: CPT® also provides three different levels of review: a problem-pertinent review (one system); an extended review (two through nine systems); and a complete review (10 or more systems). These different review levels help determine the extent of the history you will need to justify the different E/M levels. The lowest level of E/M, 99201/99212 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of a new/established patient …) needs no system review. The next level, 99202/99213, requires an expanded problem-focused history as one of the three components needed for a new patient E/M service or one out of the two components needed for an established patient. This requires a problem-pertinent ROS. To justify a level of 99203/99214, you’ll have to document an extended review, which will help you support a detailed history as one of the E/M components. For the very highest level (99204-5/99215), you will need a complete ROS, which you will need to justify a comprehensive history, one of the three components necessary to justify a level-four or five new patient visit, and one of the two components necessary for a level-five established patient visit. Answer 3: This concurs with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Documentation Guidelines for Evaluation and Management Services, which states that your practice “must provide a notation supplementing or confirming the information recorded by others to document that the physician reviewed the information” (Source: www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNProducts/Downloads/eval-mgmt-serv-guide-ICN006764.pdf). Answer 4: This means documenting “both positive and negative findings for any pertinent system,” Falbo offers as a reminder. So, a review of the gastrointestinal system for a patient complaining of chest pains could include notes about negatives, such as “No complaints of nausea, vomiting, or change in stool pattern, consistency, or color,” as well as positives such as “Burning epigastric pain at night, approximately twice a month,” Falbo adds. The review can also include systems that are not directly related to the problems identified in the history of present illness (HPI). In the above example of the patient complaining of chest pains, you could count a review of the ears, nose, mouth, and throat if your provider documented that the patient had no complaints of headache, change in vision, or problems with the nose or ears. But it is important that ROS documentation sticks with elements related to a system and not to the patient’s past medical history. For example, “if the provider documents, ‘No known drug allergies,’ this is past medical history and not ROS. To count as ROS, the provider would need to document something like, ‘no wheezing,’ which would count as a review of the respiratory system,” Falbo concludes.
“From a medical perspective, a review of systems is needed to better understand the current condition of the patient,” says Suzan Hauptman, MPM, CPC, CEMC, CEDC, director compliance audit at Cancer Treatment Centers of America. “If a patient arrives with problem X, and has an unrelated problem Y, the treatment options for X might be limited based on the Y,” Hauptman further explains.
CPT® identifies 14 different systems (constitutional symptoms [e.g., fever, weight loss, etc.]; eyes; ears, nose, mouth, and throat; cardiovascular; respiratory; gastrointestinal; genitourinary; musculoskeletal; integumentary (skin and/or breast); neurological; psychiatric; endocrine; hematologic/lymphatic; and allergic/immunologic) in total.
“The ROS can be recorded by the patient or any clinical staff within the office; however, the provider’s review of information obtained in the ROS must be evident within the record in order for the coder to use it toward the justification of the code,” says Hauptman. “The important piece for the coder is to be able to see the provider’s review of the questions, the performance of the questioning, and/or the inclusion of that information in the note,” Hauptman adds.
Simply put, “it is important to have evidence that the review took place,” Hauptman says.