EM Coding Alert

Quick Quiz:

Test Yourself to Avoid These Critical E/M Errors

Use this quiz to identify where you need to focus your learning.

One of the most efficient ways to get the reimbursements you deserve is to make sure your E/M coding is top notch.  Evaluation and management is the most frequently billed service and when it’s coded correctly, can give your practice an income boost. 

Find out if you’re properly billing the E/M services your physicians perform with these five quiz questions. Watch for the answers in the next issue of E/M Coding Alert.

Question 1: The physician puts an asthma patient on steroids and changes his inhaler settings after an exacerbation. The patient returns the next week for a scheduled follow-up. The provider asks the patient if he is having any breathing trouble since his medication change. What review of systems (ROS) level does this represent?

A. Problem-pertinent ROS
B. Extended ROS
C. Complete ROS
D. None of the above.

Question 2: A patient who is new to the area makes an appointment with the physician for a yearly physical and to discuss chronic diagnoses of asthma and depression. The patient has never been seen by anyone in your practice before. The physician performs the preventive medicine service and has a long discussion with the patient regarding the chronic diagnoses. The documentation supports the annual physical code and also has enough stand-alone documentation to bill an E/M with the visit. Which of the following should you bill?

A. New patient physical only.
B. Established patient physical only.
C. A new patient physical with the appropriate-level new patient E/M.
D. A new patient physical with the appropriate-level established patient E/M.

Question 3: Your physician sees an established five-year-old patient with severe chronic allergies. The patient is not presenting with any symptoms currently. Your physician documents a detailed history, a detailed exam, and low complexity decision making. You can report 99214.

A. True.
B. False.

Question 4: A patient comes into your practice in the morning for some lab draws and an echocardiogram. Later the same day the patient comes back and sees another physician (in the same specialty) for coordination of care based on the findings. How would you report these services?

A. Report a separate E/M code for each visit.
B. Report just one E/M code that represents the combined service levels of both visits.
C. Report just one E/M code, ignoring the second visit all together.
D. None of the above.

Question 5: The physician sees a former patient who was in an automobile accident. The physician does a comprehensive history and examination and documents medical decision-making. The E/M medical necessity level meets the criteria for 99214. The physician spends additional time answering the patient’s many questions and helping her to understand her options. The total visit takes 60 minutes. What code(s) should you report?

A. 99214
B. 99214-21
C. 99214, 99354
D. 99354.

Stay tuned: Be sure to read next month’s issue for the answers!

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