Gastroenterology Coding Alert

99211:

5 Tips Help You Master 99211

Tip: Always watch out for bundles.

Whether you report it every day or you avoid it like the plague, your gastroenterology practice is certainly familiar with 99211. When employed properly, this code can allow certain qualified professional staff to handle on low-level E/Ms, which means physicians can focus on higher-complexity patients.

If you understand how to use it, the established patient office evaluation and management (E/M) code 99211 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient, that may not require the presence of a physician or other qualified health care professional. Usually, the presenting problem(s) are minimal. Typically, 5 minutes are spent performing or supervising these services) could be a big contributor to your practice’s bottom line.

As with every code, there are rules to be followed on 99211 reporting. Use this list of tips to streamline and maximize your 99211 reporting.

Tip 1: Prove Entire E/M Visit Via Documentation

To report 99211, a practitioner must perform an E/M service. In other words, it isn’t a catch-all code that you can report every time a patient passes through your practice.

Example:  A nurse speaks to a patient on the phone and agrees to obtain a prescription refill for her. The patient comes to the practice an hour later, and the nurse hands her the prescription through the reception window.

Solution: Because the nurse did not evaluate the patient, and no medical necessity required that she meet with her, you should not report an office visit. If the nurse couldn’t renew the patient’s prescription without evaluating her, however, she should have documented the medical necessity to support billing 99211.

Whenever you report 99211, the provider should document the reason for the visit, a brief (interim) history of the patient’s illness, and any pertinent physical exam (vital signs are commonly expected by contractors in note audits of 99211). A brief evaluative statement (e.g. “No complications, PPI being used properly, refill provided”) is good practice.

Also, make sure you have the date of service, the reason for the visit, proof that the nurse performed the service per the physician’s order, and the nurse’s legible signature.

Tip 2: Be Familiar With 99211 Components

The description for 99211 states, “for the evaluation and management of an established patient.” When patients come in and weigh themselves, or simply hand you a form for the doctor to complete and don’t require any face-to-face time with a physician or nurse, that doesn’t meet the code’s requirements.

In some cases, a prescription pickup or form completion could require an E/M visit to take place, and in those cases, 99211 is appropriate if the documentation supports it.

For instance, if a patient presents to pick up a prescription and the nurse meets with the patient to review the prescription to make sure the patient is properly educated on how to take the medication, review side effects, etc., then it could qualify. The code states, “typically, five minutes are spent performing or supervising these services,” so it’s OK if the visit or face-to-face time isn’t long. But enough has to happen that the nurse can write a progress note, and that some brief physician’s time to supervise the service is warranted.

Tip 3: Remember ‘Established Patient Rule’

You shouldn’t forget the fact that 99211 only applies to established patients, not new ones. If a nurse saw a new patient for a level-one visit, you’d instead report 99201 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of a new patient, which requires these 3 components ...) — but medical assistants or nurses cannot use that code.

Code 99211 is only for established patients because it is technically performed incident-to, meaning the ancillary staff nurse will be using the supervising provider’s billing information to get the practice paid for the work. To meet the guidelines associated with incident-to, the patient must have a plan of care that has already been created by a supervising provider. The nurse would be providing services directly indicated and/or appropriate to the plan of care.

Tip 4: Physicians Can Report 99211

When necessary, a physician or other qualified nonphy­sician practitioner (NPP) can use 99211, despite the fact that many practices refer to it as a “nurse’s code.” Any qualified personnel can report 99211, including physicians, medical assistants, licensed practical nurses, technicians, and other aides working under the physician’s direct supervision, depending on state law. Most typically, a physician providing a brief service would utilize 99212 (… A problem focused history; A problem focused examination; Straightforward medical decision making …) to reflect very limited history and/ or physical exam and straightforward medical decision making, such as renewing a low-risk medication.

Tip 5: Look Out for Bundles

Although 99211 is often the best choice when a clinician performs a quick, medically necessary visit, payers won’t always reimburse it. The Correct Coding Initiative (CCI) bundles 99211 into several other codes, and some payers maintain their own edits for it.

For instance, CGS Medicare says on its website, “Code 99211 is always bundled with injection administration procedures. CMS guidelines specify that the adminis­tration of injections is only paid separately when there is no other physician fee schedule service paid on that date of service for that provider.”