READER QUESTIONS:
Previous Hospital Care May Affect E/M
Published on Tue May 24, 2005
Question: A provider insurance representative recommended at an in-house seminar that if our neurologist sees a patient in the hospital, we can still bill that patient as a "new patient" if we later see him in the office. But, when one of our neurologists treats a patient in the hospital whom he later sees in our private practice, I've been considering that patient to be "established." Who is correct?
New York Subscriber
Answer: You are correct.
CPT defines a new patient as "one who has not received any professional services from the physician or another physician of the same specialty who belongs to the same group practice within the past three years."
Show the insurance representative CPT's new and established patient definition under the heading "Definitions of Commonly Used Terms" in Evaluation and Management Services Guidelines. The representative may be unfamiliar with in-office coding that follows this rule.
A patient's status doesn't affect hospital care coding. For instance, you report initial hospital care with 99221-99223 (Initial hospital care, per day, for the evaluation and management of a patient ...) and subsequent hospital care as 99231-99233 (Subsequent hospital care, per day, for the evaluation and management of a patient ...), regardless of whether the patient is new or established.
But, if one of your physicians treats a patient in the hospital and later (within three years) treats the patient in the office, you must code the encounter as an established patient E/M service, such as 99212-99215 (Office visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient ...).