Neurosurgery Coding Alert

Reader Question:

Bill On-Call Visits as 'Established'

Question: Our physician is now "on-call" for another surgeon. If he sees a patient for the first time while filling in (but the patient is not new to the practice he is filling in for), should we report a new or established patient visit?

Michigan Subscriber

Answer: Although you may be tempted to report a new patient visit, CPT specifically states, "in the instance where a physician is on-call for or covering for another, the patient's encounter will be classified as it would have been by the doctor who is not available." In other words, if the patient is not new to the physician your physician is covering for, you must report an established patient visit. For instance, if your neurosurgeon is checking on a patient admitted by another doctor for whom he is on-call, you should report the appropriate subsequent hospital care code (99231-99233).
 
An on-call neurosurgeon can bill for an initial inpatient consultation if the patient was referred directly to him or to the physician for whom he is covering, or if the on-call neurosurgeon was the admitting doctor. In addition, the visit would have to meet all the criteria of a consult (request for consultation, review of the patient, and report back to the referring physician).
 
If an on-call neurosurgeon visits a patient for a related problem during a postsurgical global period, you may not charge for any services. To recoup some reimbursement for such visits, you will have to work out a payment arrangement with the physician you are covering for, or trade services on a reciprocal basis.

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