Here’s how the verbiage changes. This year, you’ve read all about the upcoming changes to new and established patient/ outpatient evaluation and management (E/M) codes 99202-99215 in past issues of Ob-Gyn Coding Alert. By now, you know in 2021, medical decision making (MDM) will become the central factor for selecting the proper code from the 99202-99215 range, unless you decide to base the code on time. In 2021, you will find a revised Level of MDM table, which includes several updated options. These changes aim to more closely match the mechanisms of MDM in an office visit. Check out all three of the MDM component verbiage changes, so they don’t throw you when coding E/Ms in 2021. ‘Dx/Management Options’ Becomes ‘Complexity/Problems Addressed’ The first change in MDM verbiage you will see is “Number of Diagnoses or Management Options” will change to “Number and Complexity of Problems Addressed at the Encounter.” “The final diagnosis for a condition does not in itself determine the complexity or risk, as extensive evaluation may be required to reach the conclusion that the signs or symptoms do not represent a highly morbid condition, according to the new CPT® 2021 E/M guidelines. “Multiple problems of a lower severity may, in the aggregate, create higher risk due to interaction.” What the new guidelines are doing is really good for the provider because they are finally giving them credit for all they have to think about, said Jaci J. Kipreos, COC, CPC, CDEO, CPMA, CPC-I, CEMC, in a recent AAPC webinar. Think about all the physician had to go through when coming to a diagnosis. Think about all of the things they had to rule out. All of the tests they had to review. “It’s all going to come down to the documentation,” Kipreos added. “Now, more than ever, it will be crucial for the provider to document his thought process. How are they getting to this final diagnosis? How are they creating a treatment plan? How are they establishing their thought process in the written word?” We will need documentation that will help determine the risk, the severity, and the amount of work that is involved in treatment planning, Kipreos explained. Now is the time to look at some of your current notes and really think: “Would someone who doesn’t work in this practice be able to read this note and understand all of the work that was done?” New Guidance Specifies Review and Analysis of Data For the next column, “Amount and/or Complexity of Data to be Reviewed” will change to “Amount and/or Complexity of Data to be Reviewed and Analyzed.” (Emphasis added). “Now the provider is going to get some credit for analyzing data,” Kipreos says. “And they are giving their own personal interpretation.” This data will include records, tests, and/or other information the provider must obtain, order, review, and analyze for the encounter, per the new CPT® 2021 E/M guidelines. This data also includes information obtained from multiple sources or interprofessional communications that are not separately reported, as well as the interpretation of tests that are not separately reported. “Ordering a test is included in the category of test result(s) and the review of the test result is part of the encounter and not a subsequent encounter,” according to the guidelines. Different categories must meet different requirements of the data categories. For example, data does not apply to code 99211. And, for straightforward MDM with codes 99202 and 99212, the data is minimal or none. Low MDM: On the other hand, with low MDM for codes 99203 and 99213, the data is limited and must meet the requirements of at least one of the following two categories: Moderate MDM: For moderate MDM, with codes 99204 and 99214, the data is moderate and meet the requirements of at least one out of the following three categories: High MDM: For high MDM, with codes 99205 and 99215, the data is extensive and must meet the requirements of at least two out of three categories: Column 3: Mortality of Pt Management Now Part of MDM Component The third component in the table will also change in 2021. Currently it reads “Risk of Complications and/or Morbidity or Mortality.” Next year, the definition will change to (emphasis added): “Risk of Complications and/or Morbidity or Mortality of Patient Management.” This switch looks to more closely align risk with the physician’s MDM rather than tying risk to patient condition. “For higher level E/M services, [payers] will expect a discussion of risks and benefits or alternative treatments to reach those higher levels of patient management,” says Marcella Bucknam, CPC, CCS-P, COC, CCS, CPC-P, CPC-I, CCC, COBGC, revenue cycle analyst with Klickitat Valley Health in Goldendale, Washington. This change was wholly appropriate, as it more properly illustrates what providers do during E/M services, Suzan Hauptman, MPM, CPC, CEMC, CEDC, director compliance audit at Cancer Treatment Centers of America, explains. “Multiple factors go into making patient care decisions and managing the patient. [Providers] are managing a patient or perhaps a condition the patient has. This helps to clarify that the whole patient is being managed, and not just the one issue in a bubble,” concludes Hauptman.