CMS and CPT® still at odds over when to add extra time. CMS’s 2023 Physician Fee Schedule (PFS) final rule instituted significant changes to prolonged service coding. If you want to stay ahead of those changes, or you’re still confused by the different ways Medicare and payers who follow CPT® guidelines code for prolonged services, you’ve come to the right place. We’ve gathered together all the new codes and guideline changes into this one handy guide. Refresh Your +99417 Understanding For 2023, CPT® has changed the descriptor wording for +99417, to now read: Prolonged outpatient evaluation and management service(s) time with or without direct patient contact beyond the required time of the primary service when the primary service level has been selected using total time, each 15 minutes of total time (List separately in addition to the code of the outpatient Evaluation and Management service). Fortunately, the guidelines for using the code remain the same. CPT® instructs you to use +99417 when service times for 99205 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of a new patient … 60-74 minutes of total time is spent on the date of the encounter) or 99215 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient … 40-54 minutes of total time is spent on the date of the encounter) go 15 minutes beyond the minimum for the 99205/99215 time ranges — 75 minutes for a new patient visit and 55 for an established patient — and additional units for every 15 minutes beyond those times.
Then Note These New +99417 CPT® Updates For 2023, CPT® also deletes prolonged service codes 99354 and 99355. In their place, you’ll now use +99417 to report prolonged services with: And Add This New CPT® Prolonged Service Code CPT® also deletes prolonged service codes 99356 and 99357 for 2023 and introduces another code: +99418 (Prolonged inpatient or observation evaluation and management service(s) time with or without direct patient contact beyond the required time of the primary service when the primary service level has been selected using total time, each 15 minutes of total time …), which had been previously give the placeholder code of 993X0. In addition to the highest level initial and subsequent nursing facility care E/M codes 99306 and 99310, you’ll use +99418 with the following revised codes: Master G Codes for Medicare Patient Prolonged Services In the 2021 final rule, CMS argued that you should use +99417 when the total time for visits hits 15 minutes beyond the maximum time range for 99205 (i.e., 89 minutes) and 99215 (i.e., 69 minutes). To avoid potential confusion with CPT® guidelines, CMS created a new prolonged service code, recognized by Medicare and payers following Medicare payment rules, to take its place: G2212 (Prolonged office or other outpatient evaluation and management service(s) beyond the maximum required time of the primary procedure which has been selected using total time on the date of the primary service; each additional 15 minutes by the physician or qualified healthcare professional, with or without direct patient contact …).
For the 2023 final rule, CMS has taken a similar view of +99418, believing that the billing instructions for the code “would lead to administrative complexity, potentially duplicative payments, and limit our ability to determine how much time was spent with the patient using claims data.” In its place, they have introduced three more G codes: Test Yourself on This Initial Inpatient Scenario Consult the Clip & Save guide on page 4, then determine how you would code for inpatient care lasting 95 minutes for a patient who has just been admitted to the hospital. Answer: If the patient has private insurance, you would bill 99223 and +99418 as “+99418 may be used as soon as the total time [75 minutes] has been exceeded by 15 minutes,” according to Kelly Loya, CPC, CHC, CRMA, CPhT, CHIAP, associate partner at Pinnacle Enterprise Risk Consulting Services, Charlotte, North Carolina. However, for a Medicare patient, you cannot bill 99223 with G0316 in this situation. Even though 99223 has been exceeded by 15 minutes (at 90 minutes), the code’s descriptor tells you not to report G0316 “for any time unit less than 15 minutes.” This means you must not only wait for the time to extend 15 minutes beyond the stated time, but another 15 minutes must expire before you can report G0316 (or 105 minutes total). In this case, the unit of the prolonged service time, 5 minutes, is less than the full eligible 15 minutes, so you will only bill Medicare for the 99223 service. But Mind This Medicare Muddle While the prolonged services threshold table was taken directly from the final rule document, the last line above may contain an error,” according to Loya. For 99483, the time requirement is 60 minutes. In order to use G2212, you must surpass the 60 minutes by a full 15 minutes (or 75 minutes), then G2212 requires an additional 15 minutes, which would make the threshold 90 minutes, not 100 minutes. “We’ll have to watch and see if CMS makes the correction. It is unclear at this time why the table indicates 100 minutes to use G2212, except for an error when publishing it,” Loya cautions. Even so, Medicare may still implement their time thresholds and pay accordingly unless they issue a ruling later on that says differently.