After 3 years, faces familiar to your optometry practice are new again
If a patient you last saw in 2002 for an eye exam returns to your practice, do you code him as a -new- or -established- patient? What if it wasn't you who saw him, but another OD in your office?
New Medicare guidelines might make the answers to those questions a little clearer. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) tweaked some of the rules for evaluation and management coding in a new transmittal (731), dated Oct. 28.
To start, CMS clarified the definition of -new patient- for E/M purposes. Experts say the policy hasn't really changed, but CMS is explaining it differently, and it can provide a useful refresher course. According to CMS, someone is a new patient if none of your physicians have seen him face-to-face in the past three years, says Elena Vargas, OCS, coding specialist for Rashid and Rice Eye Associates in San Antonio.
In other words, if one of your physicians interpreted a patient's test results or did some other non-face-to-face service in the past three years, you can still consider that person a new patient the next time she comes into the office, according to consultant Devona Slater with Auditing for Compliance & Education in Leawood, Kan.
-Many times, our physicians don't realize they can use a new patient code if they haven't seen the patient in 36 months,- says Robyn Brooks with Lee-Brooks Consulting in Chicago.
Also, CMS says it won't pay for any E/M services on the same day by physicians in the same practice and same specialty--unless you document that the visits were for unrelated problems.
Sometimes carriers won't pay for same-day E/Ms even when they-re for unrelated problems, but CMS is telling the carriers to pay for repeat visits.
Read it: Download the transmittal at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/pm_trans/R731CP.pdf.