Question: CPT® states that a patient must be “critically ill or injured” in order to use critical care codes. Could you briefly explain what “critically ill or injured” means, and give me some examples of conditions that may warrant critical care?
Delaware Subscriber
Answer: According to CPT®, a critical illness or injury “acutely impairs one or more vital organ systems such that there is a high probability of imminent or life threatening deterioration in the patient’s condition.” In other words, critical care occurs when the patient’s condition is so tenuous that the immediacy of care could affect patient outcome.
You’ll report critical care encounters with 99291 (Critical care, evaluation and management of the critically ill or critically injured patient; first 30-74 minutes) and +99292 (… each additional 30 minutes [List separately in addition to code for primary service]).
Examples of scenarios in which critical care might be warranted include, but are not limited to:
Remember: In order to report critical care codes, the physician must have provided at least 30 documented minutes of critical care time to the patient. If the care does not exceed 30 minutes, the visit does not warrant 99291 — even if the patient is considered “critical.”
If the physician does not cross the 30-minute threshold, report an E/M service based on encounter notes instead.