Upgrade your fracture care coding using 4 wise tips. How can you tell if a claim merits a fracture care code or an E/M code? It's usually hard to tell right away as experts agree that code selection will likely depend on a case-to-case basis. But you wouldn't face a cul-de-sac if you could take the following 4 factors into account to find the best fit the fracture treatment. 1. Match Fracture Treatment with Criteria You'd know you should report fracture care, if the scenario meets the following criteria: The physician sees the patient for her initial visit for the injury (e.g., 826.x, Fracture of one or more phalanges of foot, and 838.xx, Dislocation of foot). The injury is recent enough that it has not already healed on its own. The patient has not had surgery for this injury by another physician in a different practice. (For instance, if the patient was injured while on vacation, had surgery and now is home and seeking follow-up, you cannot bill fracture care). The physician provides a restorative treatment or procedure and plans to care for this injury for the next 90 days. Example: Code it: 2. Consider the Possibility of an E/M Service Some cases call for you to report an E/M service (99201-99215, Office or other outpatient services) instead of fracture care. You should also consider billing the appropriate casting and strapping application codes (29000-29590), where applicable. Hidden trap: Example: 29540, Strapping, ankle and/or foot 99212, Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient, which requires at least two of these three key components: a problemfocused history; a problem-focused examination; straightforward medical decision-making, for the E/M modifier 25 linked to 99212 to show that the E/M and strapping were separate services. To make it clear: 3. Generate Larger Payouts with Fracture Care Codes Don't get used to the habit of billing an E/M code and the applicable casting code all the time. If you missed the opportunity of reporting fracture care you could be losing at least $100 per claim. Learn from this scenario: A child comes in after stubbing her big toe. The physician looks at the x-ray, diagnoses a closed fracture (826.0), straps the toe to the adjacent one and tells the parent to have the child wear church shoes for a while for added protection. The physician reports no separate E/M service. In this case, you have two options: 28490 (Closed treatment of fracture great toe, phalanx or phalanges; without manipulation), and 29550 (Strapping; toes). These CPTs describe the same work performed by the physician, says Jeffrey F. Linzer Sr., MD, associate medical director for compliance and business affairs at EPG in Egleston, Ga. She makes no referral to the orthopedist and may see the patient for follow-up. Smart move: 4. Be Careful Reporting for Follow-up Visits Carelessly Fracture care codes may include related follow-up care, but it doesn't mean you will not report a code for any follow-up visits. It's always wise to look at the reason the patient presents for the visit, and base your code selection on the following: If the E/M service during the global period relates to the original procedure, you should report the included follow-up care with 99024 (Postoperative follow-up visit, normally included in the surgical package ...) and a $0 charge. When your physician sees a patient during the fracture care global period for an unrelated problem, add modifier 24 (Unrelated evaluation and management service by the same physician during a postoperative period) to the E/M service.