Reader Questions:
Don't Lose Out on Discharges by Forgetting 99239
Published on Mon Dec 20, 2004
Question: When our physicians discharge patients from the hospital, is 99238 the only code we should report for all the services that day?
Maryland Subscriber
Answer: Yes, a hospital discharge code is the only E/M code you should report for your physician's services on the day of discharge. If the physician happened to perform some other procedure or service before discharging the patient (for example, a fine needle biopsy of a thyroid nodule), you can report the appropriate code(s) for that service separately.
Not so fast: Many coders automatically report 99238 (Hospital discharge day management; 30 minutes or less) when they see a discharge in the physician's documentation, but 99239 (...more than 30 minutes) may often be more appropriate - and 99239 pays more.
Documented time is essential:
Hospital discharge codes report the total duration of time the physician spends preparing the patient's discharge, and the time doesn't have to be continuous. Discharge services can include "final examination, discussion of the hospital stay, ... instructions for continuing care to all relevant caregivers, and preparation of discharge records, prescriptions and referral forms," CPT states.
Often physicians don't adequately document all the time spent and services involved with a discharge - leaving you no choice but to report 99238. To make sure you're recouping all you deserve for your physicians' time, instruct them to carefully record the details and length of time they spend on discharges. Ten minutes here and there can quickly add up and increase your level of service to a 99239.