Question:
A nurse practitioner (NP) sees a 65-year-old established patient for a pneumonia vaccination. Before administering the vaccine, she takes a brief history, checks the patient's vital signs and rules out any contraindications for the vaccine. Can I report an E/M in addition to the vaccination codes?South Carolina Subscriber
Answer:
Probably not. From your description of the NP's actions, she did not do much beyond providing the E/M service built into most CPT codes. For that reason, you should just report the vaccination codes. On the claim, report the following:
• 90732 (Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine, 23-valent, adult or immunosuppressed patient dosage, when administered to individuals 2 years or older, for subcutan-eous or intramuscular use) for the pneumonia vaccine
• 90471 (Immunization administration [includes percutaneous, intradermal, subcutaneous, or intramuscular injections]; one vaccine [single or combination vaccine/toxoid]) for the vaccine administration.
Note:
For Medicare patients, and payers that observe Medicare rules, report G0009 (
Administration of pneumococcal vaccine) for the vaccine administration rather than 90471.
• V03.82 (Other specified vaccinations against single bacterial diseases; Streptococcus pneumoniae [pneumo-coccus]) linked to 90732 and 90471 (or G0009) to prove medical necessity for the service.
Explanation:
All CPT codes have an inherent E/M service (a brief patient assessment required before undergoing any type of procedural service) built into them. The E/M the NP provides the patient during the vaccination must go beyond this inherent E/M in order to justify a separate E/M code.
If you can identify a problem that the nurse assesses and separately treats (at the direction of the physician), you might be able to report an E/M service along with the immunization codes.