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Virtual Reality:

Stay Calm When Reporting VR Procedural Dissociation With These Coding Tips

Plus, find out what services are not covered by 0771T-+0774T.

Virtual reality (VR) is a great option for helping to decrease your patients’ pain, and the CPT® code set includes four codes. Here are answers to a few frequently asked questions (FAQs) related to the VR procedural dissociation codes, so you’re ready.

Which Codes Apply to VR Procedural Dissociation?

The codes for VR procedural dissociation services are 0771T-+0774T. You will choose between the codes based on who performs the service.

The first two codes apply when a single provider performs both the VR service and the diagnostic or therapeutic service performed at the same session. An independent observer must be present for these VR codes to be appropriate. The guidelines state that the observer must be qualified to monitor the patient, be trained in immersive technology, be able to adjust the tech under provider supervision, and not have other duties during the procedure.

  • 0771T (Virtual reality (VR) procedural dissociation services provided by the same physician or other qualified health care professional performing the diagnostic or therapeutic service that the VR procedural dissociation supports, requiring the presence of an independent, trained observer to assist in the monitoring of the patient’s level of dissociation or consciousness and physiological status; initial 15 minutes of intraservice time, patient age 5 years or older)
  • +0772T (… each additional 15 minutes intraservice time (List separately in addition to code for primary service))

The other two codes apply to the VR service when one provider performs the VR service, and another performs the related diagnostic or therapeutic service.

  • 0773T (Virtual reality (VR) procedural dissociation services provided by a physician or other qualified health care professional other than the physician or other qualified health care professional performing the diagnostic or therapeutic service that the VR procedural dissociation supports; initial 15 minutes of intraservice time, patient age 5 years or older)
  • +0774T (… each additional 15 minutes intraservice time (List separately in addition to code for primary service))

“This is still a developing area,” says Doris V. Branker, CHC, CPC, CIRCC, CPMA, CPC-I, CANPC, CEMC, president of DB Healthcare Consulting and Education LLC in Sunrise, Florida. “The AMA needs some additional feedback to make a decision on this technology, which is why this is a Category III code currently.”

Remember: Category III codes are “temporary codes for emerging technology, services, procedures, and service paradigms,” CPT® guidelines state. “If a Category III code is available, this code must be reported instead of a Category I unlisted code.”

“Reporting the Category III codes provides the data for clinical usage that could impact conversion to a Category I code and future payment,” says Terri Brame Joy, MBA, CPC, COC, CGSC, CPC-I, revenue cycle director for Clinical Health Network for Transformation in Houston, Texas. You can find these codes and guidelines online on the AMA’s website.

What Is VR Procedural Dissociation?

Generally speaking, VR is a simulated environment that lets people interact with virtual surroundings. Users typically wear a headset. For these codes, the VR involves “a computer-generated audio, visual, and proprioceptive immersive environment,” the guidelines state. Proprioception is the body’s ability to sense movement, action, and location.

These new codes are specific to a state of altered consciousness that improves patient comfort and tolerance for the procedure while decreasing the patient’s pain, the guidelines state. Patients can still respond to spoken instructions and stimuli.

As an example, you may see these services during interventional radiology procedures, such as thyroid biopsies and vascular access procedures. Specialty societies including the American College of Radiology and Society of Interventional Radiology sponsored these codes.

What Services Are Part of VR Procedural Dissociation?

Along with the use of VR, the new codes require monitoring patient response. The provider is responsible for periodically assessing the patient, checking how well they are tolerating the procedure, and also monitoring oxygen saturation, heart rate, pain, neurological status, and global anxiety, according to the guidelines.

The codes also require changing the VR program to optimize the patient’s state. The guidelines provide examples of optimization techniques, such as changing the software program, adjusting the volume or visual environment, making changes necessary to reposition the patient, changing programming to maintain the dissociated state, and using a feedback loop to achieve the desired dissociated state level.

“Our pediatric anesthesia providers are sometimes asked to do this service,” says Branker. But note that the codes apply only to patients 5 years of age and older.

What Is Not Part of VR Procedural Dissociation?

The guidelines make it clear that VR procedural dissociation is distinct from the services represented by the Anesthesia section of CPT®. The VR codes do not include interventions to maintain:

  • Cardiovascular function
  • Patent (open) airway
  • Spontaneous ventilation (breathing)

You also should not use the new codes to report administering medication for:

  • Pain control
  • Anxiolysis (minimal sedation)
  • Moderate sedation
  • Deep sedation
  • Monitored anesthesia care (MAC)

Important: “Time spent administering VR procedural dissociation cannot be used to report moderate sedation or anesthesia services,” guidelines state.

What Is Intraservice Time for 0771T to +0774T?

The new VR codes are time-based, so you must know what to include in calculating the time. The descriptors refer to intraservice time, which the guidelines define as follows:

  • Begins with administration of VR technology;
  • Requires continuous face-to-face provider attendance (don’t add face-to-face time that occurs after the continuous time ends); and
  • Ends when the procedure and VR administration end and face-to-face time is over.

You should not report the pre- and post-service work and time separately. That means you should not count or report the time for ordering and selecting the VR program, explaining the service to the patient or caregiver, applying the VR device, or anything that occurs after intraservice time ends.