HCPCS Code for Levalbuterol, inhalation solution, FDA-approved final product, non-compounded, administered through DME, unit dose, 0.5 mg J7614
HCPCS code J7614 for Levalbuterol, inhalation solution, FDA-approved final product, non-compounded, administered through DME, unit dose, 0.5 mg as maintained by CMS falls under Inhalation Solutions .
Subscribe to Codify by AAPC and get the code details in a flash.
Subscribers see the ICD-10-CM codes a contractor allows and full LCD policy text on the same website.
Protect Part B Payments by complying with Correct Coding Initiative (CCI) edits. Subscribers see the full list of column 2 codes for the searched HCPCS code.
Hopefully, you received an answer already, but yes, the drug should be billed with the neb treatment. Like an injection- you bill for the drug and administration- you would bill for the use of the mac... [ Read More ]
I am trying to find out if these J codes can be billed in a physicians setting when we give a nebulizer treatment in the office?
Thank you.
L~... [ Read More ]
Please help, we are going back and forth on the proper [B]units [/B]for billing nebulizer medications in office when they are given in conjunction with a nebulizer treatment
1 vial of Medication Alb... [ Read More ]
Hello Forum,
I have a patient who was given levalbuterol HCL (Xopenex) and need some help with determining the correct J-code to bill.
The packaging shows this:
Levalbuterol HCL
Inhalation Solution... [ Read More ]
Hello
can anyone tell me if they bill this code j7614 to medicare and if so do you get reimbursed? We seem to only get reimbursed after they request and receive an invoice from us showing what we paid... [ Read More ]
Will some one tell me if I have this right? We administer Xopenex in the
office, it comes in either the 0.63 mg solution or 1.25 mg solution. So,
in the HCPCs book the code is J7614, however this is... [ Read More ]
I was wondering if anyone could help me out with how to bill J7614. The patient was given 1.25mg and J7614 is for 0.5mg. Do I bill J7614 x 3 units?... [ Read More ]
[QUOTE="Lisa Curtis, post: 65187, member: 8339"]J7614 looks right, but I think your unit dose would be 3 if you are giving 1.25mg (0.5 x 3 = 1.5 but you need to use whole units).[/QUOTE]
Thanks I th... [ Read More ]
Carriers are quick to spot improper HCPCS code billing. Take your HCPCS Coding Compliance up a notch with related Medicare Transmittals and Manuals right at code level. Finding Medicare info can be hassle free. Time-saving HCPCS code lookup ties essential CMS documents to the HCPCS code. Add Codify's Coder Search Now!