Wiki Required NST Documentation - 59025

tloeb

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Can anyone weigh in on whether a NST 59025 is billable when the documented components of the NST are comingled within the E/M documentation? Or does the NST need to be documented separately either as a procedure note or within the E/M notes as a separtely titled procedure with detail/results? Example of comingled within the E/M that ACOG is stating not billable is below NST in bold:
Objective
Vitals:
09/09/23 183909/09/23 185009/09/23 185909/09/23 1909
BP:144/82136/70131/72136/72
Pulse:111103102100
Resp:
Temp:
Gen: AO x 3, NAD
CV: RRR
Resp: CTAB
Skin: warm and dry to touch, no rashes
Abdomen: Gravid, soft, NT to palpation
Back: neg CVAT
Extremities: warm and well perfused, 1+ pitting edema in upper extremities, 2+ pitting edema in lower extremities, DTRs 1+ bilateral LE
SVE: deferred
FHTs: Baseline 150, moderate variability, + accelerations, no decels.
UCs: q 5-10min, mild to palpation
Labs: PIH pannel sent.
GBS/GBS rapid sent

Assessment
XXXXXXXX is a _29 y.o._ G1P0 at 35w3d
Does not meet gestational HTN diagnosis because we do not have recorded HTN BPs greater than 4 hours apart.
VSS
Reactive NST
Vertex confirmed via BS US.
GBS Pending

Thank you!
 
I don't have any resources to direct you to but I can tell you that we often see them embedded and we do bill them out separately. Here's one I just came across

Physical Exam:
General appearance: alert, appears stated age, cooperative and in no apparent distress
Head: Normocephalic, without obvious abnormality, atraumatic
Skin: No lesions, bruising or abnormal skin discoloration apparent
Lungs: normal effort
Heart: normal rate
Abdomen: Soft, non tender, gravid, pain with palpation of paraspinal muscles on the left consistent with musculoskeletal origin, no CVA tenderness. No RUQ pain.
Extremities: no clubbing, no cyanosis, trace non pitting edema, redness or tenderness in the calves
Psych: Appropriate mood and affect
GU: deferred

Reactive NST with Baby A baseline at 135, moderate variability, with accels and Baby B baseline at 135, moderate variability, accels. Irregular contractions on toco.
 
As long as the documentation was done by a doctor or CNM then we would bill for a NST with that documentation. Alot of the time the NST is done by a RN but we need a provider to write an attestation or their own interpretation.
 
Hi, is this acceptable to bill as an NST? TIA

FHR reactive
Uterine activity is being monitored by TOCO with contractions occurring Irregular minimal
 
Hello, I'm looking for the same advice as the original poster. Coding for facility observation type accounts, sometimes all the documentation we get is results embedded on a am h&p, there is an order, its not from a previous visit, there is medical necessity. 1718734777837.png a managerthis advice from hcpro 1718734921178.png and is questioning #3. If no time is noted, can we still bill it? Thank you for any response.
 
Per the ACOG Coding Committee, the following is a brief description of CPT code 59025, Fetal NST:

"The patient reports fetal movement as an external monitor records fetal heart rate changes. The procedure is noninvasive and typically takes 20 to 40 minutes to perform. However, if a reassuring test is achieved within the first 10 minutes or less, the patient does not have to be monitored for the additional time.

CPT code 59025 can be conducted as many times as medically necessary. For patients with conditions complicating pregnancy, 59025 is typically performed weekly beginning in the mid to latter part of the third trimester and continuing until delivery. The non-stress test may be the primary means of fetal surveillance for many high risk pregnancies. Proper diagnostic reporting to justify the medical necessity and documentation is important to ensure appropriate reimbursement.

However, if routinely performed on all patients without distinct medical necessity, this code is not separately reported."

ACOG does not specify what the documentation needs to look like, but you MUST have a copy of a strip somewhere that shows the length of the testing and indicates the fetal movement. In years past a practice/hospital department would have a form to record the BP, movements, FHR, etc which also included the reason for the test, and the interpretive result - similar to an ultrasound report. Now with EMR records, shortcuts as being taken that do not always make it clear that the requirements have been met.
 
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