Neurosurgery Coding Alert - eNewsletter

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Neurosurgery Coding Alert – an AAPC eNewsletter

Laminectomy, laminotomy, facetectomy, foraminotomy, discectomy, spondylolisthesis … When it comes to neurosurgery, the coding challenges seem endless. In addition to staying on top of ICD-10-CM, CPT®, and HCPCS code and guideline changes, neurosurgery coders need to keep pace with regulatory updates, NCCI edits, and revisions to modifiers, payer policies, and more.

Get the advantage with Neurosurgery Coding Alert.

Face Your Neurosurgery Coding Challenges with Confidence

Neurosurgery Coding Alert provides coding best practices and step-by-step tutorials to simplify the complexities of spinal and cranial procedure reporting.

Profit from expert know-how and insider tips delivered to you each month. Every issue of this eNewsletter is jam-packed with time-sparing, revenue-saving information, including solutions to trending neurosurgery claim errors and expert answers to real-world questions from coders like you. 

5 More Reasons to Subscribe to Neurosurgery Coding Alert

  • Expand Your Working Knowledge: Profit from billing and reimbursement strategies and insights into a range of neurosurgery topics, including documentation, physician queries, E/M, CPT® modifiers, and more.
  • Master Updates: Don’t let code or guideline changes affect your productivity and coding accuracy. Transition smoothly with regular how-to coding guidance.
  • At-a-Glance Tools: Download clip-and-save cheat sheets and checklists covering everything from E/M coding, bilateral billing rules, and auditing to HIPAA and Promoting Interoperability.
  • Comprehensive Resource: Quickly find the information you need in our neurosurgery coding archive, packed with thousands of coding and compliance articles dating back to 2000.
  • Free Annual CEUs: Earn 6 CEUs while keeping your coding sharp.

Newsletters are regular and timely publications written by subject matter experts with their fingers on the pulse of your industry.

In the case of coding newsletters, your subscription will give you all the latest information you need, plus a refresher on things you might have learned but forgotten.

Coding newsletters feature real reader questions, interviews, and guidance from experts. You’ll find clinical scenarios and expert advice to explain code choice and guide you through the code selection process. A specialty-specific newsletter promotes accurate coding, leading to higher revenues and less time and money wasted on justifying billing.

Non-coding healthcare newsletters provide up-to-the-minute news on changes in federal regulations governing reimbursement and legislative developments. You’ll find ways to navigate often dense government-speak and learn how to apply regulatory changes to your practice or agency.

The knowledge disseminated in each newsletter issue can help protect your practice or business from costly mistakes and even help boost your revenue with guidance on the best ways to:

  • Code challenging scenarios or use modifiers correctly
  • Stay on top of the latest news and regulatory changes pertaining to the healthcare market
  • Learn how to ethically optimize your reporting to avoid undercoding and missed opportunities

Healthcare Business Monthly is a broad-scope publication that provides information on a range of topics, including human-interest stories based on coders. It also covers healthcare issues beyond coding, compliance, or post-acute care — such as front-desk etiquette, keeping the office clean, etc.

Coding newsletters, more focused than Healthcare Business Monthly, exclusive cover coding, billing, and regulations for the title specialty.

Non-coding healthcare newsletters dig into the regulatory news pertaining to healthcare. These are up-to-the-minute publications. You won’t find such in-depth information for compliance, practice management, MDS, home health, or hospice in Healthcare Business Monthly.

AAPC coding newsletters will help new coders get up to speed on the job. The articles cover several in-specialty topics each month and delve into the specifics of coding procedures and services. A new coder could get information on a coding scenario in a newsletter before they encounter it in the workplace, which is a huge asset.

Coding newsletters provide more exposure to the news you need, and the quizzes offer an opportunity to apply your coding knowledge in a low-stakes situation. Newsletter articles and reader questions add to and reinforce coder training. You’ll find expert opinions and advice from trusted and experienced sources that can help you understand the nuances of the profession.

Throughout the year, all newsletters contain updates to codes and coding guidelines that are vital to new and veteran coders. From articles on code changes and quarterly National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) edits to discussions of ad-hoc guideline changes issued by CMS and other agencies, newsletters keep coders informed and current. Having a specialty-focused publication addressing and analyzing updates is an important tool for every coder.

For instance, NCCI edits are often applied behind the scenes to coding software, and coders may be staring at a denial without realizing why. Newsletter articles will update coders to the edits that affect their practices the most and translate them into practical advice. That way, even veteran coders will be aware.

Secondly, there is so much to remember in coding that everyone occasionally forgets how to report something. The newsletter provides a monthly refresher on coding topics that a veteran coder might not have seen in a while.

Finally, most AAPC coding newsletters provide coders with regular AAPC CEU opportunities that can help keep your credentials current.

CPT® is a registered trademark of the American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

Most coding newsletters are specific to a medical specialty, and coders working in those specialties should obviously subscribe to newsletters aligned with their professional interests.
 
Several newsletters feature subject matter that crosses specialty lines. E/M Coding Alert, ICD-10 Coding Alert, and Health Information Compliance, for example, all contain articles and reader questions applicable to most specialties, practices, and institutions.

You’ll also find newsletters dedicated to compliance, practice management, skilled nursing facility, home health, hospice, and Medicare Part B. These newsletters are beneficial to practice managers, billing/coding staff, Minimum Data Set nurses, clinicians, and administrators.

Category

eNewsletter Title

Frequency

Medical Coding

Anesthesia Coding Alert

Monthly

Cardiology Coding Alert

Monthly

E/M Coding Alert

Monthly

ED Coding Alert

Monthly

Gastroenterology Coding Alert

Monthly

General Surgery Coding Alert

Monthly

ICD-10 Coding Alert

Monthly

Neurology and Pain Management Coding Alert

Monthly

Neurosurgery Coding Alert

Monthly

Ob-gyn Coding Alert

Monthly

Oncology/Hematology Coding Alert

Monthly

Optometry/Ophthalmology Coding Alert

Monthly

Orthopedic Coding Alert

Monthly

Otolaryngology Coding Alert

Monthly

Path/Lab Coding Alert

Monthly

Pediatric Coding Alert

Monthly

Podiatry Coding and Billing Alert

Monthly

Primary Care Coding Alert

Monthly

Pulmonology Coding Alert

Monthly

Radiology Coding Alert

Monthly

Urology Coding Alert

Monthly

Compliance

Health Information Compliance Alert

Monthly

Medicare Compliance & Reimbursement

Biweekly

Part B Insider

Monthly

Practice Management Alert

Monthly

Post-Acute

Home Care Week

Weekly

Hospice Insider

Monthly

MDS Alert

Monthly

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AAPC newsletters are all available in full-color electronic format. The “flipbook” format functions like an online magazine. You’ll be able to click on live links in articles to go directly to resource websites, and you can do keyword searches of the newsletter.

Articles in an eNewsletter can be downloaded to your computer and then printed.

Newsletters monthly issue date varies from month to month. Different newsletter may or may not be published on the same date of the month.

Fees paid for any subscription term are paid in advance and are not refundable in whole or in part. You may terminate your subscription at any time and continue using the services until the expiration of your pre-paid term.

How to Cancel: You may terminate your subscription by contacting AAPC via phone or email. To ensure that your credit card does not get charged, please make your cancelation request at least two business days prior to the end date of your subscription term.

You will not be able to log in to your account to view a newsletter once your subscription expires. If you decide to end your subscription but would like to refer to past articles, you should download the articles prior to the expiration of your subscription.

Alternative to more invasive surgery has trio of key of add-ons. When your surgeon performs cranial stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), coders will need to find a few important details in the encounter notes to ensure the claim’s success. Like what? Coders must decide if the notes indicate a simple or complex cranial lesion, and be able to count the number of [...]

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Here’s why you need to know the difference between trigeminal and greater occipital nerves. When your provider performs a nerve injection, it’s up to you to differentiate between the services to code correctly—and to choose the right ICD-10 code to prove medical necessity. Two nerve injections that your provider might perform involve the trigeminal and greater occipital nerves. Providers use [...]

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Know how to capture work that occurs beyond the patient encounter. Every coder knows how vital counting face-to-face time with patients is to the coding of each encounter. However, providers also spend a lot of time doing the behind-the-scenes work that comes with healthcare but doesn’t involve patients directly: chart reviews, data analysis, etc. Even though this work doesn’t involve [...]

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Question: Encounter notes indicate that the provider performed the following: “MRI cerv. spinal canal w/contrast …MRI thor. Spinal canal no contrast.” Should I report 72141 x [...]

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Question: The surgeon performed elevation of a depressed skull fracture. How should I report this surgery? Iowa Subscriber Answer: It depends on a few factors that you [...]

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Question: Encounter notes indicate that a patient suffered from “arnold chiari type 3.” How should I choose an ICD-10 code for this condition? Florida Subscriber Answer: Your [...]

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