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DOWNLOADABLE EBOOK
2 | TABLE OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF CONTENTS | 3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
TABLE OF CONTENTS
5
SECTION 1
6
8
12
14
SECTION 2
16
22
26
34
38
44
48
54
60
68
78
82
86
90
92
SECTION 3
98
102
108
112
116
120
122
126
130
132
136
142
146
SECTION 4
SECTION 5
148
152
156
160
162
166
168
172
174
176
178
182
186
188
190
192
194
196
198
200
202
204
208
210
212
214
216
218
220
SECTION 6
222
226
228
4 | INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION | 5
INTRODUCTION
This ebook will brief you on every aspect of the medical billing and coding
field: from a breakdown of each code set to starting your own practice.
DOWNLOADABLE MATERIAL
Along with our online video courses, we provide free downloadable resources
like Powerpoint presentations, vocabulary lists, sample problems, and review
quizzes to help you in your studies.
The course is divided into six sections. In section one, we introduce you to
the general topic of medical billing and coding.
In section two, we talk about the practice and the basics of the medical coding
process.
In section three, you learn about the medical billing claims process and how it
pertains to health insurance payers, Medicare and Medicaid, and the rest of the
healthcare industry.
In section four, we apply the knowledge youve learned and work with some
real-world problems in coding and billing. This section gives you a detailed
look into what its like to work as a medical coder or biller.
In section five, we help you prepare for the American Association of Professional Coders Certified Professional Coder exam.
And finally, in section six we show you some of the next steps to take in the
field, including where to go to school, where to get certified, and how to avoid
online scams.
DISCLAIMER
Bear in mind that this ebook, and all our provided content on our website alone
will not prepare you to take the exams to become a certified medical biller or
coder. In order to learn the specifics of these fields and prepare yourself for
their exams, youll want to take classes at one of the many schools and training
programs around the country. You can count on us for that, too: our website can
help you pick out the school or training program thats right for you.
Lets get started!
6 | SECTION 1
The codes for the procedures performed must also correspond to the diagnoses
made by the physician. Having the correct procedure codes match up with the
diagnosis codes ensures that healthcare providers and patients will be properly
reimbursed by insurance companies.
MEDICAL CODING
Medical coding, at its most basic, is a little like translation. Its the coders
job to take something thats written one way (a doctors diagnosis, for
example, or a prescription for a certain medication) and translate it as
accurately as possible into a numeric or alphanumeric code. For every
injury, diagnosis, and medical procedure, there is a corresponding code.
The coding process ends when the medical coder enters the appropriate codes
into a form or software program. Once the report is coded, its
passed on to the medical biller.
MEDICAL BILLING
There are thousands and thousands of codes for medical procedures, outpatient procedures, and diagnoses. Well cover which codes represent which
injury or sickness, and which codes correspond to each procedure,
in greater depth in Section 2.
For now, lets start with a quick example of medical coding in action.
A patient walks into a doctors office with a hacking cough, high production
of mucus or sputum, and a fever. A nurse asks the patient their symptoms
and performs some initial tests, and then the doctor examines the patient
and diagnoses bronchitis. The doctor then prescribes medication
to the patient.
Every part of this visit it recorded by the doctor or someone in the healthcare
providers office. Its the medical coders job to translate every bit of relevant
information in that patients visit into numeric and alphanumeric codes,
which can then be used in the billing process.
There are a number of sets and subsets of code that a medical coder must
be familiar with, but for this example well focus on two: the International
Classification of Diseases, or ICD, codes, which correspond to a patients injury
or sickness, and Current Procedure Terminology, or CPT, codes, which relate
to what functions and services the healthcare provider performed on or for
the patient. These codes act as the universal language between doctors, hospitals, insurance companies, insurance clearinghouses, government agencies,
and other health-specific organizations.
The coder reads the healthcare providers report of the patients visit and then
translates each bit of information into a code. Theres a specific code for what
kind of visit this is, the symptoms that patient is showing, what tests the doctor
does, and what the doctor diagnoses the patient with.
Every code set has its own set of guidelines and rules. Certain codes, like ones
that signify a pre-existing condition, need to be placed in a very particular
order. Coding accurately and within the specific guidelines for each code will
affect the status of a claim.
On one level, medical billing is as simple as it sounds: medical billers take the
information from the medical coder and make a bill for the insurance company. This bill is called a claim, and will be discussed more in depth
in Section 3. The biller also receives evaluated or adjudicated claims,
analyzes them, and then creates bills for patients.
Of course, as with everything related to the health care system, this
process isnt as simple as it seems.
To get a better look at medical billing, lets rewind the example we used earlier.
Our same patient has a cough, a fever, and is producing lots of mucus. This patient calls the doctor and schedules an appointment. Its here that the medical
billing process begins.
The medical biller takes the codes, which show what kind of visit this is,
what symptoms the patient shows, what the doctors diagnosis is, and what
the doctor prescribes, and creates a claim out of these using a form or a type
of software. The biller then sends this claim to the insurance company, which
evaluates and returns it. The biller then evaluates this returned claim and figures out how much of the bill the patient owes, after the insurance is taken out.
If our bronchitis-afflicted patient has an insurance plan that covers this type
of visit and the treatment for this condition, their bill will be relatively low.
The patient may have a co-pay, or have some other form of arrangement with
their insurance company. The biller takes all of this into account and creates
an accurate bill, which is then passed on to the patient.
In the case of a patient being delinquent or unwilling to pay the bill, the medical biller may have to hire a collections agency in order to ensure that the
healthcare provider is properly compensated.
The medical biller, acts as a sort of waypoint between patients, healthcare
providers, and insurance companies. Think of the biller, like the coder, as a
sort of translatorwhere the coder translates medical procedures into code,
the biller translates codes into a financial report. The biller has a number of
other responsibilities, which well discuss further in Section 3, but for now you
should simply know that the biller is in charge of making sure the healthcare
provider is properly reimbursed for their services.
8 | SECTION 1
for the rest of the day. Most coding is relatively straightforward, and most
coders become familiar with the codes for the more common procedures
completed in their respective office. A coder for a general practitioner, for
example, will become very familiar with the codes for a general office visit
(99214) and flu shots (90658). Coders must adhere to the guidelines for each
code. Certain conditions, for example, need to be coded in a particular order.
To learn more about coding guidelines, please refer to Section 2, specifically
the courses ICD-9 & ICD-9-CM through CPT Modifiers.
Still, there may be instances where there is significant confusion or a gray area
in the code. Coding guidelines may also get incredibly intricate and specific
as the symptoms, conditions, or procedures performed get more complicated.
In cases where referring to the appropriate manuals and their guidelines is
not sufficient, most coders will reach out to the larger coding community for
advice and guidance.
Not only are there a large number of job openings in coding and billing, many
of these jobs are fairly lucrative. Entry-level coders and billers made an average
of 34,000 dollars in 2012thats $16.42 an hour when youre starting out. The
top ten percent of coders across the United States make $27 an hour, and coders
in some states make even more than that.
Above all else, the coder must make sure that the procedure code used corresponds to the diagnosis code. If the procedure listed does not make sense with
the diagnosis provided, this may result in a rejected claim, which can muddy
the reimbursement process considerably.
MEDICAL CODING
Professional coders start the day by reviewing the reports they have to code.
Their job is relatively straightforward: a coder examines a doctors report from
a procedure or checkup, and then the coder determines the best way to translate
this into code.
For example, a note may read that a patient visited the doctor with a sore throat.
Upon examination of the throat, the doctor suspected streptococcus, a common
infection of the throat. The doctor performed a rapid strep test. With a positive
diagnosis of strep throat, the doctor prescribed a weeks worth of amoxicillin,
an antibiotic drug.
One last point: Each medical office has a specific lag time for coding reports.
This lag time is typically two to five business days. That means that coders
must complete their coding within five days of the procedure or doctors visit.
Hitting these deadlines ensures that the billing and reimbursement process
can move along smoothly. Its the coders responsibility to manage these deadlines and work in a timely, efficient manner.
MEDICAL BILLING
The job of the medical biller begins as the medical coders job ends. As we
learned in the previous course, its the medical billers responsibility to create
accurate, legal bills for the healthcare providers office and to send them in a
timely fashion to an insurance company, or payer. Its also the billers job to
send out and collect payments from patients. What follows is an abbreviated
description of the medical billing process. For a more in-depth look at the biller
process, please refer to More About Insurance and the Insurance Claims Process in
Section 3.
The medical billers day involves a number of different processes. The medical
biller is responsible for creating accurate, formally correct claims, checking
for accuracy in transaction reports, and creating bills for patients.
The coder would read this note and, using the ICD-9-CM and CPT manuals,
determine the best way to code this diagnosis and procedure. In this instance,
the coder would use a CPT code of 87880 for the rapid strep test, a CPT code of
00781-6041 for the prescription of orally administered amoxicillin, and an
ICD-9-CM code of 680.0, for streptococcal sore throat.
First, the medical biller takes the codes from the medical coder, whether in a
form or via a computer program, and creates a medical claim. As we covered
in the last course, a claim is an itemized list of procedures, services, and costs
that is sent from a healthcare provider to a payer in order to collect reimbursement for the provider.
The coder will then enter the correct codes into a form or, more often, a computer program, and then move on to the next report. This process of reading
reports, translating them into the correct code and entering them will continue
This process, while simple in theory, can be very complicated. First, the biller
must confirm that all of the codes correspond to one another. Consider this a
quality check after the medical coder completes their report. This requires the
10 | SECTION 1
medical biller to be familiar not only with medical terminology, but also with
the current forms of CPT, ICD and HCPCS codes.
Medical billers must also become familiar with the patients insurance policy
in order to determine if the procedures and services performed by the healthcare provider are covered by that patients plan. Essentially, the medical biller
needs to make sure that each code, and thus each procedure, listed on the claim
is actually billable. This generally depends on the payer and the contract the
healthcare provider or patient has with that payer. Each insurance payer has
a set of rules or guidelines that determine what can and cannot be billed for
under the policyholders contract.
Medical facilities each have different rates for particular procedures as well,
so a medical biller must create a claim that corresponds to the providers established rates.
The medical biller takes all of these considerations in mind and creates an
accurate medical claim, and then sends it off to the payer. Depending on what
payer the medical biller is sending the claim to, the claim may first go through
a clearinghouse or straight to the payer.
Well cover what a clearinghouse is in Medical Billing Vocabulary and Key Concepts in Section 3. For now, just know that certain payers and clearinghouses
require specific forms or software. If you are sending a claim to Medicaid, for
example, you must the claim as a CMS-1500 form. Well cover this process in
more depth in Section 3.
Once a claim is sent out, the payer performs an evaluation known as payer
adjudication. This is a process well cover in more depth in Section 3, as well.
Essentially, the payer decides how much of the bill it will reimburse the provider
for and sends it back to the provider in the form of a transaction report.
The biller then reviews this transaction report and checks it for accuracy. The
biller makes sure the charges and reimbursements correspond to the providers agreement with the payer. If the transaction report is accurate, the biller
then processes a bill for the patient, with an explanation of which services and
procedures are covered, and for how much, and which procedures the patient
is responsible for paying for.
The final phase of the medical billers day is that of collections. Should a patient
be unable or unwilling to pay for the medical services rendered, a medical biller
is in charge of sending them reminders and, as a last resort, sending their bill
on to a collections service. The collections process varies, and depends on the
healthcare providers policy.
Now that youve learned a little bit about the day-to-day activities of both medical billers and medical coders, its time to learn about the certification process
in both of these fields.
12 | SECTION 1
CONTINUING EDUCATION
CPCA
You should also note that completing an AAPC CPC exam, without any prior
experience in coding, will not make you a fully certified coder. Individuals who
pass the CPC exam without any experience in the field will have to work as an
apprentice, which is designated by a -A on their certification. For example, an
apprentice CPC would be designated a CPC-A until he or she completed the work
experience or continuing education needed.
AAPC
By far the largest organization of coders is the American Association of Professional Coders (AAPC). The AAPC offers general and specialized certifications in
coding and billing.
AHIMA
AHIMA REQUIREMENTS
Like AAPC, AHIMA requires an annual membership fee and the completion of
a number of continuing education credits every two years if you are to remain
certified. AHIMA requires certified members to complete and report 20 continuing education units every two years in order to hold their certification.
A general certification is the best place to start as a new medical coder. The
AAPCs Certified Professional Coder (CPC) exam remains the most popular
certification in the field. This nearly six-hour exam will be discussed at length
in Section 5.
The AAPC recommends that all persons interested in the CPC exam have an
associates degree.
SPECIALIZED
CERTIFICATIONS
14 | SECTION 1
You are allowedand encouragedto use the current publications for medical coding during the exam, including the CPT, ICD-9-CM, and HCPCS Level II
coding manuals.
Once youve passed your exam, youll need to maintain your certification. In
order to do this, the AMBA requires you to complete 15 credits of continuing
education each year, in addition to maintaining your annual membership.
Since the certification can mean the difference between a high-paying, stable
job and a lower-paying, temporary position, its an important thing to learn
about before you start your career in medical billing. Lets look at two such
certifications now.
Well break down the different medical certifications by the organization that
grants them. For the sake of brevity, well cover the two largest certifying organizations in medical billing, the American Medical Billing Association (AMBA)
and the American Association of Professional Coders (AAPC).
AMBA
Insurance
Insurance Carriers
Acronyms
Compliance
Fraud and Abuse
Managed Care
General
Case Studies
There are over 800 questions in this exam, and students must earn an 85% or
higher to pass. Students take this exam online and have 45 days from sign-up to
complete the exam. The CMRS exam is divided into sections. Upon completion
of one section, the students grade will be available immediately. Comprehensive scores are also available immediately upon completion.
Should you fail to score 85% or higher on the test, you are allowed two
free retakes, with at least 30 (but no more than 60) days between retakes.
In order to prepare for the exam, you can purchase the CMRS study guide
for $199 in the AMBA store: www.ambastore.net
AAPC
Billing
Coding
Case Studies
Unlike the CMRS exam, individuals taking the CPB exam must complete
the test in one sitting. Students should bring their code books, which list ICD9-CM, CPT and HCPCS codes. Students must earn a 65% or higher in order to
pass the exam.
Like the CMRS certification, individuals must pay for a membership in the
sponsoring organization (in this case, the AAPC) and must demonstrate completion of a certain amount of continuing education courses in order to maintain their certification. For the CPB, individuals must complete 36 units of
continuing education every two years.
16 | SECTION 1
Continuing education may take the form of seminars, online classes, meetings,
training courses, and other forms of instruction. In order to get a full picture
of what continuing education units are available, visit the AAPCs Continuing
Education Unit (CEU) page here: www.aapc.com/medical-coding-education/
help/index.aspx
REVIEW QUIZ
You can find the Section 1 Review Quiz on our website at:
www.medicalbillingandcodingcertification.com
Feel free to rewatch any course videos and look at our downloadable materials
for extra information.
18 | SECTION 2
Finally, coding allows administrations to look at the prevalence and effectiveness of treatment in their facility. This is especially important to large medical
facilities like hospitals. Like government agencies tracking, say, the incidence
of a certain disease, medical facilities can track the efficiency of their practice
by analyzing
WHY WE CODE
Lets start with a simple question about medical coding: Why do we code medical reports? Wouldnt it be enough to list the symptoms, diagnoses, and procedures, send them to an insurance company, and wait to hear which services
will be reimbursed?
To answer that, we have to look at the massive amount of data that every patient
visit entails. If you go into the doctor with a sore throat, (as a patient did in the
example in Working in Medical Billing and Coding in Section 1,) and present the
doctor with symptoms like a fever, sore throat, and enlarged lymph nodes, these
will be recorded, along with the procedures the doctor performs and the medicine the doctor prescribes.
In a straightforward case like this, the doctor will only officially report his diagnosis, but that still means the portion of that report that will be coded contains
a diagnosis, a procedure, and a prescription.
Take a step back, and this is suddenly a lot of very specific information. And
thats just for a relatively simple doctors visit. What happens when a patient
comes into the doctor with a complicated injury or sickness, like an ocular impairment related to their Type-2 diabetes? As injuries, conditions, and illnesses
get more complex, the amount of data that needs to be conveyed to insurance
companies increases significantly.
Simply put, the volume of information is too great. According to the Centers
for Disease Control (CDC), there were over 1.2 billion patient visits in the past
year. Thats a stat that includes visits to physician offices, hospital outpatient
facilities and emergency rooms. If there were just five pieces of coded information per visit, which is an almost unrealistically low estimate, thatd be 6 billion
individual piece of information that needs to be transferred every year. In a
system loaded with data, medical coding allows for the efficient transfer of huge
amounts of information.
Coding also allows for uniform documentation between medical facilities.
The code for streptococcal sore throat is the same in Arkansas as it is in Hawaii.
Having uniform data allows for efficient research and analysis, which government and health agencies use to track health trends much more efficiently.
If the CDC, for example, wants to analyze the prevalence of viral pneumonia,
they can search for the number of recent pneumonia diagnoses by looking for
the ICD-9-CM code 480.
As you can see, medical coding simplifies the business of health considerably.
Now that we understand the importance of this practice, lets take a look at the
three types of code that youll have to become familiar with as a medical coder.
There are three sets of code youll use on a daily basis as a medical coder.
The first of these is the International Classification of Diseases, or ICD codes.
Well cover ICD codes and how to use them in a little more depth in the courses
ICD-9 & ICD-9-CM through Using ICD-10-CM in Section 2.
These are diagnostic codes that create a uniform vocabulary for describing the
causes of injury, illness and death. This code set was established by the World
Health Organization in the late 1940s. Its been updated several times in the 60plus years since its inception. The number following ICD represents which
revision of the code is in use.
CLINICAL MODIFICATION
For example, the code thats currently in use in the United States is ICD-9-CM.
This means its the ninth revision of the ICD code. That -CM at the end stands
for clinical modification. So the technical name for this code is the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification. The
clinical modification is a set of revisions put in place by the National Center
for Health Statistics (NCHS), which is a division of the Center for Medicare and
Medicaid Studies (CMS).
The Clinical Modification significantly increases the number of codes for diagnoses. This increased scope gives coders much more flexibility and specificity,
which is essential for the profession. To give you an idea of how important the
clinical modification is, the ICD-10 code, (which we will discuss more thorou
ghly in the course ICD-10-CM in Section 2,) has 14,000 codes. Its clinical modification, ICD-10-CM, contains over 68,000.
ICD codes are used to represent a doctors diagnosis and the patients condition.
In the billing process, these codes are used to determine medical necessity.
Coders must make sure the procedure they are billing for makes sense with
the diagnosis given. To return to our strep throat example, if a coder listed
a strep throat diagnosis as the medical justification for an x-ray, that claim
would likely be rejected.
ICD codes are updated by the NCHS on a regular basis. One of the biggest issues
in codingand, indeed, in the health information business at largeis the upcoming switchover from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM. Well cover this in upcoming
courses, but the quick summary is that ICD-9-CM has reached its capacity of
use as a coding system. ICD-10-CM provides significantly more codes and thus
more flexibility and accuracy in the coding process. The entire medical system
20 | SECTION 2
is set to change over from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM in October of 2015. For a more
detailed explanation of the reasons behind this switch, and how it is being implemented, please refer to the courses ICD-10-CM and HCPCS Codes in Section 2.
Lets turn our attention now to the two types of procedure codes.
Current Procedure Terminology, or CPT, codes, are used to document the majority of the medical procedures performed in a physicians office. This code set is
published and maintained by the American Medical Association (AMA). These
codes are copyrighted by the AMA and are updated annually.
CPT CATEGORY I
CPT codes are five-digit numeric codes that are divided into three categories.
The first category is used most often, and it is divided into six ranges. These
ranges correspond to six major medical fields: Evaluation and Management,
Anesthesia, Surgery, Radiology, Pathology and Laboratory, and Medicine.
CPT CATEGORY II
CPT MODIFIERS
CPT codes also have addendums that increase the specificity and accuracy of
the code used. Since many medical procedures require a finer level of detail
than the basic Category I CPT code offers, the AMA has developed a set of CPT
modifiers. These are two-digit numeric or alphanumeric codes that are added
to the end of the Category I CPT code. CPT modifiers provide important additional information to the procedure code. For instance, there is a CPT modifier
that describes which side of the body a procedure is performed on, and theres
also a code for a discontinued procedure.
Well get into finer detail with CPT modifiers in Course Using CPT in Section 2.
HCPCS LEVEL I
The HCPCS code set is divided into two levels. The first of these levels is identical to the CPT codes that we covered earlier.
HCPCS LEVEL II
22 | SECTION 2
24 | SECTION 2
Modifier Exempt (CPT): Certain codes in CPT cannot have modifiers added to
them. This is a fairly short list that can be found in the appendices of the CPT
manual.
Morbidity: The rate or incidence of disease in a patient or a population. ICD codes
are used to report morbidity.
Mortality: The rate or incidence of death in a patient or population.
NCHS: The National Center for Health Stastics. The NCHS is a government agency that tracks health information, and is responsible for creating and publishing both the clinical modifications to ICD codes (See Clinical Modification)
and their annual updates.
Pathology: The science of the causes and effects of disease.
Pathology and Laboratory (CPT): The section of Category I CPT codes that
pertains to laboratory testing and pathological investigations. This section
includes codes for procedures used to determine the status and root cause of
a patients illness or condition. The codes for Pathology and Laboratory are
80047-89398.
Professional Component: In CPT, a professional component refers to the services performed by a fully licensed medical professional. This is important for
the reimbursement process, and is usually noted with the inclusion of modifier
-26 after a procedure code (See Modifier). Professional services include the
evaluation of a radiologic test, but not the administration of the test, which is a
technical component (See Technical component).
Radiology (CPT): The section of the CPT manual that covers radiologic tests
and procedures like X-rays, ultrasounds, and oncology. The codes for Radiology
are 70010-79999.
Sequela: A condition that is the result of a previous injury or condition. You
will encounter this term in ICD-10-CM in the codes subclassifications (See
Subclassifications).
Subcategory: In ICD codes, the subcategory describes the digit that comes after
the decimal point. This digit further describes the nature of the illness or injury, and gives additional information as to its location or manifestation.
Subclassification: The subclassification follows the subcategory (See Subcategory) in ICD codes. The subclassification further expands on the subcategory,
and gives additional information about the manifestation, severity, or location
of the injury or disease. In ICD-10-CM there is also a subclassification that describes which encounter this is for the doctorwhether this is a first treatment
for the ailment, a follow-up, or the assessment of a condition that is the result
of a previous injury or disease (See Sequela). There is one subclassification
character in ICD-9-CM; in ICD-10-CM there may be as many as three.
Surgery (CPT): The section of the CPT manual that covers surgical procedures
performed on patients. The largest and most complicated section of CPTs first
Category, the Surgery section is divided into sections based on which part of
the body the surgery is performed on, and then further subdivided based on
what type of procedure is being performed. For instance, there is a section for
excisions of the hand and fingers, which is itself part of the larger section of
surgical procedures performed on the musculoskeletal system. The codes for
Surgery are 10021 69990.
Technical Component: The portion of a medical procedure that concerns only
the technical aspect of the procedure, but not the interpretative, or professional
aspect (See Professional component). A technical component might include
the administration of a chest X-ray, but would not include the assessment of
that X-ray for disease or abnormality.
V-codes: V-codes are a special section of ICD-9-CM that describe patient visits
related to circumstances other than disease or injury. This includes live-born
infants, people with risk or disease due to family history, people encountering
health services for specific or mandated evaluation or aftercare, and a host of
other not easily classifiable situations. V-codes have been replaced in ICD-10CM by Z-codes (See Z-codes).
WHO: The World Health Organization. This international body, which is an
agency of the United Nations, oversees the creation of ICD codes and is one of
the most important organizations in international health.
Z-codes: Much like V-codes in ICD-9-CM (See V-codes), these codes describe
circumstances outside of injury or disease that cause a patient to visit a health
professional. This may include a patient visiting a doctor because of family
medical history.
26 | SECTION 2
HISTORY/
HOW IT IS USED
This code was initially intended for epidemiological purposes, but has since
become an integral part of the reimbursement cycle. While ICD codes are still
used to track the incidence and spread of diseases and injury, their most important facet today is demonstrating medical necessity in claims. In other words,
ICD codes explain to the insurance payer why the doctor performed a certain
procedure.
The code thats currently in use in the United States is the Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification, or ICD-9-CM. ICD-9, the code set on which ICD-9-CM is based,
was published in 1978. It was adapted for use in the United States in the same
year. Note that ICD-9-CM is used only in the United States.
Initially ICD codes were to be updated every ten years, although the difficulty
in updating these code sets in a timely manner led officials at the WHO to push
this deadline back somewhat. Even with a more expanded revision schedule,
the United States is far behind the rest of the world when it comes to ICD codes.
This outdated code set is problematic for coders and the healthcare industry at
large, but the difficulty in overhauling the system to use the next code set, ICD10-CM, is large enough that the United States has delayed it by over a decade.
Canada, for example, has been using a version of ICD-10, the next revision of
ICD, since 2000. Well cover the transition from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM, and
the reasons for this transfer, in the courses ICD-10-CM and Crosswalking, both
in Section 2.
CODE BREAKDOWN
When using ICD-9-CM codes, its imperative to code to the highest level of specificity. Thats an important phrase that youll probably hear over and over again
during this course, and it means that you should always get down to the finest
grain of detail. But what does that mean for ICD-9-CM codes? The answer lies
in the makeup of the codes themselves.
ICD-9-CM codes are three-to-five digit numeric and, in certain cases, alphanumeric codes. The first three digits in a code are called the category. The
category describes the general illness, injury, or condition of the patient. In
many cases, the category is not specific enough to describe the full extent
of the patients condition. Take dementia, for example. The basic ICD-9-CM
code for dementia is 290. These first three numbers are the category, but
since dementia is such a complicated condition, you would almost never
stop coding at this level.
In cases where more specificity is needed, a decimal point is added after the
category and one or two more digits are added. The fourth digit of the ICD-9
code is called the subcategory, and the fifth digit is called the subclassification.
123 {Disease}
(*Category First three digits)
123.0 {Disease} in Chest
(*Subcategory The digit after the decimal.
It relates an important designation about the disease.)
123.00 - uncomplicated
123.01 - with complications in cardiac system
123.02 - with complications in digestive system
(*SubclassificationLast digit. This gives even more info
about the designation outlined in the subcategory.)
123.0 Disease in legs
And so on
If we were to select 123.02 as our code, wed read the full code as
Disease in chest, with complications in the digestive system.
CODING DEMENTIA
EXAMPLE
Now that weve got a loose idea of what the code trees look like, lets return
to our dementia example. The doctors report states our patient suffers from
dementia and depression brought on by a series of strokes. Our patient is about
35, so not an elderly person. Thats an important distinction, as dementia is a
condition that frequently occurs in patients over 65 years of age.
To code this accurately, wed look at the category 290, for dementia, and then
look at the various subcategories available listed below the category and rule
out the codes for senile or presenile dementia, which removes codes 290.0,
290.1, 290.2, and 290.3. 290.4, however, is the code for vascular dementia, which
is dementia brought on by reduced blood flow to the brain. Thats the code were
looking for.
But our imperative to code to the highest level of specificity prevents us from
stopping there. If you look at the subdivisions of 290.4, youll find four additional digits, each corresponding to an aspect of our patients condition. If the
patients vascular dementia is uncomplicated, you would add the subdivision
0 after 290.4, creating 290.40, for vascular dementia, uncomplicated.
28 | SECTION 2
If, however, the patient suffers from delusions in addition to their dementia,
wed code their condition as 290.42vascular dementia with delusions.
Lets look at the code now. Weve bolded the category, subcategory, and subclassification we used in this example.
290 Dementias
290.0 Senile dementia, uncomplicated
290.1 Presenile dementia
290.2 Senile dementia with delusional or depressive features
290.3 Senile dementia with depressive features
290.4 Vascular dementia
290.40 - uncomplicated
290.41 - with delirium
290.42 - with delusions
290.43 - with depressed mood
As you may be able to tell from the example above, many ICD-9-CM codes
branch down into more and more specific levels. If a category has a number of
subcategories, these subcategories are indented below the main category. The
subclassifications specific to each subcategory are then indented below their
respective subcategory.
Most ICD-9-CM codes also make use of guidelines, or conventions, which help
guide the coder to the correct code for the diagnosis. These conventions may be
punctuation or verbal instructions.
CONDITION &
MANIFESTATION
DEFINITION
CONVENTIONS IN ICD-9-CM
CONVENTIONS
MEANING
Brackets [ ]
Parentheses ( )
Excludes
Includes
See
See Also
Code First
Indicates that the coder should list a particular code first. This typically happens with an
underlying condition that has multiple manifestations, like diabetes. In situations like
this, the underlying conditions is coded first,
and then the manifestation is coded. Code
first codes typically appear in the manifestation codes.
Use Additional
Code
This phrase usually appears under the condition code (again, well use diabetes), and
informs the coder that other codes for manifestations are available.
30 | SECTION 2
CONVENTIONS IN ICD-9-CM
CONVENTIONS
MEANING
This note is attached exclusively to manifestation codes. It means that this manifestation is
directly related to an underlying condition. A
code with this note attached to it can never be
used as the primary code (it could never have
a code first note).
Not Elsewhere
Classified
Not Otherwise
Specified
As you can see from the abbreviations NEC and NOS, the ICD-9-CM code set
takes into account its limitations. There are a number of unlisted or nonspecific
codes for diagnoses that dont fit exactly with the medical report. Coders use
these as a last resort when they cant find the exact code theyre looking for. This
is something well return to in the course ICD-10-CM when we talk about the
updated ICD code set, which is set to replace ICD-9-CM in 2015.
ICD-9-CM CHAPTERS
CHAPTER
TOPIC
RANGE
001139
Neoplasms
140239
240279
280289
Mental disorders
290319
320359
360389
390459
460519
10
520579
11
580629
12
Complications of pregnancy,
childbirth, and puerperium
630679
13
680709
14
710739
HOW IT IS ORGANIZED
Now that we know a little bit more about ICD-9-CM, lets look at how the code set
is organized. ICD-9-CM is divided into three volumes, but coders generally use
the first two.
HOW IT IS ORGANIZED
FIRST SECTION:
TABULAR VOLUME
The first volume is the tabular volume, which lists disease descriptions and
their corresponding codes. This section is divided into 17 chapters with two
alphanumeric additions, called E-codes and V-codes. Each of these chapters contains a certain field of disease, and is confined to a certain numerical range.
15
Congenital anomalies
740759
16
760779
The seventeen chapters, the diseases or maladies they cover, and their respective ranges, are listed in the table below. The numbers listed in
the Numerical Range column are the categories for the ICD-9-CM
codes. Bear in mind as well that the term Chapter is more of an official,
organizational designation. Youll usually find codes by their numerical range,
and you wont necessarily refer to a code as a Chapter 1 code, so much as a
code for infectious and parasitic disease.
17
800-999
E-Codes
e800e999
V-Codes
Supplementary classification of
factors influencing health status
and contact with health services
v01v91
32 | SECTION 2
For the most part, these divisions are relatively self-explanatory. If you were
trying to code measles, for example, youd look at the section of codes corresponding to diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissue, in the chapter for
Diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissue (Chapter 13 in table). Likewise,
if you were going to code a diagnosis of hypertension, youd look in the section
for cardiovascular diseases.
So, injury codes describe the injury itself. E-codes, on the other hand, describe
the cause of the injury. E-codes can be important for insurance purposes, and
theyre also extremely useful when coding for trauma centers and emergency
rooms. The cause of an injury, whether its an automobile accident, a gunshot,
or a fall from a ladder, can inform the billing process and help doctors get a better picture of what happened to the patient. Some E-codes include e893, accident caused by ignition of clothing and e813, motor vehicle accident involving
collision with other vehicle.
There are hundreds of E-codes, each attached to seemingly every type of injury.
E-codes also utilize subcategories and subclassifications to get to the highest
level of specificity.
HOW IT IS ORGANIZED
SECOND SECTION:
ALPHABETIC INDEX
This index is especially helpful if you dont know the medical term for the condition or illness youre coding. For instance, theres an index entry for cocked-up
toe (known medically as hallux rigidus). You wont find anything that colloquial
in the tabular section.
E-codes and V-codes are where it gets slightly more complicated. Note that
codes 800-999 correspond to injury and poisoning, while the E-codes correspond to external causes of injury. This might seem redundant, but injury
codes actually correspond to the specific type and location of injury, as opposed
to the external cause of the injury. One example of an injury code is 800.01a
closed fracture of the vault of the skull with no loss of consciousness.
In injury codes, subcategories and subclassifications are very important. A
phrase like fracture of the vault of the skull doesnt tell us the whole story
about the diagnosis. For instance, what kind of fracture is it? Is it open or
closed? Did the patient suffer any brain-related injuries? Internal bleeding?
Did the patient lose consciousness? The subcategories and subclassifications
provide all of this important additional information.
V-CODES
The index also redirects coders to more accurate sections of the code set. For
instance, in the leakage example above, there is an entry for leakage: device,
implant, or graft. Instead of providing a code, the index redirects us to Complications, mechanical. We can then turn in the index to Complications, find the
subsection on mechanical, and see where the correct code is.
V-codes describe reasons that people might visit a healthcare provider outside
of immediate injury or disease. There are V-codes for childbirth, screenings for
hereditary diseases or congenital abnormalities, or persons at risk from exposure to communicable diseases. In other words, if there is a reason a person in
good health visits a healthcare provider, you can use a V-code.
The next volume of the ICD code manual is the alphabetic index.
Coders use this index to locate codes in the tabular section. You can
use the alphabetic index like you would any index. Simply search for a general
term and the index will point you to any of the applicable codes.
For instance, if you look up Leakage in the alphabetic index, youll find
a number of items that relate to leakage, including leakage of amniotic
fluid (code: 658.1), leakage of amniotic fluid with delayed delivery (658.2),
and leakage of amniotic fluid affecting fetus or newborn (761.1). The leakage
entry also points to codes for leakage of urine, blood, and bile.
Essentially, the alphabetic index gives us directions around the tabular volume.
Its important to code from the tabular section, however. We use the alphabetic
index in order to track down codes, but we always confirm in the tabular section.
HOW IT IS ORGANIZED
THIRD SECTION:
ALPHABETIC & TABULAR
INDEX OF PROCEDURES
USED BY HOSPITALS
The third and final section of the ICD-9-CM manual consists of procedure codes
used by hospitals to report services and procedures performed in their facilities.
We will not be covering this volume in depth in this course, as physicians and
coding professionals do not use it to report codes.
Now that were familiar with what an ICD-9-CM code looks like and how its organized in the code manual, its time to look closer at how to use these codes. In the
next course, well show you how to use ICD-9-CM and give you more examples
of the code in action. In the sections following that, well talk about the new ICD
code set, ICD-10-CM, that is set to replace ICD-9-CM.
34 | SECTION 2
USING ICD-9-CM | 35
USING ICD-9-CM
By now you know what ICD-9-CM is used for, what it looks like, and how its
organized. Its time to look at some more practical examples of this important
code at work.
You might look at the report and also see history of asthma and breathing
problems, but since those conditions did not directly affect the patients visit
this time, we dont always have to code them.
The coding process actually begins with the medical report. The medical
report provides the coder with an immense amount of information, including
the patients demographic info, their medical history, the patients present
symptoms, the doctors diagnosis, the procedures performed by the doctor to
ascertain or confirm the diagnosis, and the prescriptions or treatments, if any,
recommended by the doctor. The medical report is the full documentation of
the patients visit.
ICD-9-CM CONVENTIONS
In the previous course, we talked a little about the format of the code set and
its guidelines for use. To recall, the guidelines, or conventions, include:
Brackets [ ]
Parentheses ( )
Excludes
Includes
See
All of medical coding is derived from this important document. For the sake
of simplicity, were going to focus only on the symptoms and diagnosis portion
of the report, but well return to this in our courses on procedure coding.
A quick note as we get started. Remember that, as coders, we always want to
code to the highest level of specificity. That means reading the report carefully,
taking notes, abstracting the information, looking up the code, paying attention to all of the convetions for the code, and double-checking your work. Lets
begin.
After reading over the medical report, a coder will take notes and abstract the
information in the report. Most physicians or providers will list the patients
symptoms and then give their diagnosis in a straightforward, direct manner.
Lets look at a quick, simplified example of a medical report.
Patient is 28-year-old Caucasian male. Self-reported height and weight 1.85m
and 85 kg. Smoker. History of asthma and breathing problems as a child, though
none recently.
Patient presents with hacking cough, difficulty breathing, production of
mucus, fever. Suspected diagnosis of acute bronchitis. Pulmonary function
test performed with spirometer. Diagnosis confirmed.
Prescribed bed rest and low dose of anti-inflammatory drugs (Prednisone)
to patient.
Theres a lot information here! Theres the patients height, some of his medical
history, his symptoms, the procedure the doctor performed, the prescription
and more. Since, however, were looking at diagnosis codes, we have to winnow
down what were looking for.
In the case of a positive diagnosis, we dont code any symptoms. That means
the only diagnostic code were using is the one for acute bronchitis (466.0). That
means you wont code for fever, hacking cough, or mucus production. You only
Nows a good time to step back and take another look at some of the guidelines
and rules of using ICD-9-CM.
See Also
Code First
Use Additional Code
In Diseases Elsewhere Classified
You can think of these guidelines and additional bits of information as instructions for the code. They are typically listed below the code and tell the coder
whether the code they are looking at is the right one. See the previous course
for a full list of what these codes mean.
CONVENTIONS
EXAMPLE
Lets return to our bronchitis example. If we look in the ICD-9-CM manual, wed
see the code were looking for, 466.0. Below that, wed also see an Excludes
note. Under that note, youd find the phrase acute bronchitis with chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (491.22).
Likewise, youd also find an Includes note below the acute bronchitis code,
which would include the following information:
Applies to:
Bronchitis, acute or subacute
Fibrinous
Membranous
Pneumococcal
Purulent
Septic
Viral
With tracheitis
Croupous bronchitis
Tracheobronchitis, acute
These notes perform two functions. One, if you were trying code acute bronchitis with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and flipped to just acute bronchitis, youd know to look elsewhere. This might seem like a minor distinction,
but this can make a huge difference on an insurance claim. So, the Excludes
note gives you a warning about what not to use.
36 | SECTION 2
USING ICD-9-CM | 37
Similarly, the Includes note confirms the coders success. By looking at the
Includes note, a coder can double-check that the code theyre looking at is the
correct one. If, however, the term youre looking for isnt in the Includes section, you may have to double back and look for a different code.
Before we go any further, we should reiterate that the following and all medical report
examples listed in these courses are simplified for the ease of understanding. Many
lab reports, for example, take days to complete, and medical reports for conditions as
severe as kidney disease are often longer and significantly more complicated.
DISCLAIMER
Wed also code down to the subclassification (remember that we have to code
to the highest level of available specificity!). Lets take a look at the code tree
below. Weve once again bolded the correct category, subcategory, and subclassification.
DIABETES MELLITUS
CODE TREE
MANIFESTATION VS.
CONDITION EXAMPLE
Because the patient is on a medical regimen (from the medical report: patient
on a program of Metformin), we would say their diabetes is not stated as uncontrolled.
So, wed code this underlying condition first, and then wed code for the manifestation: 581.81, nephritic syndrome in diseases classified elsewhere.
Essentially, what this says is that the patient has a kidney disease that is the
direct result of their type II diabetes mellitus.
OTHER STEPS
In certain cases, you may find something missing from a medical report. This
could be a procedure, or it could be an incomplete diagnosis. (Recall that, in
cases where a doctor cant come to a positive diagnosis, a coder may code the
patients symptoms). If a the listed diagnosis does not match up with the procedure or procedures performed, its up to the coder to contact the provider to
clarify the report. This can be especially difficult in medical reports on large,
complicated procedures. There may also be multiple diagnoses listed in a medical report. A coder has to list every diagnosis (or set of symptoms) thats directly
related to a procedure performed by the provider.
Remember, ICD codes are used to demonstrate medical necessity in insurance
claims. They justify the processes performed by the doctor. If you read a report
and a certain procedure is not justified by a doctors diagnosis, you must contact
the doctor to get clarification.
The final step of the coding process is the submission of codes. In the past, this
was done via paper forms, but today almost all medical codes are submitted
via a software system like Epic. Well cover this a bit more in Electronic vs. Paper
Coding in Section 2. For now, just know that when the coder has fully coded the
medical report, they submit these codes to the medical biller (or medical billing
agency). The medical biller then uses these codes to make the claim (well cover
this in Section 3).
Now you know what ICD-9-CM is, and how to use it. In the following two courses, well talk about ICD-10-CM, which is due to replace ICD-9-CM in October of
2015. These code sets shares a lot of similarities, but have a few critical differences. Well walk you through the format, use, and transition between the code
sets in just a little bit.
38 | SECTION 2
ICD-10-CM | 39
If we remember out mission of always coding to the highest level of specificity, you can see that this is a real problem. As medical practice has developed
and diversified, the old ICD-9-CM code set is increasingly incapable of providing the exact right codes. While ICD-9-CM has developed a workaround in the
form of Not Elsewhere Classified codes and other unlisted codes, its not ideal
to work with intentionally nonspecific codes.
ICD-10-CM
THE CHANGEOVER FROM
ICD-9-CM TO ICD-10-CM
In the United States, weve been using the ICD-9-CM code set since the late 1970s.
ICD codes are updated every 10 to 15 years, and typically just include expansions
to existing code sets. The upgrade from ICD-9 to ICD-10, however, involved a
shift in format and organization. Because of this shift in format, and the headaches that go along with reformatting every aspect of medical reporting in
the industry, the United States was unwilling to upgrade to ICD-10 when it was
initially published in 1999. In the years since, the deadline to upgrade to ICD-10
in the US has been pushed back repeatedly.
As a result of this, the United States primary code set for representing diagnoses
is more than 10 years out of date with the rest of the world. Canada and Australia, for instance, updated to some form of ICD-10 in the early 2000s. The US had
originally intended to upgrade to ICD-10 (and its attached Clinical Modification,
ICD-10-CM) in October of 2013, but this was pushed back to October 1, 2015. This
is considered the hard deadline for the upgrade, and coders around the country are hard at work learning the ins and outs of this new, significantly larger
code set.
This presents a bit of a challenge for incoming medical coders. The ICD-9-CM set
is still in use today, and coders must be able to use it quickly and efficiently. But,
the ICD-10-CM upgrade is looming, and coders must also be able to use that code
set effectively. Adding to the complications is the fact that for two years after the
upgrade, ICD-9-CM codes will still be used in a sort of transitional phase, meaning coders must be able to move between code sets freely.
With that challenge laid out, lets take a look at ICD-10-CM and discover more
about this new and important element of health informatics.
Enter ICD-10-CM. The code set is significantly larger than ICD-9-CM (there are
13,000 ICD-9 codes and 68,000 ICD-10 codes), and its increased number of subcategories and subclassifications (the digits after the decimal point), allow for
a far greater level of specificity in coding. ICD-10-CM is also more flexible, and
was designed in such a way that eases the entrance of codes for new, recently
discovered, or expanded diagnoses.
EXTENSIONS
The extension describes the type of encounter this is. That is, if this is the first
time a healthcare provider has seen the patient for this condition/injury/disease, its listed as the initial encounter. Every encounter after the first is listed as a subsequent encounter. Patient visits related to the effects of a previous
injury or disease are listed with the term sequela.
To review: the first digit of an ICD-10-CM code is always an alpha, the second
digit is always numeric, and digits three through seven may be alpha or numeric. Heres a simplified look at ICD-10-CMs format.
A01 {Disease}
A01.0 {Disease] of the lungs
A01.01 simple
A01.02 complex
A01.020 affecting the trachea
A01.021 affecting the cardiopulmonary system
A01.021A initial encounter
A01.021D subsequent encounter
A01.021S sequela
As you can see from the above example, ICD-10-CM branches much farther out
than ICD-9-CM. ICD-10-CM allows us to code the location and manifestation of
a disease or injury far more accurately, and the extensions reduce the administrative burden by documenting both the diagnosis and whether this injury or
illness has been examined before.
Still, ICD-10-CM and ICD-9-CM share more similarities than you might think.
Like ICD-9-CM, the ICD-10-CM code manual is divided into three volumes.
40 | SECTION 2
ICD-10-CM VOLUME I
ICD-10-CM | 41
Volume I is the tabular index, much like that of ICD-9-CM. Volume II is, again,
the alphabetic index. Volume III lists procedure codes that are only used by
hospitals. (We wont be covering ICD-10-CM Volume III codes in these courses).
ICD-9-CM
VS. ICD-10-CM
Like the first volume of ICD-9-CM, ICD-10-CM is divided into ranges based
on the type of injury or disease they document. ICD-10-CMs division closely
follows ICD-9-CMs separation into chapters. Heres a breakdown of the
ICD-10-CM code manual.
TOPIC
RANGE
A00-B99
Neoplasms
C00-D49
D50-D89
E00-E89
F01-F99
G00-G99
H00-H59
H60-H95
I00-I99
J00-J99
K00-K95
L00-L99
M00-M99
N00-N99
O00- O9A
P00-P96
Q00-Q99
R00-R99
S00-T88
V00-Y99
Z00-Z99
You should recognize the majority of these code sections from the chapters
in ICD-9-CM. ICD-10-CM has replaced E- and V-codes with their own formal
sections (V, Y and Z), and there is some shuffling in the order of the chapters,
but for the most part, the sections remain constant.
Whats different, as you may imagine, is the levels of detail to which all of
these codes can go.
Lets consider a side-by-side example.
ICD-9-CM
ICD-10-CM
Chapter 17
Injury and Poisoning
ICD-10-CM | 43
42 | SECTION 2
As you can clearly see, ICD-10-CM allows coders to code to a much higher level
of specificity. ICD-10-CM introduces lateralitywhich side the injury or infection is onand substantially increases the amount of information about the
diagnosis. Instead of leaving off at closed fracture of distal phalanx of hand,
as we would in ICD-9-CM, we can go into fine detail about what type of fracture,
on which finger, on which handeven which visit this is the for the particular
injury.
CONVENTIONS
ICD-10-CM has another important convention that has to do with the codes extensions. Remember, extensions typically provide information what encounter
this is for the healthcare provider with the patient. These are not always included, but in the case that they are, they cannot simply be appended to the end of
whatever code is attached. Extensions are only found in the seventh character of
an ICD-10-CM code.
If a coder has to include an extension for an initial encounter on a code that does
not have six characters, they must add placeholder characters. Coders use an X
for the placeholder digit.
Aside from its format and organization, ICD-10-CM is very similar to ICD-9-CM.
It includes all of the conventions youd find in ICD-9-CM, including:
Brackets [ ]
Parentheses ( )
Includes
Excludes
*There is a slight variation here: ICD-10-CM includes 2 types of Excludes
EXCLUDES1
& EXCLUDES2
EXTENSIONS &
PLACEHOLDERS
PLACEHOLDER EXAMPLE
USING ICD-10-CM | 45
44 | SECTION 2
USING ICD-10-CM
The medical coder should approach ICD-10-CM in the exact same way as ICD9-CM. The coding process again begins with the analysis and abstraction of a
medical report. Using their notes from the report, the coder may go straight
to the tabular section or may refer to the alphabetic section to find the correct
code, and then confirm it in the tabular.
Youll note that this ICD-10-CM code doesnt have any subclassifications or
extensions. Remember, not all codes need to go to the level of specificity that
ICD-10-CM provides. In this case, the fourth digit is all thats needed to describe
the diagnosis.
Patient is 44-year-old Caucasian male. Self reported height and weight 1.8m
and 80 kg. No notable medical history.
Patient presents with a red rash around the nose and labial folds. Some yellowish-reddish pimples. Patient complains of itching and flaking skin. Patient says
rash emerged two months ago but then subsided. Diagnosed patient with suborrheic dermatitis and prescribed a topical antifungal medication.
In order to code this relatively straightforward visit, the coder would first abstract the information in the doctors report. The patient shows one very specific symptom (a rash on the face), and the doctor is able to make a positive diagnosis: suborrheic dermatitis.
The coder could look this up in the alphabetic index, or turn to the section in
the tabular index for diseases of the skin or subcutaneous tissue: L00-L99.
From there the coder would look for dermatitis and eczema and find
L21: seborrheic dermatitis.
Underneath that category wed find four subcategories. Wed select the one
that best describes the condition diagnosed by the physician, which in this
case would be L21.9, Seborrheic dermatitis, unspecified. We use unspecified
here because the other codes for seborrheic dermatitis pertain either to infants
or describe an other serborrheic dermatitis. In this case, unspecified is our
best option.
FURTHER EXPLORATIONS
Lets look at another example, this time an injury. Injuries often have extensions that document the encounter because the stage of treatment (whether it
has not been treated, as in an initial encounter, or has already received treatment, as in a subsequent encounter) can greatly impact the medical necessity
on a claim.
USING ICD-10-CM
INJURY EXAMPLE
Patient presents with bruising and a swollen nose and cheek after contact in a
rugby match. Patient has not lost consciousness. Examination shows no rupture of the skin on the face. X-rays confirm a type II Le Fort fracture.*
We know right off the bat that this is an injury code, so we can start searching in the ICD-10-CM injury codes, found in S00-T88: Injury, poisoning and
certain other consequences of external causes. From there wed winnow our
search to S00- S09, Injuries to the head.
Within that subfield of codes, wed find S02, fracture of the skull and facial
bones. We could also go about this by looking up a Le Fort fracture in the alphabetic index. As mentioned in the note above, a Le Fort fracture can be one of
three fractures to the facial bones and skull. According to the medical report,
were looking for a Type II Le Fort fracture.
Below S02, wed find a number of subcategories, including codes for fractures
of the vault and base of the skull, fractures of the nasal bones, and fractures of
the orbital floor. Were looking for a very specific type of fracture, however, one
that involves the maxillary and zygoma bones of the face. Thankfully, theres
a specific subcategory for this: S02.4, fracture of the malar, maxillary and
zygoma bones.
*Le Fort fractureone of three fractures of the bones in the face, including
fractures the lower and mid maxillary bones and the zygomatic arch/cheek bone.
USING ICD-10-CM | 47
46 | SECTION 2
ICD-10-CM INJURY
CODE TREE EXAMPLE
EXCLUDES1
EXAMPLE
CONVENTIONS
ICD-10-CMs Excludes notes have been divided into two levels. Excludes1
informs coders that the codes listed in the note may not, in any circumstance,
be listed with the code that contains the Excludes1 note. For example, you
might find something that looks like this:
A12 {Disease} A
Excludes1:
{disease} B, {disease} C
The conditions listed in an Excludes1 note are mutually exclusive with the
main condition the coder is looking up. An Excludes1 note informs the coder
that if the code they are looking up is in the Excludes1 note, the coder cannot,
under any circumstances, use the code that houses the note. That is, if a medical coder is looking for {disease} B, but thinks the code for {disease} A would
be appropriate, the Excludes1 note would direct her to look elsewhere besides
{disease} A.
Excludes2 is the other new Excludes note. An Excludes2 note indicates that the
code above the note does not include the other conditions listed below the note.
Lets take another look at our simplified example.
EXCLUDES2
EXAMPLE
A12 {Disease} D
Excludes2
{disease} E, {disease} F
This Excludes2 note means that while Diseases E and F might be pertinent to
or related to Disease D, theyre not found in the same code as Disease D. Unlike
Excludes1, you can code conditions found in an Excludes2 note with the condition above the note. You can think of Excludes2 as sort of like See Also, while
an Excludes1 note is more like a See note.
The upgrade from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM is set for October 1, 2015. In the
meantime, coders across the country are learning how to use this new large
code set. Well cover that process, and the process of transitioning codes from
ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM, in Crosswalking, later in Section 2. For now, were going
to move on to procedure codes.
In the next few courses, well introduce you to CPT codes, HCPCS codes, and
their modifiers. These codes, along with the ICD codes youve just learned
about, make up the heart of the medical coding profession.
INTRO TO CPT | 49
48 | SECTION 2
INTRO TO CPT
In Learn More About Medical Coding, we introduced you to Current Procedural
Terminology, or CPT. This expansive, important code set is published and maintained by the American Medical Association (AMA), and it is, with ICD, one of
the most important code sets for medical coders to become familiar with. Note
also that all the codes featured in this course, and every course that touches on
CPT codes, are copyrighted by the AMA.
CPT codes are used to describe tests, surgeries, evaluations, and any other medical procedure performed by a healthcare provider on a patient. As you might
imagine, this code set is extremely large, and includes the codes for thousands
upon thousands of medical procedures.
CPT codes are an integral part of the billing process. CPT codes tell the insurance payer what procedures the healthcare provider would like to be reimbursed for. As such, CPT codes work in tandem with ICD codes to create a full
picture of the medical process for the payer. This patient arrived with these
symptoms (as represented by the ICD code) and we performed these procedures
(represented by the CPT code).
Like ICD codes, CPT codes are also used to track important health data and
measure performance and efficiency. Government agencies can use CPT codes
to track the prevalence and value of certain procedures, and hospitals may use
CPT codes to evaluate the efficiency and abilities of individuals or divisions
within their facility.
FORMAT
Lets look a little closer at what these codes look like and how theyre organized.
Each CPT code is five characters long, and may be numeric or alphanumeric,
depending on which category the CPT code is in. Dont confuse this with the
category in ICD. Remember that in ICD codes the category refers to the first
three characters of the code, which describe the injury or disease documented
by the healthcare provider.
With CPT, Category refers to the division of the code set. CPT codes are divided into three Categories. Category I is the most common and widely used set of
codes within CPT. It describes most of the procedures performed by healthcare
providers in inpatient and outpatient offices and hospitals. Category II codes
are supplemental tracking codes used primarily for performance management.
Category III codes are temporary codes that describe emerging and experimental technologies, services, and procedures.
Note that while CPT codes have five digits, there are not 99,000-plus codes.
CPT is designed for flexibility and revision, and so there is often a lot of space
between codes. Unlike ICD, each number in the CPT code does not correspond
to a particular procedure or technology.
FORMAT
CATEGORY I
Medical coders will spend the vast majority of their time working with
Category I CPT codes. For the sake of simplicity, well refer to the CPT codebook
when were describing the code set. This book, which is updated yearly by the
AMA and the CPT Editorial Board, is an essential tool for every medical coder.
In the next few minutes, youll learn the basic layout, format, and instructions found in the CPT codebook. Well cover how to use CPT codes in the next
course, Using CPT. Most of the Using CPT course will be focused on Category I
CPT codes.
Like the ICD code set and its division into chapters by type of injury or illness,
Category I CPT codes are divided into six large sections based on which field of
health care they directly pertain to. The six sections of the CPT codebook are,
in order:
Evaluation and Management
Anesthesiology
Surgery
Radiology
Pathology and Laboratory
Medicine
CPT codes are, for the most part, grouped numerically. The codes for surgery,
for example, are 10021 through 69990.
In the CPT codebook, these codes are listed in mostly numerical order, except
for the codes for Evaluation and Management. These Evaluation and Management, or E&M, codes are listed at the front of the codebook for ease of access.
Physicians offices frequently use E&M codes for reporting a number of their
services. The code 99214, for a general checkup, is listed in the E&M codes, for
example.
Note also that some codes appear out of numerical sequence but near similar
procedures. This may seems slightly confusing, but having these codes clustered near similar procedures prevents having to delete and resequence codes,
and so is seen as a sort of necessary evil.
Heres a quick look at the sections of Category I CPT codes, as arranged by their
numerical range.
Evaluation and Management: 99201 99499
Anesthesiology: 00100 01999; 99100 99140
Surgery: 10021 69990
Radiology: 70010 79999
Pathology and Laboratory: 80047 89398
Medicine: 90281 99199; 99500 99607
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INTRO TO CPT | 51
Within each of these code fields, there are subfields that correspond to how that
topicsay, Anesthesiaapplies to a particular field of healthcare. For instance,
the Surgery section, which is by far the largest, is organized by what part of
the human body the surgery would be performed on. If youd like to learn more
about the anatomy and physiology terms used in the Surgery section, see the
course on Human Anatomy and Medical Terminology later in Section 2. Likewise,
the Radiology section is organized into sections on diagnostic ultrasound, bone
and joint studies, radiation oncology, and other fields.
Each of these fields has its own particular guidelines when it comes to use. For
example, the Surgery section has a guideline for how to report extra materials
used (such as sterile trays or drugs) and how to report follow-up care in the case
of surgical procedures.
Like ICD codes, many CPT codes are arranged by indentation. If a procedure is
indented below another code, the indented procedure is an important or noteworthy variation on the above procedure, and would replace the first code. Lets
take a look at an example of an indented code.
The code for management of liver hemorrhage; simple suture of liver wound or
injury is 47350. This is a surgical procedure, and would be found in the surgery/
digestive system portion of the CPT book.
Its helpful to look at a code like this in two parts. The first, which comes before
the semicolon, is the general procedure. In this case, thatd be liver management. The phrase that comes after the semicolon is additional, specific information. In this example, we could read the code as liver management, with a
simple suture of liver wound or injury.
If, however, a doctor performed a more complicated procedure on a patients
liver, 47350 would no longer be the correct code to use. If we look in the CPT
manual, we find the code 47360 below 47350. Code 47360 reads complex suture
of liver wound or injury, with or without hepatic artery ligation. That phrase
is meant to take the place of the phrase that comes after the semicolon in code
47350.
You could therefore read code 47360 as liver management, with complex suture
of liver wound or injury, with or without hepatic artery ligation.
CPT codes also have a number of modifiers. These modifiers are two-digit additions to the CPT code that describe certain important facets of the procedure,
like whether the procedure was bilateral or was one of multiple procedures performed at the same time. CPT modifiers are relatively straightforward, but are
very important for coding accurately. For this reason, well cover them in a CPT
Modifiers later in Section 2.
Like ICD codes, many CPT codes also have additional instructions featured below the code. These instructions, which are in parentheses below the code youve
looked up, tell the coder that, in certain situations, another code might
be better suited than the present code. Well cover these commands in more
depth in the next course Using CPT. For now, just recognize that the CPT code
set has a number of instructions that inform the medical coder on how to best
code the procedure performed. Remember that you always need to code to the
highest level of specificity, and a miscoded procedure can be the difference
between an accepted and rejected claim.
The CPT code set also instructs coders on when to use multiple codes, when
to use codes in tandem with one another (add-on codes), and which codes are
modifier exempt.
This is an awful lot of information to take in regarding Category I CPT codes,
so lets review briefly.
Category I CPT codes are numeric, and are five digits long.
They are divided into six sections: Evaluation and Management, Anesthesia,
Surgery, Radiology, Pathology and Laboratory, and Medicine.
Each of these sections has its own subdivisions, which correspond to what
type of procedure, or what part of the body, that particular procedure relates to.
The sections are grouped numerically, and, aside from Evaluation and Management, are in numerical order. That is, the codes for Anesthesia come before, or
are lower than the codes for Pathology and Laboratory.
Each of these sections also has specific guidelines for how to use the codes in
that section.
Certain codes have related procedures indented below them. These indented
codes are important variations on the code above them, and denote different
methods, outcomes, or approaches to the same procedure. For example, the
code for the elevation of a simple, extradural depressed skull fracture is 62000.
The code for the elevation of a compound or comminuted, extradural depressed
skull fracture is 62005.
There are a few important CPT Modifiers, which provide additional information about the procedure performed. Well cover these in just a little bit.
Some codes have instructions for coders below them. These instructions are
found in parentheses below the code, and they instruct the coder that there
may be another, more accurate code to use.
52 | SECTION 2
FORMAT
CATEGORY II
CATEGORY II
EXAMPLE
INTRO TO CPT | 53
These codes are five character-long, alphanumeric codes that provide additional
information to the Category I codes. These codes are formatted to have four
digits, followed by the character F. These codes are optional, but can provide
important information that can be used in performance management and
future patient care.
CATEGORY II
NUMERICAL FIELDS
(CONTD)
Heres a quick example. If a doctor records a patients Body Mass Index (BMI)
during a routine checkup, we could use Category II code 3008F, Body Mass
Index (BMI), documented.
FORMAT
CATEGORY III
The third category of CPT codes is made up of temporary codes that represent
emergent or experimental services, technology, and procedures. In certain cases, you may find that a newer procedure does not have a Category I code. There
are codes in Category I for unlisted procedures, but if the procedure, technology, or service is listed in Category III, you are required to use the Category III
code.
Category III codes allow for more specificity in coding, and they also help
health facilities and government agencies track the efficacy of new, emergent
medical techniques.
Think of Category III as codes that may become Category I codes, or that just
dont fit in with Category I. Category I codes must be approved by the CPT Editorial Panel. This Panel mandates that procedures or services must be performed
by a number of different facilities in different locations, and that the procedure
is approved by the FDA. Due to the nature of emerging medical technology
and procedures, its not always possible for an experimental procedure to meet
these criteria, and thus become a Category I code.
Whether a Category III code becomes a Category I code or not, all Category III
codes are archived in the CPT manual for five years. If at the end of this five year
period the code has not been converted to Category I, this procedure must be
marked with a Category I unspecified procedure code. When flipping through
the Category III section of the CPT manual, youll notice that each of the codes
has a phrase listing its sunset date below the code. Think of the sunset dates as
expiration dates on the code.
These codes never replace Category I or Category III codes, and instead simply
provide extra information. They are divided into numerical fields, each of which
corresponds with a certain element of patient care. These fields are, in order:
CATEGORY II
NUMERICAL FIELDS
CATEGORY III
EXAMPLE
Like Category II, these codes are five characters long, and are comprised of four
digits and a terminal letter. In this case, the last letter of Category III codes is
T. For example, the code for the fistulization of sclera for glaucoma, through
ciliary body is 0123T.
Now that you have a better idea of what CPT looks like, how its formatted, and
when to use which category of codes, lets dive a little deeper. Well take a look
at CPT codes in action in the next course, and CPT Modifiers later in Section 2.
54 | SECTION 2
USING CPT | 55
Services subsection and look at the codes listed there. There are a number
of codes for a trip to the ER, and so we have to pick the one that fits our situation best. Wed select 99282 for an Emergency department visit of low to
moderate severity. There are higher and lower levels of severity, but this code
fits the visit best: the patient has a moderately severe injury but is in no serious
danger.
USING CPT
Now youve got a basic idea of what CPT is, how its organized, and what its used
for. Lets look at how to use CPT as a medical coder.
Two notes before we begin this course on the practical applications of the CPT
code set. First, there are a number of modifiers which may be added to CPT
codes and which provide important additional information about the procedure performed. Since its helpful to have a working knowledge of CPT in action
before we learn about those modifiers, were going to learn about them after this
course. See the next course, CPT modifiers for more information.
DISCLAIMER
Second, and most importantly, we should stress again that the completion of this
course will not fully prepare you for entry into the coding workforce. This course is
merely an introduction to the practice, and some of the examples that well use are
simplified for ease of understanding.
CATEGORY I
Heres a brief refresher about the layout of the CPT code. CPT code is divided
into three categories. Most coders spend the majority of their time with Category I, which describes procedures, services, and technologies administered
by healthcare professionals.
Category I is divided into six sections, which are grouped, for the most part, in
numerical order. The sections are Evaluation and Management (E&M), Anesthesia, Surgery, Radiology, Pathology and Laboratory, and Medicine. These sections, with the exception of E&M, are in loose numerical order, though you may
find some codes from one section referenced in another section.
CODING PROCESS
When youre coding, you first want to think about what kind of procedure youre
looking at. Was it a patient visit? A surgical procedure? Did a physician administer an X-ray? Did they prescribe medication to the patient? Using that information, you can start looking at higher and higher levels of specificity. Where
on the patients body was the surgery performed? Where was the X-ray?
As a coder, your job is to use this information to find the best possible code for
the procedure.
As with ICD codes, the process of procedure coding begins with a physicians
report. The coder reads this reports, makes notes of the important procedures
and terms used in the report, and then uses this information to determine the
best CPT code to input. Lets take a look at a quick, simple example.
A patient breaks his arm and must go to the emergency room. His injury is serious, but is not a risk to the patients life or major physiological functions. Leaving aside the other procedures that a physician would undoubtedly perform in
this situation, lets look only at the hospital visit itself as a procedure code.
Since this is an instance of Evaluation and Management (E&M), we would turn
to the first section of the CPT book. Wed find the Emergency Department
Like ICD codes, when coding with CPT we always want to code to the highest
level of specificity. We never want to stop coding at a CPT code that is simply
close enough to the procedure performed. In E&M situations, this may be a
bit of a judgment call, but as the procedures get more and more specific, there
is less room for interpretation.
PARENT CODES
Nows a good time to recall something we learned in the last course. There
are indented, or parent codes in the CPT book. Certain procedures, like the
excision of soft tissue for a biopsy in the upper arm, have important variations.
In our example, there are two options for this procedure: an excision of soft
tissue on the skin of the upper arm, and an excision of soft tissue deep in the
arm. The latter procedure is indented below the former. The former is the
parent code. The specification of the parent code comes after a semi-colon,
and describes where the excision takes place.
When using the indented code, wed replace what comes after the semicolon
with the procedure listed in the indented code.
Heres the parent code:
24065 Biopsy, soft tissue of upper arm or elbow area; superficial.
And heres the code we want:
24066 Biopsy, soft tissue of upper arm or elbow area; deep (subfascial or intramuscular).
So wed select the indented code (24066) and use that as the procedure code for
the biopsy on the cyst in our patients elbow.
In certain cases, you may find that the procedure youve been asked to code
cannot be found in the CPT code manual. Remember that we want to code as
accurate as possible at all times. In cases where a procedure has not yet made
its way into the CPT book, we use an unlisted procedure code and file an
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USING CPT | 57
additional report. This may seem like a lot of extra work, but its your duty as a
medical coder to maintain the highest level of accuracy.
GUIDELINES
CODE SYMBOLS
Sometimes you may find procedure codes that are out of order in the code manual. Placing codes out of numerical order allows for clustering of similar procedures, and can help the medical coder find exactly the right procedure code.
These out-of-sequence codes typically have a note instructing the coder to flip
to the correct code elsewhere in the book. Think of these out-of-sequence codes
as road signs.
In an effort to save space, and save you from having to read tedious notes on
each and every code, the CPT Editorial Board has instituted a number of symbols within the codebook. These symbols will tell you important information
about the code. Each codebook will have a key that explains these symbols.
We wont dive fully into all of these symbols, but you should know about a few
of the more common ones.
The CPT codebook is full of guidelines. Each section of Category I has guidelines
specific to that section. The Anesthesia section, for example, instructs coders
on how to code the duration of the anesthetic procedure. The Medicine section,
for another example, tells coders how to code medicinal services that commonly
occur with other medical procedures.
Part of the purpose of the code symbols included in the CPT manual is to tell
coders which codes are new, resequenced, or revised procedure codes. The new
procedures are marked with a red dot. Heavily revised procedures are marked
with a blue triangle. New and revised procedure descriptions are marked with
green triangles.
Many codes also have guidelines or instructions, and this is where the CPT code
set can get very complex. Certain procedures, like a photodynamic therapy of
second eye (code 67225), must be used in conjunction with another procedure.
In this case, code 67225 must be coded along with code 67221, for photodynamic
therapy (includes intravenous infusion).
These code symbols also illustrate which codes must be, or cannot be, used
in conjunctions with other codes. Certain codes are always paired with other
codes. These are called add-on codes, and are noted with a boldfaced plus sign.
Other codes are incompatible with the -51 modifier, and are marked with a circle
with a diagonal line through it. Well cover what a -51 modifier is in the next
sectionor now, just know that a procedure marked like this cannot be part of
a multiple procedure report.
Other codes may instruct you not to report this code in conjunction with a certain other code. Those procedures may contradict one another or overlap.
PARENTHESES EXAMPLE
Some codes will also have instructions, listed in parentheses, that instruct the
coder to look elsewhere for a procedure. Lets say a coder receives a medical
report that a patient had his the ACL in his knee reconstructed during a surgical procedure. That coder would turn to the Surgery section of the code book,
then to the musculoskeletal subsection. The coder would find the section on the
femur and knee joint, and look at code 27407 repair, primary, torn ligament
and/or capsule, knee; cruciate.
Finally, procedures that require mild sedation are marked with a circle with
a dot in the center. This helps remind coders that they should be coding for
an anesthesia procedure, in addition to the primary procedure.
APPENDICES
The coder would then look at the instructions below this code and see a note:
For cruciate ligament reconstruction, use 27427. The medical coder needs to
describe a reconstruction, not a repair, and so the first code27407would be
incorrect. The coder would go to 27427, check that it is the correct procedure,
and then use that code.
You can think of these instructions and guidelines a little like the includes,
excludes, and see commands that you find in the ICD codes. They help guide
the coder to the correct spot.
Now that weve talked a little bit about using the CPT code book, its time to
get into some finer detail. A lot of CPT codes come with important distinctions
about their use, placement, or history.
When youre using a code set as large and complicated as CPT, it helps to have
a place to turn to for information specific to certain parts of the code set. The
appendices at the back of the CPT manual allow you to search newly added
codes, CPT modifiers, and a list of CPT add-on codes.
The manual comes with appendices A through O. You should look through these
appendices, and pay special attention to Appendix A, the list of CPT modifiers,
and Appendix C, which gives clinical examples for particularly confusing codes.
INDEX
Finally, we come to the index. The CPT Index can be used like any other index.
You can use it to track down hard-to-code procedures, services, and tests, and
you can search it by both procedure and body part.
For instance, if you werent sure how to code an exploration of the carotid artery,
you Could turn to the index and look up carotid artery. The index would then redirect you to Artery, Carotid. Upon flipping to that section, youd find the code
for an exploration of the carotid artery, 35701. As with ICD, you always flip to the
code and examine it before entering it.
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USING CPT | 59
A trained medical coder never codes from the index. It is merely a tool for finding the right information.
Lets close this course with a quick example of a coder using the index the right
way.
INDEX EXAMPLE
A patient receives an X-ray of both their femoral arteries. The medical report
is passed to the coder. The coder knows this is a radiology code, but isnt sure
which procedure to code. She turns to the index and finds Artery, Femoral, but
cant find the proper procedure. The coder is looking for the code for a venography, which is an invasive procedure that uses a catheter filled with dye, which
is injected and traced through the body via X-ray.
The coder turns instead to Venography in the index and finds the code range
for venographies in the leg: 75820-75822. The coder turns to this section and
finds a number of venographies, each for a specific part of the body. The coder
chooses the first one, 75822, for a bilateral venography of the extremities, with
radiological supervision and interpretation.
MOVING FORWARD
In the next course, well learn how CPT modifiers can help us code more
accurately, and with a wider range of information.
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CPT MODIFIERS | 61
Lets look now at the CPT modifiers that have been approved for the 2013 CPT
manual. The following list has all of the CPT modifiers, and a brief description
of what they mean when it is not already clear.
CPT MODIFIERS
When a simple CPT code isnt enough, we turn to CPT modifiers. These important additions to CPT codes give extra information about how, where and why a
procedure was performed.
Since medical procedures and services are often complex, we sometimes need
to supply additional information when were coding. CPT Modifiers, like modifiers in the English language, provide additional information about the procedure. In English, a modifier may describe the who, what, how, why, or where of
a situation. Similarly, a CPT modifier may describe whether multiple procedures
were performed, why that procedure was necessary, where the procedure was
performed on the body, how many surgeons worked on the patient, and lots of
other information that may be critical to a claims status with the insurance
payer.
Certain modifiers may allow a healthcare provider to ask for more money from
a payer. Modifiers -22 is one such modifier: If a surgeon performs a procedure
that requires significantly more time to complete, due to a complication during
the surgery, that procedure may be coded with a -22 at the end, for increased
procedural services. Essentially, this modifier lets the payer know that the
healthcare provider did more work than the basic CPT code would imply, and
should be compensated for that work.
CPT Modifiers are always two characters, and may be numeric or alphanumeric.
Most of the CPT modifiers youll see are numeric, but there are a few alphanumeric Anesthesia modifiers that well toward the end of this course.
FUNCTIONAL VS.
INFORMATIONAL
MODIFIERS
CPT modifiers are added to the end of a CPT code with a hyphen. In the case of
more than one modifier, you code the functional modifier first, and the informational modifier second. The distinction between the two is simple: you
always want to list the modifiers that most directly affect the reimbursement
process first.
Theres a straightforward reason to this, too. While CMS-1500 and UB-04 forms,
the two most common claim forms, have space for four modifiers, payers dont
always look at modifiers after the first two. Because of this, you always want the
most important modifiers to be visible. Well return to this point in a few examples after we examine the CPT modifiers.
Bear in mind that each of the CPT modifiers youll find in this course are A)
copyrighted by the American Medical Association (AMA) and B) contingent on
a number of factors and guidelines. In other words, there are rules for their use.
You cant simply add a modifier to the end of a procedure code if you think it
makes sense. There are, for example, a number of modifiers that state they are
not compatible with Evaluation and Management (E&M) codes.
2013 APPROVED
CPT MODIFIERS
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CPT MODIFIERS | 63
50 Bilateral procedure
This modifier describes medical procedures performed on both sides
of the body. This only applies to parts of the body that are, in fact,
bilateral (eg, the kidneys). This code also typically requires that the
bilateral procedure be performed in the same operating session.
51 Multiple procedures
One of the most common modifiers, this indicates that the healthcare
provider performed more than one procedure in one session. This
modifier is added to the secondary (or tertiary, etc) procedure performed
after the initial one.
Most payers can pay 100% for the first procedure but reduce
reimbursement on subsequent procedures to 50%, sometimes
lower depending on the payer.
52 Reduced services
In the case of a procedure being reduced in scope or intensity, or in
the case of a physician being unable to complete the procedure, you
may use this modifier. Note that this is different from a discontinued
procedure (which is modifier -53), but may be used to describe a
discontinued procedure or one that is either aborted.
53 Discontinued procedure
If extenuating circumstances demand it, a healthcare provider or surgeon
may elect to stop a procedure in the middle of performing it. In cases like
this, use -53 at the end of the CPT code to show that the healthcare provider
prepared for and initiated the service, only to stop mid-way through.
54 Surgical care only
If a surgeon is performing the surgery, but is not responsible for
the pre- or postoperative evaluation or care, you may use this modifier.
55 Postoperative management only
If different healthcare providers perform the surgery and the
postoperative care, this modifier may be added to the postoperative care.
56 Preoperative management only
This is identical to -55, but relates to preoperative care
instead of postoperative care.
57 Decision for surgery
If, during an evaluation and management procedure, the physician
decides surgery is necessary, you may add this modifier to the evaluation
and management procedure code.
2013 APPROVED
CPT MODIFIERS
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CPT MODIFIERS | 65
PHYSICAL STATUS
MODIFIER
(FOR ANESTHESIA)
CPT MODIFIERS
EXAMPLE
A surgeon performs a procedure to remove a bone cyst in the upper arm of a patient. The procedure also includes obtaining a graft from elsewhere in the body.
Due to minor complications, the surgeon is unable to fully excise the bone cyst.
For the procedure, wed code 24115, for excision or curretage of bone cyst or
benign tumor, humerus; with autograft (includes obtaining the graft). Since the
procedure was completed but not fully successful, wed add the -52 modifier, for
reduced services, to the code, and wed end up with 24115-52.
Anesthesia procedures have their own special set of modifiers, which are simple
and correspond to the condition of the patient as the anesthesia is administered.
These codes are:
P1 a normal, healthy patient
P2 a patient with mild systemic disease
P3 a patient with severe systemic disease
P4 a patient with severe systemic disease that is a constant threat to life
P5 a moribund patient who is not expected to survive without the operation
P6 a declared brain-dead patient whose organs are being removed for donor
purposes
As we said, these are relatively straightforward, but lets look at an example that
will also use some of the CPT modifiers we learned just a minute ago.
PHYSICAL STATUS
MODIFIER EXAMPLE
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CPT MODIFIERS | 67
HCPCS MODIFIERS
Were jumping ahead a little bit here, but know that there are also a number of
important modifiers in the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System, or
HCPCS. These modifiers describe things like which side of the body or which
body part the the procedure is performed on. Since well have to discuss HCPCS
in depth before we talk about HCPCS modifiers, youll have to wait until the
course on HCPCS Codes before you get a full breakdown of these additional bits
of code. Just know that there is significant crossover between CPT modifiers and
HCPCS modifiers. The HCPCS modifier -LT, for example, often shows up to tell
the payer that a typically bilateral procedure was only performed on the left side
of the body. Modifiers like this are often of the informational variety, rather
than the functional one, and so should be added after modifiers that directly
affect reimbursement.
SUPPLEMENTAL REPORTS
Many CPT modifiers require supplemental reports to the health insurance payer.
If, for instance, a payer wants to know why a surgery to repair lesions on the liver
of a patient was discontinued (lets say there was a complication with one of the
proximal organs), the coder would want to file a supplementary report stating
this. We both want to code to the highest level of specificity and provide as much
documentation as possible. If a modifier that requires justification of medical
necessity is left without a supplemental report, the claim that procedure is on
may very well be rejected.
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NUMBERS
Many times youll encounter a medical term that contains a prefix that describes a number. A few of the most common are listed in this table below.
PREFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
Ab-
Away from
Abduction
Ad-
Toward
Adduction
Ecto-, Exo-
Outside
Ectoparasite
Endo-
Inside
Endoderm
Epi-
Upon
Epinenephrine
Infra-
Below, under
Infrared
Ipsi-
Same
Ipsilateral
Meso-
Middle
Mesomorph
PREFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
Meta-
Metastasize
Mono-, Uni-
One
Unilateral
Peri-
Surrounding
Peridontal
Bi-
Two
Bilateral
Retro-
Behind, back
Retrograde amnesia
Tri-
Three
Triplicate
Sub-
Below
Submandibular
Quadr-
Four
Quadriceps
Trans-
Across, through
Transcutaneous
Hex-, Sex-
Six
Hexose
Diplo
Double
Diplococcus
70 | SECTION 2
There are also a number of positional and directional medical terms that are
not suffixes or prefixes, but are instead standalone words. Some of the most
valuable of these are listed below.
Lets look now at the basic terms for the regions of the body. These terms will
help you navigate the CPT and ICD manuals, decipher doctors reports, and
give you a more thorough understanding of the medical practice in general.
WORD
MEANING
EXAMPLE
WORD
BODY PART
Anterior
or ventral
Anterior nerves
Abdominal
Abdomen
Posterior
or dorsal
Dorsal surface
of the hand
Acromial
Point of shoulder
Antebrachial
Forearm
Superior
Above
Superior
(cranial) aspect
Antecubital
Front of elbow
Axillary
Armpit
Brachial
Arm
Buccal
Cheek
Calcaneal
Heel of foot
Carpal
Wrist
Caudal
Tail
Inferior
Below
Inferior aspect
Lateral
Side
Lateral aspect
Distal
Axons distal
to the injury
Proximal
Nearest to center
Proximal end
of the forearm
Medial
Middle
Medial axis
Caphalic
Head
Supine
Face up or palm up
Laying supine
Cervical
Neck
Prone
Laying prone
Clavicular
Collar bone
Sagittal
Sagittal suture
Costal
Rib
Coxal
Hip
Transverse myelitis
Cranial
Skull
Crural
Leg
Coronal suture
Cubital
Elbow
Deltoid
Curve of shoulder
Digital
Dorsal
Upper back
Femoral
Thigh
Transverse
Coronal
72 | SECTION 2
WORD
BODY PART
Fibular
WORD
BODY PART
Palmar
Palmar
Patellar
Patellar
Pectoral
Pectoral
Pedal
Pedal
Pelvic
Pelvic
Perineal
Peroneal
Plantar
Sole of foot
Frontal
Forehead
Genital
Gluteal
Buttock
Hallux
Great toe
Inguinal
Groin
Lumbar
Mammary
Breast
Pollex
Thumb
Manual
Hand
Popliteal
Back of knee
Mental
Chin
Pubic
Groin
Nasal
Nose
Sacral
Nuchal
Back of neck
Scapular
Shoulder bone
Occipital
Back of head
Sternal
Breastbone
Olecranal
Point of Elbow
Sural
Calf
Oral
Mouth
Tarsal
Ankle
Orbital
Eye
Thoracic
Chest
Otic
Ear
Umbilical
Navel
Ventral
Belly
Vertebral
Spinal Column
74 | SECTION 2
CONDITIONS
Now that weve taken a look at the terms that describe the major regions of
the body, lets turn to the conditions that may affect those body parts. Note
that there are both prefixes and suffixes listed in this table.
PREFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
Ambi-
Both
Ambidextrous
Aniso-
Unequal
Anisocytosis
Dys-
Dyslexia
Eu-
Good, normal
Eukaryote
Hetero-
Different
Heterogeneous
Homo-
Same
Homogeneous
Hyper-
Excessive, above
Hypertension
Hypo-
Lack, below
Hypoglycemic
Iso-
Equal, same
Isotope
Mal-
Bad, poor
Malnutrition
Megalo-
Large
Megalomania
CONDITIONS
SUFFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
-algia
Pain
Myalgia
-asthenia
Neurocirculatory
asthenia
-emia
Blood
Hypoglycemia
-iasis
Condition of
Elephantiasis
-itis
Inflammation
Bronchitis
-lysis
Dialysis
-lytic
Hydrolytic
-oid
Like
Haploid
-oma
Tumor
Fibroma
-opathy
Disease of
Neuropathy
-orrhagia
Hemorrhage
Metrorrhagia
-orrhea
Flow or discharge
Diarrhea
-osis
Abnormal condition of
Tuberculosis
-paresis
Slight paralysis
Hemiparesis
-plasia
Growth
Achondroplasia
-plegia
Paralysis
Quadraplegia
-pnea
Breathing
Sleep apnea
76 | SECTION 2
SURGICAL PROCEDURES
Lets wrap up this vocabulary blitz with a look at some of the most common
surgical procedures. Since its always imperative to list where on the body a
surgical procedure was performed, these vocabulary terms are a small but
useful addition to this section. Memorize the meanings of these suffixes
and youll at know instantly what kind of procedure was performed, even
if you dont know exactly what the procedure did.
SUFFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
-centesis
Puncture a cavity
to remove fluid
Amniocentesis
-ectomy
Surgical removal
or excision
Hysterectomy
-ostomy
A new permanent
opening
Tracheostomy
-otomy
Gastrotomy
-orrhaphy
Gastrorrhaphy
-opexy
Surgical fixation
Nephropexy
-oplasty
Surgical repair
Rhinoplasty
-otripsy
Crushing or destroying
Lithotripsy
Note that you can also use your CPT manual to study human anatomy vocabulary. Current CPT manuals come with instructive illustrations, diagrams, and
charts all throughout the book. In the front of the CPT manual, you should be
able to find a list of anatomical illustrations. Bookmark this page and refer to
it in case youre looking for an illustration of the eye or inner ear, or need to
remember which artery goes where.
HCPCS | 79
78 | SECTION 2
You can generally refer to the range of codes by their initial character. J-codes,
for example, are the codes for non-orally administered medication and chemotherapy drugs. J-codes are some of the most commonly used HCPCS Level II
Codes.
HCPCS
Now that weve brushed up a little bit on some critical vocabulary, lets return
our attention to medical coding. In this course, well look at the third major
code set: Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS), commonly
pronounced hicks-picks.
HCPCS LEVEL II
ALPHABETIC GROUPING
To clarify: if you are coding, say, the placement of a tracheal stent for an elderly
patient who is on Medicare, you would still use the CPT code 31631. However,
because that code is going to Medicare, and not another payer, the code youve
selected is technically a HCPCS code. For the most part this is just a technicality,
but it can be confusing.
HCPCS code manuals have an index and a large table of drugs. Whenever a
coder is coding the delivery of a drug or medication, they should always use the
drug table. Coding for medication is one of the most important parts of using
HCPCS, and the drug table will provide much more accurate information on
where to find the correct code.
Where the real difference between CPT and HCPCS comes in is in Level II
of HCPCS and the HCPCS modifiers. Well cover Level II codes here and work
on HCPCS modifiers in the next course.
Coders use HCPCS codes much like they would ICD or CPT codes. Upon receiving a medical report, youd take notes on which procedure was performed,
which products were prescribed, injected, or otherwise delivered to the patient,
and then youd use your HCPCS code set to find the appropriate code.
This code set is based upon CPT. In fact, the first level of HCPCS is identical
to CPT. That might sound a little confusing, so lets take a step back.
HCPCS was developed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) for the
same reasons that the AMA developed CPT: for reporting medical procedures
and services. Up until 1996, using HCPCS was optional. In that year, however,
the government passed the Health Information Portability and Accountability
Act, or HIPAA. Well look closer at that very important piece of legislation in
HIPAA 101 in Section 3, but for now all you need to know is that HIPAA made
the use of HCPCS mandatory in certain cases.
Heres the full breakdown of HCPCS Level II codes by their alphabetic grouping:
Level II HCPCS codes are designed to represent non-physician services like ambulance rides, wheelchairs, walkers, other durable medical equipment, and other medical services that dont fit readily into Level I. Where CPT describes the
procedure performed on the patient, it doesnt have many codes for the product
used in the procedure. HCPCS Level II takes care of those products and pieces of
medical equipment.
Level II codes are, like Level I, five characters long, but Level II codes are alphanumeric, with a letter occupying the first character of the code. These codes,
like those in ICD and CPT, are grouped together by the services they describe,
and are in numeric order.
Be aware that when coding with HCPCS, youre going to have to strive for an
even higher level of specificity than with CPT. Since this code set has codes for
all different variations and amounts of equipment and medicine, youll have to
stay as close to the medical report as possible to make sure youre coding the
correct procedure. Look at it this way: 20 ten-mg capsules of antibiotics is going
to cost more than ten ten-mg capsules, right? Thats what you have to watch out
for with HCPCS.
80 | SECTION 2
HCPCS | 81
J-codea drug administered any way except orally. A lot of J-codes are injected
drugs, and thats what were looking at in this example.
So, youd look up adalimumab and find the J-code J0135, injection, adalimumab,
20 mg. Thats your HCPCS Level II code, and thats what youd put in if you were
creating a claim for Medicare, Medicaid, or one of the many other payers that
takes HCPCS codes.
As you look through the HCPCS manual, youll recognize a lot of symbols from
the CPT manual. Like CPT, HCPCS alerts you to which codes are new and which
codes have been revised. New codes are listed with a circle, while revised codes
have a triangle next to them. HCPCS is constantly being updated, and CMS,
which maintains the code set, will often recycle codes. HCPCS features a number
of strikethrough codes, and these let you know that a code that used to be listed
there has been deleted and moved elsewhere.
You should also note that many codes in HCPCS Level II have specific guidelines
for their use. Those guidelines are too various and fine grain to go over here, but
you should know that with HCPCS, you always need to be paying attention. The
diligent coder always takes note of the type of equipment used and the amount
of medication delivered to the patient.
The other important variation HCPCS brings us is in the form of the HCPCS
modifier, which we will cover in the next course
HCPCS MODIFIERS | 83
82 | SECTION 2
HCPCS MODIFIERS
HCPCS modifiers allow for greater accuracy in coding and can be extremely
important in the reimbursement process.
Earlier in this section, we talked about CPT Modifiers. HCPCS modifiers work
in almost exactly the same way. The two code sets are so similar, in fact, that
you can regularly use modifiers from one set in codes from the other. The
HCPCS modifier LT, for example, is regularly used in CPT codes when you need
to describe a normally bilateral procedure that was only performed on one side
of the body.
LT: left side (used to identify procedures performed on the left side of the body)
HCPCS modifiers, like CPT modifiers, are always two characters, and are added
to the end of a HCPCS or CPT code with a hyphen. When differentiating between
a CPT modifier and a HCPCS modifier, all theres one simple rule: if the modifier
has a letter in it, its a HCPCS modifier. If that modifier is entirely numeric, its
a CPT modifier.
HCPCS MODIFIERS
IN CPT MANUAL
As you can see, these modifiers cover a broad scope of information. While most
of the above codes correspond to parts of the body, there are also modifiers for
ambulance services and mammograms. If you look at the full list of HCPCS
modifiers, youll also find modifiers that describe everything from the Medicare eligibility of a procedure to the number of wounds dressed on a single
patient.
1. FUNCTIONALITY
2. INFORMATION
As with CPT codes, we always want to use modifiers for functionality first, and
information second. That is, youll want to list the HCPCS modifier that directly affects reimbursement first. Remember that while certain coding forms provide space for multiple modifiers, payers dont always look at modifiers listed
after the first two.
Note that certain HCPCS modifiers dont agree with certain CPT modifiers.
The most obvious example of this would be CPT modifier -50 and the HCPCS
modifiers LT and RT. These modifiers are mutually exclusive: CPT modifier
-50 describes a bilateral procedure, while HCPCS modifiers LT and RT describe which side of the body a procedure is performed on.
84 | SECTION 2
HCPCS MODIFIERS
EXAMPLE
HCPCS MODIFIERS | 85
Lets look at another example, this time using a combination of CPT codes, CPT
modifiers, and HCPCS modifiers.
A patient requires the drainage of a large, felon abscess on the tip of the middle
finger of his left hand. A felon abscess is a complicated infection of the pulp
on the distal, or last, phalanx of the hand. During the procedure, however, the
patient becomes agitated and doctor decides to discontinue the procedure.
If were coding this procedure, wed first look at the procedure performed. This is
a procedure done to a patient, so were probably going to find it the CPT codebook. Its also a surgical procedure, so wed find it in the Surgery section of the
codebook. Specifically, this is an incisionits drainage made via a cut to the
skin.
Once in the surgery section, wed flip to the musculoskeletal subsection and
find the Hand and Fingers field of codes. There wed find the codes for incision
and see that there are two codes for drainage of a finger abscess: the parent code
26010 for drainage of finger abscess; simple and the indented code 26011 for
drainage of finger abscess; complicated (eg, felon).
The abscess were draining is complicatedits even listed in the code as an example of a complicated abscess. So, wed select the indented code and put 26011
as our base code.
Now wed need to look at the additional information. Whats the more important code for reimbursement: the place on the hand where the procedure took
place, or the fact that the procedure was discontinued? In this case, itd be
the discontinued procedure.
Wed add the CPT modifier -53 for discontinued procedure, and then wed look
at the HCPCS modifiers for where on the body the procedure was performed.
If youll recall, some of the HCPCS modifiers we listed earlier have to do with
parts of the hand. Well look at these modifiers and find the one that fits our
need: F2, for left hand, third digit.
So our code would look like this: 26011-53-F2: a discontinued drainage of
a complicated abscess on the third digit of the left hand.
Coding with HCPCS modifiers wont always be as easy as that example, but
that one should give you a good idea of how these additions to the code set
help us code to the highest level of accuracy.
That concludes this course on HCPCS modifiers. Like the rest of the HCPCS
code set, its easy to get overwhelmed by the number and variety of options
available. Once you get the hang of HCPCSs organizational structure, though,
you should be able to easily navigate this important, useful code.
86 | SECTION 2
CROSSWALKING | 87
CROSSWALKING
again, will see both code sets in use), it may be easier to crosswalk new
ICD-10-CM codes to ICD-9-CM codes, in order to have a uniform data set.
As you may have gathered from the previous courses, working in medical coding sometimes requires finding equivalencies between different code sets. The
code sets CPT, HCPCS, and ICD are updated annually, and medical coders need
to know how to find and map codes that may have changed between updates.
Or, if in 2015 you are looking at a patients medical history from before 2010,
it may be necessary to crosswalk those ICD-9-CM codes forward to ICD-10-CM
to comply with contemporary coding standards.
The new ICD-10-CM format makes this crosswalking process difficult. Remember, as coders, we always to be as exact as possible. But because of the increased
number of subclassifications, the higher specificity (including ICD-10-CMs use
of laterality and information regarding location on the body), and ICD-10-CMs
organization, less than a quarter of ICD-10-CM codes have an exact match in
ICD-9-CM.
So how should we approach the crosswalking process? The best place to start
is by breaking down the types of matches there are between code sets. The
AMA has classified four types of matches between ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM.
Lets take a look at them now.
ONE-TO-ONE
EXACT MATCHES
ONE-TO-ONE APPROXIMATE
MATCHES WITH ONE CHOICE
Notably more common than exact matchces, approximate matches with one
choice make up a majority of the crosswalking procedure. 82.6 percent of ICD10-CM codes can be crosswalked back to ICD-9-CM as approximate matches
with one choice, and 49.1 percent can be mapped in the other direction. Matches like this describe a close-enough pairing for two codes. For instance, ICD9-CM code 422.91 (idiopathic myocarditis) is an approximate match for I40.1
(isolated myocarditis). These are not an exact match, obviously, but they are
close, and theres only one choice in each code set that works with both.
ONE-TO-ONE
APPROXIMATE MATCHES
WITH MULTIPLE CHOICES
While exact and approximate matches with only one choice make up the
majority of crosswalked codes, coders will occasionally run into coding crosswalks that are less specific. The first of these is an approximate match with
multiple choices. In instances of multiple-choice matches, a coder may find
two or more options in one code set that correspond to a single code in another
set. For instance, the ICD-10-CM codes C22.0 (liver cell carcinoma) and C22.2
both correspond to the ICD-9-CM code 155.0 (malignant neoplasm of the liver,
primary). In situations such as this, its up to the coder to decide which of the
choices of codes works best for the particular claim.
ONE-TO-MANY MATCHES
The real crosswalking challenge for the medical coder is between ICD-9-CM
and ICD-10-CM. As we mentioned in our introduction to ICD-10-CM, ICD-9-CM
is out of date and no longer able to effectively represent new medical diagnoses.
ICD-10-CM, its long overdue upgrade, is significantly larger and more flexible
than its predecessor, thanks to its new format.
CROSSWALKING BETWEEN
ICD-9-CM & ICD-10-CM
To review, ICD-9-CM has five characters and is primarily numeric, with a few
alphanumeric codes used in certain situations. ICD-10-CM, on the other hand,
is seven characters long and entirely alphanumeric. Where each ICD-9-CM code
could have one subcategory and one subclassification, an ICD-10-CM code can
have one subcategory and two subclassifications, in addition to an alpha extension that provides information as to which visit, or encounter, this is with the
patients particular illness or injury.
ICD-10-CM is obviously a much more extensive, detail-oriented code set, but its
new format and organization presents coders with a challenge. As we mentioned in Course 2-6, ICD-10-CM is going into effect on October 1, 2015. Coders
will need to be fluent in both ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM, as they may need to
translate codes back and forth from one set to the other. If, for instance, you
were helping analyze certain diagnoses from the 2014 calendar year (which,
In these matches, one code set (the source) has an exact match, down to the
wording, in the other code set (the target). An example of this would be the
ICD-9-CM code 416.0 (primary pulmonary hypertension) and ICD-10-CM
Vcode I27.0 (primary pulmonary hypertension). Only five percent of codes
in ICD-10-CM map directly from ICD-10-CM to ICD-9-CM, and 24 percent map
directly in the other direction.
88 | SECTION 2
CROSSWALKING | 89
ICD-10-CM). For instance, the ICD-9-CM code 800.10 (closed fracture of vault
of skull with cerebral laceration and confusion, state of consciousness unspecified) is a one-to-many match with two different ICD-10-CM codes: S02.0XXA
(fracture of the vault of the skull, initial encounter for closed fracture) and
S06.339A (contusion and laceration of the cerebrum, unspecified, with lost
of consciousness of unspecified duration, initial encounter).
In one-to-many matches, a single code in one set must be crosswalked to a
cluster of codes in the other set. Clusters are always between two and four
codes. There may be multiple target clusters for a single source code. Its up
to the coder to look at and abstract all of the concepts in the single source code,
and find their corollaries in the target code set. This process of crosswalking
by cluster requires diligence and a lot of review, as a missing code from one
of the clusters can drastically affect the status of a claim or report.
NO MATCH
GENERAL EQUIVALENCY
MAPPINGS (GEMs)
In certain cases, there is simply no match between code sets. This typically
only happens in cases of crosswalking ICD-10-CM back to ICD-9-CM. In these
instances, coders may use the phrase NoDX to show that there is no target
diagnosis code that matches the source code.
Crosswalking between ICD-10-CM and ICD-9-CM is one of the most important
skills a coder can learn as the changeover date approaches. In order to help
coders, the National Center for Health Statistics has created a set of tools, called
General Equivalency Mappings, or Gems. GEMs are like guides that list a code
from one set and its exact, possible, or appropriate match in the other set.
Like many aspects of the crosswalking process, GEMs can be very intimidating, and
theyre difficult to fully understand without a thorough knowledge of the medical coding
practice itself. For reasons of brevity and space, we wont be discussing them in great
detail in this course, other than in general terms. If youd like to learn more about GEMs,
how they work, and how to use them, you can find a thorough, comprehensive guide here:
ftp.cdc.gov/pub/Health_Statistics/NCHS/Publications/ICD10CM/2013/
MAIN RULE OF
CROSSWALKING
One of the main things we learn from looking at GEMs is which codes can be
transferred from one set to another. One of the main rules of crosswalking is:
You can code from a specific injury to a general one, but you cannot code from
the general to the specific.
CROSSWALKING
EXAMPLE
For example, you could crosswalk the ICD-10-CM code S11.014 (puncture wound
with foreign body of larynx) to ICD-9-CM code 874.1 (open wound of larynx and
trachea, complicated), but you could never reverse that crosswalk. That is, you
cant infer specific pieces of information from a more general diagnosis code and
then apply them to a more specific code in another set.
Because crosswalking requires a thorough understanding of both ICD-10-CM
and ICD-9-CM, we wont dive much deeper than that in this course. As you train
to become a medical coder, youll want to take extra courses that instruct you
how to map codes effectively between the two sets. Having a fluency in the crosswalking process will make you a more desirable hire, especially as the changeover date of October 1, 2015 approaches.
90 | SECTION 2
BENEFITS OF
CODING SOFTWARE
The benefits of working with coding software are numerous. Coders (and billers) can track claims and easily call up old reports to check for efficiency and
errors. Coding software is also excellent for tracking data over long periods
of time and for performance management evaluations. Software like Epic and
Eclipse can help coders keep track of their lag time for codes, allowing for better
organization and a faster turnaround in the reimbursement cycle. Many coding
programs also check, automatically, for compatible codes, though the onus is
always on the coder to check and double-check using their coding manuals.
A good coding software program should meet the needs of your practice or
coding organization. Coding software should also be compliant with CMS-1500
forms and all HIPAA regulations (well cover both of these in More About Insurance and the Insurance Claims Process and HIPAA 101 in Section 3, respectively).
Put simply, CMS-1500 is the general form used to send claims to Medicare, Medicaid, and many other third-party payers, and HIPAA is a law that created a set
of standards for electronic billing and coding in the mid-1990s.
Bear in mind that most coders wont get to select the software they use, unless
they start their own coding business. That usually doesnt happen until a coder
has five to ten years of professional experience.
92 | SECTION 2
CODE BREAKDOWN
ICD-10-CM codes all have three-character categories and one-digit subcategories. The subcategory once again follows the decimal point after the category.
ICD-10-CM codes feature up to three subclassifications. These extra subclassifications allow ICD-10-CM to feature much more specific information about the
disease or injury described in the diagnosis. ICD-10-CM, for example, has codes
for lateralitywhich side of the body the injury or illness is on.
EXTENSIONS &
PLACEHOLDERS
ICD-10-CM codes also feature alphabetic extensions. These extensions can only
occupy the seventh and final character of an ICD-10-CM code, and describe
the episode of care for the injury or illness. In other words, extensions show
which visit this is for a particular condition. These may be broadly divided into
categories of initial encounter (the first visit for a condition), subsequent
encounter (A follow-up for the same condition), or sequela (a visit for a condition stemming from a prior condition). Extensions are typically used in codes
for Injury and codes for Childbirth, though they may show up elsewhere. In the
case of adding an extension to a code that does not go to the final subclassification, codes use placeholders, typically the letter X.
After completing the quiz, you can move on to Section 3 and learn more about
medical billing, or check out Section 4 for some real-life examples of medical
coding in action.
INTL CLASSIFICATION OF
DISEASES, 9TH REVISION,
CLINICAL MODIFICATION
(ICD-9-CM)
CODE SET BREAKDOWN
CODE BREAKDOWN
INTL CLASSIFICATION OF
DISEASES, 10TH REVISION,
CLINICAL MODIFICATION
(ICD-10-CM)
ICD-9-CM is the primary diagnostic code set in use in the United States today.
Despite being more than ten years out of date, its still the primary way coders
represent illness and injury in a patient. Its used in the reimbursement cycle
to demonstrate medical necessity. That is, ICD-9-CM codes show the insurance
payer why the provider had to perform a certain medical service.
ICD-9-CM codes are three-to-five characters long, and are primarily numeric.
The code set is divided into chapters, each of which focuses on a certain type
of illness or injury. For example, Chapter 1 contains diagnosis codes for Infectious and Parasitic Diseases, Chapter 2 contains codes for Neoplasms, Chapter 5
has codes for Mental Disorders, and so on.
The first three digits, with the exception of E-codes, of an ICD-9-CM code is
called the category. There is always a category in ICD-9-CM. The category
describes the general type of injury or disease thats being described in the
code. A decimal point follows the category. The digit after that is called the
subcategory. The subcategory provides additional information about the
illness or injury described in the categorywhat type of disease is it? What
type of injury? The final digit in an ICD-9-CM code is the subclassification.
This further expands on the subcategory, and provides even more information
about the code. A subclassification might provide information on where an
injury is or what may have caused the diseases described in the category.
There are alphanumeric codes in ICD-9-CM. These are called E-codes and
V-codes, as they begin with those letters. E-codes describe external circumstances, such as car accidents, that caused the injury. E-codes are the only ICD9-CM codes that have a letter and then three digits in the category. V-codes,
on the other hand, describe external circumstances that are not life threatening or injury or disease related that nevertheless cause a person to go see a
healthcare provider. One such example would be a family medical history of a
particular disease, or exposure to a disease-inducing chemical at a workplace.
ICD-10-CM is the update to ICD-9-CM. Published by the World Health
Organization (WHO) in 1999, it features a revised format and more than
four times as many codes as ICD-9-CM. Its organization and format is based
on ICD-9-CM, but is different enough that a major training movement is underway to prepare the medical industry for the shift from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM
in October of 2015.
WHY ARE WE
SWITCHING FROM
ICD-9-CM TO ICD-10-CM?
CROSSWALKING
We transfer between ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM through a process called crosswalking. Crosswalking entails the mapping of similar information across similar but distinct data sets. You could think of translating between two languages as a sort of crosswalking: bread in English is pan in Spanish.
You can crosswalk between any two code sets, but for the sake of simplicity
well confine it to ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM.
Crosswalking entails finding exact, approximate, or appropriate matches
between the two code sets. Since there are far more codes in ICD-10-CM
than ICD-9-CM, its generally much easier to find an appropriate match for
94 | SECTION 2
an ICD-9-CM code in ICD-10-CM than the other way around. We call the code
in the first set the source, and the code to which well match the source the
target. When crosswalking, you may go from the specific to the general, but
you may never infer specific information from a general diagnosis. That is,
you could crosswalk a diagnosis of closed fracture of distal phalanx of great
toe on left foot to fracture of distal phalanx of great toe, but you could never
crosswalk those diagnosis codes in the opposite direction.
Crosswalking is not an exact science. Less than a quarter of ICD-10-CM codes
have exact matches in ICD-9-CM. The goal of crosswalking is to facilitate the
transfer between these two code sets and allow better data tracking. In order
to assist coders, the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) has created
a set of General Equivalency Mappings (GEMs). These list appropriate matches
between the two code sets, and are invaluable resources as you move further
in crosswalking.
CURRENT PROCEDURE
TERMINOLOGY (CPT)
CATEGORY I
Category III contains temporary codes for emerging and experimental procedures. CPT is updated annual to keep up with new and emerging medical procedures and technologies, and Category III is the place where new procedures go
for their test run. Before a procedure can be added to Category I, it needs to be
performed a certain number of times by a certain number of different providers.
Category III is where the codes that are not yet official, but are being tested out,
reside.
CPT MODIFIERS
ICD codes describe the why of a medical procedure. CPT codes describe the
what. CPT codes correspond to almost every medical procedure performed by
a healthcare provider, and are the primary way that providers inform payers
of their services.
Each section in Category I is broken down into further subsections. For example,
the Surgery section is subdivided into sections based on where on the body the
surgery is performed. Those subsections are then further divided by what kind
of surgical procedure (an incision vs. an excision, for example) is being performed.
Many Category I CPT codes are procedures that are based on a general, parent
procedure. The parent procedure is often a basic or simplified version of the procedure, while the codes indented below it describe variations on that procedure
that are too specific to be included in the parent code.
Lets look briefly at Category II and III codes. Category II codes are optional
codes that are added to Category I or Category III codes. Category II codes
CPT modifiers are an important part of coding with CPT. These two-digit, entirely numeric modifiers are added to the end of a CPT code with a hyphen, and may
describe the what, the who, the where, and the how of a particular procedure.
There are modifiers for things like multiple surgeons, discontinued procedures,
and increased procedural services. These modifiers are integral in the reimbursement cycle, as they tell the payer that a provider had to work more (or less)
during a particular procedure.
Because these modifiers can be very important to the billing process, we order
them in such a way that the most important, or functional modifier goes first.
That is, if there is a modifier for increased procedural services (-22) and one for
bilateral procedure (-50) wed code the -22 modifier first, as it tells the payer that
the provider had to perform extra work.
CPT codes are divided into three Categories. These Categories are different than
the categories in ICD, of course. CPT Categories refer to the division of the CPT
code manual: Category I is the larger and more important Category. Category I
contains the codes for procedures in the six major fields of health care. Category
II contains supplementary codes that may be used to add or track data, and are
often used in performance management.
Category I CPT codes are five digits long and entirely numeric. (Category II is
alphanumeric, but well focus our attention on Category I here). Category I is
divided into six sections, each corresponding to a major field of medicine. The
sections are: Evaluation and Management, Anesthesiology, Surgery, Radiology,
Pathology and Laboratory, and Medicine. These sections are, for the most part,
ordered numerically. (Evaluation and Management is out of order and placed at
the front Category I for ease of accessE&M codes are used frequently by most
practices).
CATEGORY II &III
describe things like patient management, patient history, and the results of
certain diagnostic or screening tests. Category II codes are supplemental and
may never take the place of a Category I or Category III code.
The reason for this is simple: despite the fact that most claims have room for up
to four modifiers for each procedure, many third party payers sometimes ignore
modifiers after the first two. For this reason, its important the modifiers directly
related to the reimbursement cycle come first.
HEALTHCARE COMMON
PROCEDURE CODING
SYSTEM (HCPCS)
The final of the three critical code sets used by medical coders is HCPCS (pronounced hick-picks). Developed by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS), HCPCS is the primary way that billers describe procedures to
Medicare, Medicaid, and a host of other third-party payers.
LEVEL I
HCPCS is based on CPT. So much so that the first section (Level) of HCPCS
is identical to CPT. Its a bit technical, but when you use CPT, but submit it to
Medicare, Medicaid, or one of the third-party payers that accepts HCPCS, those
CPT codes become HCPCS codes. You dont have to enter anything differently.
Since the code sets are the same, payers simply recognize Category I CPT codes
and Level I HCPCS codes as interchangeable.
LEVEL II
The code sets diverge with HCPCS Level II. HCPCS Level II describe the various
non-physician services administered or prescribed by healthcare providers
that arent covered in CPT. Its a broad swath of codesso broad that HCPCS is
sometimes referred to as the hall closet of medical coding. Its got a little bit
of everything in there.
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These codes are five characters long and alphanumeric. The code set is divided
by area of focus and assigned a letter, which doubles as the first character of
the code. For instance, B-codes are for Enteral and Parenteral Therapy, E-codes
are Durable Medical Equipment, P-codes are Pathology and Laboratory, and so
on. Level II Codes include dosages of non-orally administered medicine (like
injections) and each specific type of splint, so the code is extremely specific.
Coders use HCPCS Level II just as they would CPT. If there is equipment, certain
professional services, injected medication, or any number of things listed on
the report that arent found in CPT, the coder should use HCPCS Level II.
HCPCS MODIFIERS
Like CPT, HCPCS has a set of two-character modifiers that provide important
additional information about the code. These modifiers are added to the end
of either CPT or HCPCS Level II codes with a hyphen. You may use HCPCS modifiers alongside CPT codes and CPT modifiers. You can tell whether a modifier
is a HCPCS or CPT modifier quite easily: CPT modifiers are always numeric,
and HCPCS modifiers are always alphanumeric.
There are significantly more HCPCS modifiers than CPT modifiers. HCPCS
modifiers may describe everything from the type of ambulance service performed to the location on the body a procedure was performed.
Bear in mind that certain HCPCS modifiers do not agree with certain CPT
modifiers. The most common of these mutually exclusive relationships is the
HCPCS modifiers LT and RT, which describe which side of the body a procedure is performed on, and the CPT modifier -50, which describes a bilateral
procedure. Obviously something cant be performed on the left side of the body
and be a bilateral procedure.
As with CPT modifiers, coders should always order functional HCPCS modifiers
first, and informational modifiers second.
That concludes our review for Section 2. Before taking the review quiz, feel
free to rewatch any course videos and look at our downloadable materials for
extra information.
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WHY WE BILL
Going to the doctor may seem like a one-to-one interaction, but in reality its
part of a large, complex system of information and payment. While the insured
patient may only have direct interaction with one person or healthcare provider,
that check-up is actually part of a three-party system.
Well look more at health insurance in just a bit, and well look even deeper into
the insurance claims process in More About Insurance and the Insurance Claims
Process later in Section 3.
The first party is the patient. The second party is the healthcare provider. The
term provider includes hospital, physicians, physical therapists, emergency
rooms, outpatient facilities, and any other place where medical services are
performed. The third and final party is the insurance company, or payer.
Its the medical billers job to negotiate and arrange for payment between these
three parties. Specifically, the biller ensures that the healthcare provider is
compensated for their services by billing both patients and payers. We bill
because healthcare providers need to be compensated for the services they
perform.
With each of these types of insurance, there are procedures and services that are
covered, and some that are not. Its the medical billers job to interpret a patients
insurance plan (or plans) and use this information to create an accurate claim.
In order to do this, the biller collects all of the information (found in a superbill) about the patient and the patients procedure, and compiles that into a bill
for the insurance company. This bill is called a claim, and it contains a patients
demographic information, medical history, and insurance coverage, in addition
to a report on what procedures were performed and why.
Lets take a quick step back to talk briefly about the insurance process. Health
insurance is insurance against medical expenses. Put simply, people with
health insurance, sometimes called the insured or subscribers, pay a certain
amount in order to have a degree of protection against medical costs.
The biller adds information about the patient and the patients visit, along
with the cost of the procedure or procedures performed, to the claim. So the
claim now has a what, a why, a who, a when, and a how much.
The creation of the claim is where medical billing most directly overlaps with
medical coding. Medical billers take the procedure and diagnosis codes used
by medical coders and use them to create claims. If youll remember from
Section 2, its the coders job to translate the medical report accurately into
numeric and alphanumeric codes.
CROSSWALKING
At this point, the biller also checks to make sure a claim is compliant. That is,
the claim is factually and formally correct. This is a complicated process, as
the biller must know what.
The claim allows the payer to fully evaluate the procedure and decide how
much they will reimburse the provider. If the claim is approved, its sent back
to the biller with the amount the payer is going to pay. The biller then takes
the amount, called the balance, and sends it on to the patient.
Well take a closer look at The Medical Billing Process and the claims process
specifically in More About Insurance and the Insurance Claims Process in this section.
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DAY-TO-DAY ACTIVITIES
WORKING WITH PATIENTS
Now that youve got a little more information about the overall process, heres
a quick look at the day-to-day activities of a professional medical biller.
When a patient receives medical services from a healthcare provider, theyre
typically presented with a bill at the end of their services. The biller creates
this bill by looking at the balance (if any) the patient has, adding the cost of
the procedure or service to that balance, deducting the amount covered by
insurance, and factoring in a patients copay or deductible.
Billers also work daily with a patients medical records. Like coders, billers
abstract a large amount of information from medical documents. Where
coders use medical reports to accurately translate medical services into code,
billers abstract information from patients medical records and insurance
plans to create accurate medical bills.
WORKING WITH
COMPUTERS
Computer programs are invaluable tools in the world of medical billing. Today,
almost every doctors office in the country uses some form of practice management software. This software keeps track of patients, helps schedule visits,
stores important medical information and generally helps the practice run
smoothly. Medical billers use practice management software to generate
reports on the status of claims, record payments from payers and patients,
create statements for patients, and much more.
CREATING CLAIMS
The majority of a medical billers day is spent creating and processing medical
claims. Billers need to be familiar with what type of claim an insurance payer
accepts, and adjust their claim creation accordingly. Billers may also work
frequently with insurance clearinghouses to streamline the claims process.
Billers also have to check that each claim is compliant. Ideally, every claim a
biller sends out will be clean. A clean claim contains no errors, and will be
processed speedily by the payer, ensuring that the healthcare provider gets
reimbursed quickly and efficiently.
NOTIFICATION AND
COMMUNICATION
COLLECTIONS
In the case of a patient with delinquent bills, a medical billing specialist may
have to arrange for collections on that debt. This is not necessarily a day-to-day
activity, as one would hope that a providers patients were not ignoring their
medical bills on a daily basis, but it is something to be aware of.
In the courses that follow, well learn more about the steps of the medical billing
process, the insurance claims process, Medicare and Medicaid, HIPAA and more.
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CMS 1500: A paper form used to submit medical claims to Medicare and Medicaid. Many commercial insurance payers also require providers to submit their
claims using a CMS 1500, making this one of the most common and important
tools in the medical billing process.
Applied to Deductible (ATD): The amount of money a patient owes a healthcare provider that goes to paying their annual deductible (See Deductible).
A patients deductible varies, and depends on that patients insurance policy.
Assignment of Benefits (AOB): Insurance payments paid directly to the
healthcare provider for medical services administered to the patient. The
assignment of benefits occurs after a claim has been successfully process.
Authorization: In certain cases, a patients insurance plan requires them to
get permission from the payer before receiving a certain medical service. If a
patient ignores this authorization, the claim for that procedure may be denied
and the patient will be saddled with the entire bill.
Beneficiary: The person who receives benefits or insurance coverage. Beneficiaries are not always the ones paying for the plan, as in the case of children
on their parents healthcare plans.
Capitation: An arrangement between a healthcare provider and an insurance
payer that pays the provider a fixed sum for every patient they take on. Capitated arrangements typically occur within HMOs (See Health Maintenance
Organization (HMO)). HMOs enlist patients to service providers, who are paid
a certain amount based on the patients health risks, age, history, race, etc.
Clean Claim: A claim received by an insurance payer that is free from errors
and processed is a timely manner. Clean claims are a huge boon to providers,
as they reduce turnaround time for the reimbursement process and lower the
need for time-consuming appeals processes. Many providers send their claims
to third parties, like clearinghouses (See Clearinghouse), that specialize in
creating clean claims.
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Electronic Claim: A claim sent electronically using a providers billing software. Electronic billing is a rapidly expanding field, but you should note claims
must still adhere to billing regulations laid out by the federal government.
Explanation of Benefits (EOB): A document attached to a processed claim
that explains to the provider and patient which services an insurance company
will cover. EOBs may also explain what is wrong when a claim is denied.
Electronic Remittance Advice (ERA): A digital version of the EOB, this
document describes how much of a claim the insurance company will pay
and, in the case of a denied claim, explains why the claim was returned.
Financial Responsibility: Financial responsibility describes which party
insurance payer or patientowes money to the healthcare provider. Financial
responsibility is outline in the patients healthcare insurance agreement.
Fiscal Intermediary (FI): A Medicare representative who processes Medicare
claims.
Guarantor: An individual paying for the insurance plan who is not also the
patient. Parents are the most common examples of guarantors. You may also
see guarantors referred to as responsible parties.
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA): An law
passed in 1996 that has lasting effects on the healthcare industry today. Title I
of the act protects workers health insurance when they change or lose jobs.
Title II of the Act established standards and best practices in electronic health
care. (Refer to HIPAA 101 and HIPAA and Medical Billing later in Section 3.)
Health Maintenance Organization (HMO): A network of healthcare providers
that offer coverage to patients for medical services exclusively within that
network. (Well cover this type of insurance more thoroughly in More About
Insurance and the Insurance Claims Process later in Section 3.)
Indemnity: Also known as fee-for-service insurance, this type of insurance
allows patients to receive care from any healthcare provider in exchange for
higher fees and deductibles. Unlike an HMO, this plan allows for greater flexibility on the patients part, but it does cost significantly more.
Independent Practice Association (IPA): A professional organization of
physicians or healthcare providers who have a contract with an HMO. HMOs
contract IPAs to provide services to patients within the HMOs network, but
their individual practices do not have to be part of the HMO network.
Managed Care Plan: A type of insurance plan wherein patients are only
eligible to receive health care within the insurance companys network. HMOs
and IPAS (See Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) and Independent
Practice Association (IPA)) are examples of the managed care system.
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108 | SECTION 3
SUPERBILL
REGISTER PATIENTS
PREPARE CLAIMS /
CHECK COMPLIANCE
Register Patients
When a patient calls to set up an appointment with a healthcare provider, they
effectively preregister for their doctors visit. If the patient has seen the provider before, their information is on file with the provider, and the patient need
only explain the reason for their visit. If the patient is new, that person must
provide personal and insurance information to the provider to ensure that that
they are eligible to receive services from the provider.
CONFIRM FINANCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY
PATIENT
CHECK-IN & CHECK-OUT
The superbill contains all of the necessary information about medical service
provided. This includes the name of the provider, the name of the physician,
the name of the patient, the procedures performed, the codes for the diagnosis
and procedure, and other pertinent medical information. This information is
vital in the creation of the claim.
The medical biller takes the superbill from the medical coder and puts it either
into a paper claim form, or into the proper practice management or billing software. Billers will also include the cost of the procedures in the claim. They
wont send the full cost to the payer, but rather the amount they expect the
payer to pay, as laid out in the payers contract with the patient and the provider.
Once the biller has created the medical claim, he or she is responsible for ensuring that the claim meets the standards of compliance, both for coding and format.
The accuracy of the coding process is generally left up to the coder, but the
biller does review the codes to ensure that the procedures coded are billable.
Whether a procedure is billable depends on the patients insurance plan and
the regulations laid out by the payer.
Financial responsibility describes who owes what for a particular doctors visit.
Once the biller has the pertinent info from the patient, that biller can then
determine which services are covered under the patients insurance plan.
Insurance coverage differs dramatically between companies, individuals, and
plans, so the biller must check each patients coverage in order to assign the bill
correctly. Certain insurance plans do not cover certain services or prescription
medications. If the patients insurance does not cover the procedure or service
to be rendered, the biller must make the patient aware that they will cover the
entirety of the bill.
While claims may vary in format, they typically have the same basic information.
Each claim contains the patient information (their demographic info and medical
history) and the procedures performed (in CPT or HCPCS codes). Each of these
procedures is paired with a diagnosis code (an ICD code) that demonstrates the
medical necessity. The price for these procedures is listed as well. Claims also
have information about the provider, listed via a National Provider Index (NPI)
number. Some claims will also include a Place of Service code, which details
what type of facility the medical services were performed in.
Billers must also ensure that the bill meets the standards of billing compliance.
Billers typically must follow guidelines laid out by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and the Office of the Inspector General (OIG).
Well discuss HIPAA and its effect on medical billing in Course 3-8 and 3-9. OIG
compliance standards are relatively straightforward, but lengthy, and for reasons
of space and efficiency, we wont cover them in any great depth here.
The providers office will also collect copayments during patient check-in
or check-out. Copayments are always collected at the point of service, but its
up to the provider to determine whether the patient pays the copay before or
immediately after their visit.
Once the patient checks out, the medical report from that patients visit is sent
to the medical coder, who abstracts and translates the information in the report
into accurate, useable medical code. This report, which also includes demographic information on the patient and information about the patients medical
TRANSMIT CLAIMS
Since the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA),
all health entities covered by HIPAA have been required to submit their claims
electronically, except in certain circumstances. Most providers, clearinghouses,
and payers are covered by HIPAA.
Note that HIPAA does not require physicians to conduct all transactions electronically. Only those standard transactions listed under HIPAA guidelines
must be completed electronically. Claims are one such standard transaction.
110 | SECTION 3
Billers may still use manual claims, but this practice has significant drawbacks.
Manual claims have a high rate of errors, low levels of efficiency, and take a
long time to get from providers to payers. Billing electronically saves time,
effort, and money, and significantly reduces human or administrative error in
the billing process.
SUPERBILL
The biller reviews this report in order to make sure all procedures listed on the
initial claim are accounted for in the report. They will also check to make sure
the codes listed on the payers report match those of the initial claim. Finally,
the biller will check to make sure the fees in the report are accurate with regard
to the contract between the payer and the provider.
MONITOR ADJUDICATION
REJECTED CLAIM
DENIED CLAIM
If there are any discrepancies, the biller/provider will enter into an appeal process with the payer. This process is complicated and depends on rules that are
specific to payers and to the states in which a provider is located. Effectively, a
claims appeal is the process by which a provider attempts to secure the proper
reimbursement for their services. This can be a long and arduous process, which
is why its imperative that billers create accurate, clean claims on the first go.
GENERATE PATIENT
STATEMENTS
Once a claim reaches a payer, it undergoes a process called adjudication. In adjudication, a payer evaluates a medical claim and decides whether the claim is
valid/compliant and, if so, how much of the claim the payer will reimburse the
provider for. Its at this stage that a claim may be accepted, denied, or rejected.
A quick word about these terms. An accepted claim is, obviously, one that has
been found valid by the payer. Accepted does not necessarily mean that the
payer will pay the entirety of the bill. Rather, they will process the claim within
the rules of the arrangement they have with their subscriber (the patient).
A rejected claim is one that the payer has found some error with. If a claim is
missing important patient information, or if there is a miscoded procedure or
diagnosis, the claim will be rejected, and will be returned to the provider/biller.
In the case of rejected claims, the biller may correct the claim and resubmit it.
A denied claim is one that the payer refuses to process payment for the medical
services rendered. This may occur when a provider bills for a procedure that is
not included in a patients insurance coverage. This might include a procedure
for a pre-existing condition (if the insurance plan does not cover such a procedure).
Once the payer adjudication is complete, the payer will send a report to the provider/biller, detailing what and how much of the claim they are willing to pay
and why. This report will list the procedures the payer will cover and the amount
payer has assigned for each procedure. This often differs from the fees listed in
the initial claim. The payer usually has a contract with the provider that stipulates the fees and reimbursement rates for a number of procedures. The report
will also provide explanations as to why certain procedures will not be covered
by the payer.
(If the patient has secondary insurance, the biller takes the amount left over
after the primary insurance returns the approved claim and sends it to the
patients secondary insurance).
Once the biller has received the report from the payer, its time to make the
statement for the patient. The statement is the bill for the procedure or procedures the patient received from the provider. Once the payer has agreed to pay
the provider for a portion of the services on the claim, the remaining amount
is passed to the patient.
In certain cases, a biller may include an Explanation of Benefits (EOB) with the
statement. As we learned in the previous course, an EOB describes what benefits,
and therefore what kind of coverage, a patient receives under their plan. EOBs
can be useful in explaining to patients why certain procedures were covered
while others were not.
FOLLOW UP ON
PATIENT PAYMENTS
AND HANDLE COLLECTIONS
The final phase of the billing process is ensuring those bills get, well, paid.
Billers are in charge of mailing out timely, accurate medical bills, and then
following up with patients whose bills are delinquent. Once a bill is paid, that
information is stored with the patients file.
If the patient is delinquent in their payment, or if they do not pay the full
amount, it is the responsibility of the biller to ensure that the provider is properly reimbursed for their services. This may involve contacting the patient directly,
sending follow-up bills, or, in worst-case scenarios, enlisting a collection agency.
Each provider has its own set of guidelines and timelines when it comes to bill
payment, notifications, and collections, so youll have to refer to the providers
billing standards before engaging in these activities.
112 | SECTION 3
Heres a breakdown:
Health care is, as many have noted, one of the largest and fastest-growing
sectors of the American economy. Americans spend almost $8,000 annually
per capita on healthcare, and a significant portion of that sum is spend on health
insurance.
HOW HEALTH
INSURANCE WORKS
EXAMPLE
Many plans also have deductibles, which are monetary limits after which the
health insurance company assumes the cost of the medical procedure or service.
For instance, if a person has an insurance plan with a $100 deductible, he will
pay up to $100 for a medical procedure, and his insurance company will pay for
the remaining amount (provided that procedure is valid and within their insurance arrangement).
INDEMNITY
MANAGED CARE
We covered indemnity insurance briefly in Course 3-1, but lets return to it now
for the sake or review. Indemnity is the most basic and straightforward kind of
insurance, in that you pay a premium to an insurance company to insulate you
from medical expenses. Youll likely have a deductible and, depending on your
insurance plan, a co-pay or co-insurance. Subscribers to indemnity plans have no
restrictions on which providers they can see, but indemnity plans are typically
much more expensive than managed care options, which well review now.
We touched briefly on managed care and managed care organizations in our
introduction to this section. Lets revisit these now. Managed Care Organizations
(MCOs) are groups, organizations, or other bodies that seek to reduce the cost of
healthcare and increase the efficacy or health services through a number of means.
Managed care organizations, for instance, may confine the providers the
subscriber may see to a specific network of doctors and facilities. In general, MCOs
have fixed costs that are lower than most indemnity plans, but restrict
the options a patient has for where to get treatment.
There are three main types of MCO, which well discuss below. Bear in mind
that these are simplified descriptions of these managed care organizations.
MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZATIONS
114 | SECTION 3
MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZATIONS
BILLING EXAMPLE
Lets say were billing for a procedure that cost $1500. The patient who received
the procedure has a CDHP with a deductible of $1000. In order to create an
accurate claim, wed look at the patients coverage plan, and assign the $1000
deductible to the patient, and then pass the $500 on to the payer.
Likewise, if were looking at a patient with coverage under an HMO, but that
patient sees a provider out-of-network, we need to know that we cant send a
claim to that HMO, but must instead bill the patient directly. (Recall that HMO
subscribers cannot receive insurance coverage if they see providers out of their
network).
Knowing the ins and outs of insurance planswhat type of coverage they
provide, how much to deduct and send to the payeris an integral part of the
billing process.
CLAIM FORMS
Lets talk briefly about electronic and manual claim forms. HIPAA regulations
mandate that most claim transmissions be completed electronically. (Well
cover this more thoroughly in HIPAA 101 and HIPAA and Medical Billing later
in Section 3) That doesnt mean that all claims are submitted electronically,
though that would probably be ideal. Billers do use paper claims from time to
time, and its
The two most common claim forms are the CMS-1500 and the UB-04. These
two forms look and operate similarly, but they are not interchangeable. The
UB-04 is based on the CMS-1500, but is actually a variation on itits also
known as the CMS-1450 form. CMS-1500 forms are used for non-institutional
healthcare facilities (e.g., private practices), while UB-04 (CMS-1450) forms are
generally used in institutional healthcare facilities, such as hospitals.
Both CMS-1500 and UB-04 have a number of lines where billers can input the
procedure code, the diagnosis code, and cost of the procedure. As in medical
coding, every procedure listed must have an appropriate diagnosis code listed
with it. In instances where a provider performs a long list of procedures or medical services, and this list is too long for a single form, billers simply complete
multiple CMS-1500 or UB-04 forms until theyve listed the full number
of medical procedures.
Under HIPAA regulations, standard transactions like claims are required to
be submitted electronically. There are some exceptions to this rule, however.
For one, a practice under 10 employees may use manual claims. Also, a practice
that has experience a power outage may submit claims manually if those claims
are time-sensitive.
The process of billing an insurance company or other third-party payer is difficult to summarize because so much of it depends on variables. These variables
include things like the patients insurance plan, the payers guidelines for claim
submission, and the providers contract with the payer. Our goal in these courses
is to prepare you for formal training in medical billing, not give you fine-grain
detail on the various technicalities inherent in the claims process. That said,
we will provide you with a number of working examples in Section 4, and, in
the following courses, well learn about two of the most important aspects of
the medical billing profession and its relation to third-party payers: Medicare
and Medicaid, and HIPAA.
116 | SECTION 3
Part D The most recent addition to the Medicare, Part D was instituted after
the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003.
Part D provides coverage for prescription drug costs during healthcare. Patients
must actively enroll in Part D (and thus pay its monthly premiums) if they are
to receive coverage from this portion of Medicare.
MEDICARE
In order to qualify for Medicare benefits, a person must be: 65 years of age;
a United States citizen; and be enrolled in Social Security. Medicare makes
exceptions for persons under 65 with end-stage renal failure (which requires
regular dialysis treatment), and persons under 65 who have other certain disabilities or illnesses (like Lou Gehrigs Disease).
MEDICAID
Created in 1965 with the passage of the Social Security Act, Medicare provides
health coverage to American citizens 65 years of age or older, and to citizens
with certain debilitating diseases.
Unlike Medicare, which is a federal program with universal standards, Medicaid regulations and restrictions vary by state. Each state has to maintain its
own Medicaid program (like Californias Medi-Cal or Wisconsins BadgerCare).
Each of these state-based Medicaid programs still has to meet certain standards
established by the federal government, but you should expect to see a wider
range of variation in Medicaid policies than Medicare policies.
The basic principle of whether Medicare does or does not cover a service
depends on whether the service is medically necessary. This necessity is
affected by federal laws, national regulations, and local coverage decisions.
The program itself is divided into four sections, or Parts. Its easier to understand Medicare when we break it up into these four Parts. Each of these Parts
has its own set of monthly premiums, and coverage under these often comes
with a fixed deductible as well.
MEDICARE SECTIONS
Part A Confined mostly to inpatient services. This coverage may extend from
overnight stays based on pressing medical concern all the way to hospice care
and other long-term stays in a hospital or nursing facility. In order to contain
costs and encourage higher quality healthcare, Part A comes with a number of
restrictions and criteria. For instance, if a patient needs to return to a hospital
within 30 days for an identical procedure, Medicare will not pay the provider
for this service.
Part B Provides medical insurance for procedures and services not covered in
Part A. This includes physician services like x-rays and some kinds of nursing
care, along with durable medical equipment like canes and walkers (which you
may remember from HCPCS). Along with Part A, Part B of Medicare makes up
the basic Medicare coverage package. (Part B may also be deferred if the person
receiving Medicare coverage is still working).
Part C Also known as the Medicare Advantage plan, Part C allows Medicare
subscribers to receive the entirety of their coverage through a private organization. Medicare Advantage is offered by private HMO and PPO organizations.
Subscription to Part C does not require subscription to Parts A and B. Under
the Medicare Advantage, the federal government reimburses the private payer,
and no claims are filed to Medicare under this program. Part C often comes
with Part D.
Medicaid is a joint state and federal healthcare program that provides care to
persons who might not otherwise be able to afford it. Medicaid provides coverage to low-income families and individuals, disabled individuals, and certain
elderly persons.
Since some states Medicaid coverage is more extensive than others, lets focus
only on the minimum requirements for the program, as laid out by the CMS and
the federal government.
Below youll find seven of the basic services covered by Medicaid.
BASIC SERVICES
COVERED BY MEDICAID
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120 | SECTION 3
Only those providers who are licensed to bill for Part D may bill Medicare for
vaccines or prescription drugs provided under Part D. If the provider is not a
licensed Part D provider, the biller must assign that total directly to the patient
(or the patients secondary insurance, if they have it, and if it covers that procedure or prescription).
Like billing to a private third-party payer, billers must send claims to Medicare
and Medicaid. These claims are very similar to the claims youd send to a private
third-party payer, with a few notable exceptions.
As youll remember from our Courses on HCPCS, whenever a procedure code is
sent to Medicaid or Medicare, these procedures codes are automatically listed as
HCPCS. The first Level of HCPCS is identical to CPT, so even the only thing thats
really changing is the codes designation as a HCPCS code, rather than a CPT code.
In certain cases, the provider will decline the assignment of the claim, and
Medicare will assign payment directly to the patient. In cases like this, the
patient, as opposed to the payer, must reimburse the provider for their services.
Like many other third-party payers, Medicare and Medicaid are covered by
HIPAA. This means that standard transactions like claims must be sent electronically, except in certain circumstances. In instances where a paper claim
must be sent, billers should use either the CMS-1500 or the UB-04 forms
described in the previous course. (Which form to use may depend on what
type of procedure was performed by the provider). Well cover HIPAA in
greater depth in the next two courses.
Since these two government programs are high-volume payers, billers send
claims directly to Medicare and Medicaid. That means billers do not need to
go through a clearinghouse for these claims, and it also means that the onus
for clean claims is on the biller.
Before we get into specifics with Medicare, heres a quick note on the administrative process involved. When a claim is sent to Medicare, its processed by a
Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC). The MAC evaluates (or adjudicates)
each claim sent to Medicare, and processes the claim. This process usually takes
around 30 days.
When billing for traditional Medicare (Parts A and B), billers will follow the
same protocol as for private, third-party payers, and input patient information,
NPI numbers, procedure codes, diagnosis codes, price, and Place of Service codes.
We can get almost all of this information from the superbill, which comes from
the medical coder.
If a biller has to use manual forms to bill Medicare, a few complications can arise.
For instance, billing for Part A requires a UB-04 form (which is also known as
a CMS-1450). Part B, on the other hand, requires a CMS-1500. For the most part,
however, billers will enter the proper information into a software program and
then use that program to transfer the claim to Medicare directly.
Parts C and D, however, are more complicated. Because Part C is actually a private
insurance plan paid for, in part, by the federal government, biller are not allowed
to bill Medicare for services delivered to a patient who has Part C coverage.
You should be aware, as well, that Parts A and B of Medicare have monthly and
annual premiums, in addition to coinsurance arrangements depending on what
kind of service the patient receives. These deductibles, premiums, co-pays, and
coinsurance rates are fixed by CMS, but they can vary greatly between patients
and procedures. Part of the challenge of filing a claim with Medicare is getting
the proper number for each patient.
Creating claims for Medicaid can be even more difficult than creating claims
for Medicare. Because Medicaid varies state-by-state, so do its regulations and
billing requirements. As such, the claim forms and formats the biller must use
will change by state. Its up to the biller to check with their states Medicaid program to learn what forms and protocols the state follows.
In general, the medical biller creates claims like they would for Part A or B of
Medicare or for a private, third-party payer. The claim must contain the proper
information about the place of service, the NPI, the procedures performed and the
diagnoses listed. The claim must also, of course, list the price of the procedures.
Be aware when billing for Medicaid that many Medicaid programs cover a larger
number of medical services than Medicare, which means that the program has
fewer exceptions.
One final note: Medicaid is the last payer to be billed for a service. That is,
if a payer has an insurance plan, that plan should be billed before Medicaid.
In general, its much too difficult to describe the full process of billing Medicaid
without going into an in-depth description of specific state programs. As this is
just a basic introductory course, we wont go into much more depth than this.
As you can see from this Course, billing for services covered by Medicare and
Medicaid is a complicated, involved process. Billing these two payers requires
an incredible amount of diligence and patience. Creating claims for these two
programs is a valuable skill. Its one that youll learn more thoroughly when
you train formally for a career in medical billing.
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The goal of the medical biller is to ensure that the provider is properly reimbursed for their services. In the pursuit of this goal, errors, both human and
electronic, are unfortunately unavoidable. Since the process of medical billing
involves two incredibly important elements (namely, health and money), its important to reduce as many of these errors as possible. In these brief course, well
introduce you to some common errors in the medical billing practice.
Before we jump into that discussion, however, lets review the difference between a rejected and denied claim.
DENIED AND
REJECTED CLAIMS
As youll recall from previous Courses, a rejected claim is not the same as a denied one. A rejected claim is one that contains one or many errors found before
the claim is processed. These errors prevent the insurance company from paying the bill as it is composed, and the rejected claim is returned to the biller in
order to be corrected. A rejected claim may be the result of a clerical error, or it
may come down to mismatched procedure and ICD codes. A rejected claim will
be returned to the biller with an explanation of the error. These claims are then
corrected and resubmitted.
Clearinghouses employ a process colloquially called scrubbing in order to
avoid rejected claims. The end goal, for billers and clearinghouses, is a clean
claim.
Denied claims, on the other hand, are claims that the payer has processed and
deemed unpayable. These claims may violate the terms of the payer-patient
contract, or they may just contain some sort of vital error that was only caught
after processing. Payers will include an explanation for why a claim is denied
when they send the denied claim back to the biller. Many times, these claims
can be appealed and sent back to the payer for processing, but this process can
be time-consuming and, therefore, costly. For that reason, its important to try
and get as many claims clean on the first go, and not waste any time billing for
procedures that are incompatible with a patients coverage.
SIMPLE ERRORS
Like medical coding, were always striving for the highest level of accuracy in
our codes, and were also required to provide as complete a picture as possible
of the medical procedure(s). If you can cut down on these simple errors in your
medical billing, youll have a much higher number of clean claims.
The above are some of the most frequent errors a medical biller comes across.
These errors directly affect the status of a claim, which makes them very important to watch out for.
But there are other errors to watch out for as you go through your day as a medical biller. Some of these are, regrettably, out of the billers hands, but theyre
important to watch out for nonetheless.
Now that weve reviewed denied and rejected claims, lets look at some of the
basic errors that can get a claim returned to the biller.
Undercoding
Undercoding occurs when a provider intentionally leaves out a procedure code from a superbill, or codes for a less serious or extensive
procedure than the patient received. Undercoding may be done to avoid
audits for certain procedures, or to try and save money for the patient.
This process is illegal, and counts as a type of fraud.
Upcoding
Like undercoding, this is a fraudulent process wherein the provider
intentionally misrepresents the work they performed on a patient. In
upcoding, a practice enters codes for services a patient did not receive,
or codes for more intensive procedures then the provider actually performed. Upcoding is typically done in an attempt to receive more money
from a payer. This, like undercoding, is a fraudulent practice, and
should be noted and reported immediately.
Poor documentation
While not a fraudulent practice like upcoding or undercoding, poor
documentation can also negatively affect the claims process. If a provider has provided incorrect, illegible, or incomplete documentation of a
procedure or patient visit, its difficult to make an accurate or complete
claim. In cases of sloppy documentation, the biller should contact the
provider and ask for more information.
No EOB on denied claim
In certain cases, the payer may fail to attach the Explanation of Benefits
(EOB) to a denied claim. In cases like this, its difficult to note the error
on a denied claim, which slows down the (already slow) appeals process.
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Its always important to be proactive when youre medical billing. Here are a
couple of things you can do to catch medical billing errors before they happen.
Stay Current
Billers need to stay up-to-date on billing and coding trends. Coding especially will change as new codes are introduced and older ones phased
out. Its important to check on new protocols in medical coding regularly. Study new codes and be aware of how they affect billing.
Be Diligent
You should always double check your work when youre creating a
claim. Simple clerical errors like missing digits or misspelled names
can be the difference between an approved and a rejected claim, so go
over each claim you create before you send it off.
Communicate
Part of reducing medical billing errors comes down to coordinating
effectively within the providers office. Make sure you communicate
regularly and effectively with other personnel in the providers office,
including the physician, and dont be afraid to ask questions about possible errors on the claim.
Follow Through
After you send a claim in to a payer, you can follow up with a representative working on that claim. They may be able to alert you to any errors
theyve already caught, in which case you can begin work on making a
new, error-free claim. (Wait until they send it back to you, of course!)
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HIPAA 101
By this point, youve probably seen a few mentions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). In previous courses, weve talked about
HIPAA in regards to its regulation of standard transmissions between providers and payers. These standard transmissions include claims, meaning HIPAA
regulates a huge portion of the medical billing process.
Title II also established a set of rules limiting who can distribute your medical information, and when. These rules give patients more control over their
medical records, including who can access them and at what times. These rules
prevent anyoneincluding providers, payers, or government agenciesfrom
viewing or distributing a patients medical information for anything not related
to treatment for the patient. For instance, on a workers compensation claim for
a broken finger, a biller would not include the patients history of heart disease.
But what, exactly, is HIPAA? In this course, youll find out. In the course following this one, well show you how HIPAA affects medical billing.
WHAT IS HIPAA
Created in 1996, HIPAA is an act of Congress that protects the health insurance
of workers and their families if they lose their jobs. HIPAA also protects the privacy of children 12 to 18 years of age and establishes a number of regulations for
the electronic transfer of healthcare data. This last point is where well spend
the most time in our summary, but lets look at the whole Act in brief first.
HIPAA is divided into five sections, or Titles. For the sake of this course, well
focus only on the first two Titles, which are the largest and most far-reaching.
TITLE I
Title I establishes rules for how group health organizations (like managed care
organizations) interact with patients. Title I limits the restrictions a group
health organization can put into place based solely on a pre-existing condition.
Title I also limits the amount of time it takes to get coverage for that pre-existing condition. Specifically, once a person has coverage under a group health
organization, that person must receive coverage for their pre-existing condition
within 12 months (or 18 months in certain circumstances).
Title I also provides protection to individuals and their families when that individual changes or loses their job. If an individual has health insurance under
their old job, they are allowed to keep that insurance until the point when their
new health care coverage kicks in. There are a few caveats to this, of course, and
HIPAA does not provide permanent health insurance. It does, however, ensure
that persons out of work can continue their health care coverage while in between jobs.
As you may be able to tell, this Title of HIPAA affects insurance companies and
their interactions with patients much more than it does medical billers. Title II
is where well see HIPAA affect medical billing more directly.
TITLE II
Title II lays out a set of security guidelines that ensure the safety of both physical and electronic records. These regulations limits who can view medical
information, and also dictates how this information is transferred.
TITLE II AND
MEDICAL BILLING
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Each of these types of transaction forms has their own rules and formats. For
simplicitys sake, weve focused expressly on the health care claim (the first code
set number listed below), and well continue to do so for the rest of the courses.
The additional forms, and their code set numbers, are listed for your general
knowledge, and to give you a better idea of the scope of the medical billers
responsibilities.
Whether you know it or not, youre actually already familiar with many of the
provisions laid out by HIPAA. One of the most readily felt impacts of HIPAA is
the standardization of medical codes used by coders and billers.
As we discussed in the last Course, HIPAA formalized the use of ICD codes for
diagnosis and CPT and HCPCS codes for procedural reporting. We use these
codes every day in medical billing to create claims.
Another one of the simple ways HIPAA regulations affects the creation of
claims is the National Provider Identifier (NPI). As youll recall from last Course,
the NPI is a ten-character number (it may be alphanumeric) that corresponds to
a unique healthcare provider. NPIs are required on every claim submitted under
HIPAA regulations.
HIPAA establishes and manages electronic medical transactions. As we covered
in the last course, Title II of HIPAA requires all providers and billers covered by
HIPAA to submit claims electronically using the approved format. This format
is known as ASC X12 005010. You may encounter the shorthand for this form
as HIPAA 5010. (An important side note: the 5010 format was created with
ICD-10-CM in mind, and has the ability to accept both ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM
codes.)
Its important to remember that HIPAA 5010 does not necessarily prescribe the
format of a claim, so much as the way it is transferred. You can think of HIPAA
5010 transactions as vehicles with uniform exteriors. They all must look the
same, but each vehicle might carry different passengers in different arrangements (in this case, medical information).
Within ASC X12 005010, each type of transaction gets its own code set number.
Lets look at these code set numbers, and the type of transactions they correspond to, now. Youll see that each code set number is preceded by an X12. This
is to remind you that the code set is monitored and maintained by the ASC X12.
Each of these transactions takes the form of a particular Electronic Data Interchange (EDI).
HIPAA regulations require billers making transactions like the ones above to
use the prescribed form. Just as medical coders have to use the appropriate code
set to describe a procedure or diagnosis, so too do medical billers have to use the
right type of EDI to perform a certain billing task.
As you can see, HIPAAs impact extends to almost every aspect of the medical
billing process, from how records are stored and accessed to how codes are used
in creating claims. As you pursue your formal training in medical billing, youll
learn even more about HIPAA and the ways its affects medical billing. For this
course, however, well leave you with this overview and continue to the Section
Review and Section Quiz.
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If the claim is approved, its sent back to the biller with an explanation of what,
and how much of, each procedure the payer will pay for. The biller subtracts that
number from the total cost of the procedure and comes up with the balance. The
balance is then passed on to the patient, who is responsible for the remainder of
the balance.
WHO PARTICIPATES IN
MEDICAL BILLING
Medical billing is the process of ensuring a provider is paid for their services. In
the healthcare process, there are three principal parties: the patient, the provider, and the payer.
The medical biller acts as a sort of financial conduit between these three
parties, ensuring that the provider is reimbursed by the payer for the services it (the provider) performed on the patient.
Lets look at this another way: the patient has an agreement with the payer (lets
say its a Health Maintenance Organization, or HMO) that provides that patient,
or subscriber, with health insurance. That patient comes down with the flu and
goes to see the doctor (provider). The provider diagnoses the flu in the patient
and prescribes some medication.
The provider has now provided medical services to the patient, and needs to
be reimbursed. The providers office generates a medical report, which is then
coded (by the medical coder) and transferred to the biller. The biller looks at the
patients insurance agreement with the payer (the patients HMO) and figures
out how much the payer is contractually obligated to pay the provider.
The above is fairly simplified version of the medical billing process. There are
a number of caveats and complications that can arise in the process of creating
a health care claim, and many of them stem from the way payers interact with
patients and providers.
When a person is subscribing to an insurance policy, theyre faced with a number of options. There are many different kinds of insurance, and many different
levels of coverage within each kind. This variation naturally affects how we
pursue medical billing. Different levels of coverage, different deductibles, and
different kinds of coinsurance or co-pay arrangements all play large parts in
how we create claims.
The most basic type of insurance is indemnity insurance. Under this kind of insurance, a subscriber (the patient) can go to any provider they wish. Indemnity
insurance typically has higher premiums (the monthly or annual membership
fees charged by the insurance company) and deductibles, but offers patients
more flexibility.
A deductible is the amount of money a patient must pay before their insurance
coverage kicks in. For example, if a patient has a $200 deductible and receives a
$600 medical procedure, that patient has to pay the $200 before the payer will
cover the cost of the medical service.
Managed care is a larger, more popular type of insurance. In managed care, certain restrictions are placed on what providers the patient may see, in exchange
for lower premiums and deductibles. The most popular types of managed care
are the Health Maintenance Organization (HMO), Preferred Provider Organization (PPO), Point-of-Service (POS), and Consumer-Driven Healthcare Plans
(CDHP).
The biller puts the diagnosis codes, procedure codes, patient information, provider information, and cost of the procedures into a document called a claim.
This claim can be manual (paper) or electronic. Today, most billers send claims
electronically.
With an HMO, a patient must see a provider within a prescribed network. Seeing
an out-of-network provider will not be covered by the HMO. In a PPO, patients
are allowed to see any provider, but will pay less if they see a provider in a certain (preferred) network. With a POS model, a subscriber typically receives
most of the care in-network, but can see an out-of-network physician if they pay
a higher fee, making it much like a PPO.
The biller sends the claim to the payer, who then evaluates (adjudicates)
it, and decides whether they will approve, deny, or reject the claim. In many
cases, a biller will send the claim, or information to create the claim, to a
clearinghouse, which is a third-party organization that specializes in creating
error-free, or clean, claims. Creating clean claims is imperative, because if a
claim is returned with errors, it may take more time to correct and re-process.
Finally there is the Consumer-Driven Healthcare Plan (CDHP). CDHPs allow patients to receive PPO-like benefits after theyve paid a certain (high) deductible.
A savings account is included in the CDHP, which allows subscribes to save up
untaxed earnings to pay for future healthcare. In general, the CDHP is designed
to give consumers (that is, subscribers/patients) more control over their healthcare coverage.
134 | SECTION 3
While many of these insurance plans differ, they each have similar mechanics.
Those include premiums and deductibles (both of which we just discussed) and
co-pays and coinsurances.
Medicare, which is run by the federal government, Medicaid differs from state
to state. Each state has to meet certain minimum requirements for coverage, but
there is no universal Medicaid plan.
A co-pay is a small amount that the subscriber must pay before any medical
service is rendered. The amount for a co-pay is fixed and depends on what type
of medical procedure is performed.
HIPAA
So how does this affect medical billing? When we create claims, we include the
cost of the total procedure in the claim we send the payer. Each insurance plan
features deductibles, copays, and/or coinsurances. This means that the amount
a biller sends to a payer will differ based on each patients insurance plan.
Many people in the United States receive their health insurance coverage from
the large, government-funded payers known as Medicare and Medicaid.
Medicare is a social insurance program designed to help elderly people and
individuals with certain disabilities and diseases pay for their health care.
American citizens over the age of 65, who have registered for Social Security are
eligible for Medicare coverage, along with people with Lou Gehrigs disease or
end-stage renal failure.
Medicare is divided into four main parts, each of which covers a certain type of
healthcare. Part A of Medicare covers medically necessary health services like
hospital stays and treatment at inpatient facilities. Part B covers other necessary services, and also extends coverage for preventive services and general
health maintenance.
Part C, also known as the Medicare Advantage, allows subscribers to receive
private insurance, which is then funded by the government. Part D covers prescription drug costs. Parts A and B together make up whats known as Original
Medicare, which is still the most common type of Medicare coverage.
Medicaid is a government program that provides healthcare coverage to poverty-stricken individuals and families, along with disabled persons. Unlike
The vast majority of claims today are sent electronically. Electronic claims are
faster, more cost-efficient, and reduce human error significantly. As more people age and require medical treatment, cutting down on administrative tasks
like filing claims manually is very important to an efficient medical system.
HIPAA also sets standards for how providers interact with and store the
information of their patients.
WEBSITE
You can find the Section 3 Review Quiz on our website at:
www.medicalbillingandcodingcertification.com
136 | SECTION 4
EXAMPLE 1
Lets start off with a relatively straightforward visit to the doctors office. Heres
some context: our patient is in his late 20s and has not seen this doctor before.
Hes had a fever, a cough, some slight chest pain, and difficulty breathing.
Heres the hypothetical medical report.
Patient is a 27-year-old while male. Not an established patient. Height is 74 inches,
weight 220 lbs. Patient states he is allergic to penicillin, but has no other outstanding
medical history. Does not smoke, exercises moderately.
Patient presents with chills, headache, cough, fever (101 degrees), difficulty breathing.
Examination via stethoscope yields heavy rales. Percussion test on thorax suggests
buildup in lungs. Streptococcal pneumoniae suspected.
Obtained blood sample for Antistreptolysin O titer. Results yield level of ASO above
200. Diagnosis of streptococcal pneumoniae confirmed.
Prescribed patient two weeks of 500mg azithromycin (Zithromax), and scheduled
follow-up for next week.
Lets start abstracting the information from this medical report. We can start
right away with the most straightforward code: the diagnosis. The doctor has
diagnosed streptococcal pneumoniae in this patient. (Remember, we always
code the definitive diagnosis, meaning we wouldnt code the cough, fever, or
any of the other symptoms unless the doctor could nto come to a definitive
diagnosis).
So, in order to get the proper diagnosis code, we turn to the ICD-9-CM manual.
Wed turn to Chapter 8, in the range 460 519, for Diseases of the Respiratory
System. In that section wed find 481 pneumococcal pneumonia [streptococcus pneumoniae pneumonia], which is the code were looking for: pneumonia
caused by streptococcal bacteria. In this case, there are no subcategories or
subclassifications. 481 is our diagnosis code.
(Bear in mind that you could also just look up Streptococcus Pneumoniae in
the alphabetic index of ICD-9-CM. Were taking the long route for the sake of
instruction).
Now we get into the procedure codes. There are a couple here. Firstly, since a
new patient is coming into the doctors office with an as-yet unspecified condition, we know its an Evaluation and Management (E&M) procedure. Secondly,
we see that the doctor performed a test on the patient to confirm the diagnosis.
Thats a pathology and laboratory test.
Lets start with the E&M codes. You may think that the prescription of medication by the doctor falls into yet another category of procedure, but prescribing
a medication is actually part of the E&M process. So too are the basic examinations the doctor performed (the thoracic percussion and the use of the stethoscope). Those are each part of the History, Exam, and Medical Decision-Making
portions of E&M codes, often abbreviated to HEM. The doctor asked the patient
about his history, he performed various exams, and he made a medical decision
to prescribe antibiotics.
When youre selecting E&M codes, you look at the intensity of the evaluation
and patient management. We can do this by the time spent with the patient, or
we can do it by evaluating the amount of work that goes into the HEM.
E&M codes will list the level of intensity (and the time) of the procedure in
their description. In our example, since the patient is new, there will be a more
involved history section of HEM. This would go with a thorough examination.
The medical decision-making of prescribing antibiotics by oral administration
is relatively low-risk, so this E&M procedure would probably be of low to moderate complexity.
Since the patient is a new patient, wed look for codes in that subsection of E&M.
Wed find code 99203, which includes a detailed history; a detailed examination; medical decision making of low complexity. Thats our E&M code.
But the doctor also performed a test that confirmed his diagnosis. How do we
code that? Since the doctor took a sample from the patient to test, we know its
in the Pathology Section of the CPT Manual.
A little medical background here: the test in the medical report was an Antistreptolysin O, or ASO, titer. A titer is a type of test. ASOs are antibodies the
immune system creates to combat streptococcal bacteria. The human body typically has around 200 units of ASO as a baseline. If a test confirms a heightened
level of ASO, thats usually a definitive sign of the presence of strep bacteria.
We can find the test for ASO in the immunology subsection of Pathology. We
could also look up antistreptolysin in the index at the back of the CPT manual.
Both methods would lead us to the CPT code 86060, antistreptolysin; titer.
Thats our Pathology code.
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Now what about the medication the doctors prescribed to our patient? Wed
include that as part of our medical decision making processthe prescription
of antibiotics is the decision the doctor made for the patient. However, if we
wanted to add it to the E&M code to give the payer more information, we can do
that pretty easily.
Previously, we talked about Category II CPT codes as useful for administrative
and performance management purposes, but they can also be used in informational settings. These Category II codes are optional, and are added to Category
I codes with a hyphen. Wed look up the proper Category II code in the index
under antibiotic administration. That would point us to 4120F, antibiotics
prescribed or dispensed. Wed flip there in Category II to confirm.
So wed add the Category II CPT code 4120F to our extant E&M code 99203 to get
99203-4120F, which is a new patient visit of low complexity, with the prescription or dispensation of antibiotics.
So our codes would be
PROCEDURE
99203-4120F (E&M)
86060 (Pathology)
DIAGNOSIS
481
Wed enter these into a superbill that would include...
The patients information
height, weight, name, DOB, demographic info, insurance info, policy number, balance on their account, etc
The provider information
National Provider Index number (NPI), resident physicians name, phone
number, address
Procedure information
Procedure codes, date of procedure, price of procedure,
Diagnostic information
Diagnosis code(s)
Wed then send that superbill on to the medical biller so that they could create
the medical claim.
Lets look at another hypothetical situation, this time involving surgery.
EXAMPLE 2
Well jump right in with our medical report. This one, youll note, is different
in format from the previous one. Theres no uniform style of medical report,
so coders should be prepared to abstract information from a whole variety of
reports.
140 | SECTION 4
In our example, the patient is a P3the patient has a severe systemic disease
(since appendicitis can go septic, and thus potentially life-threatening, its regarded as severe). So our Anesthesia code is 00840-P3.
Heres what wed end up with:
PROCEDURE
99284 (E&M)
76705 (Radiology)
44970 (Surgery)
with 00840-P3 (Anesthesia)
DIAGNOSIS
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EXAMPLE 1
visual representation of Element 24 in just a moment, but first, lets look at the
last few important Elements.
In the last course, we looked at medical coding in the real world. Now well turn
our focus to medical billing. In this course, well go through a few examples and
show you how to create claims
Element 25 is the field where the biller will enter the patients taxpayer ID. Element 26 is the patients account number with the provider. Well skip to Element
28, which includes the total charge of the procedure. Element 29 includes the
amount paid by the health insurance. This is the amount the biller is asking the
payer to pay, not the amount the payer has already paid.
Lets start off by looking at the first example from our previous course on everyday medical coding. If youll recall, the patient in that situation was a 27-yearold male who went to the doctor with a hacking cough, fever, and difficulty
breathing. After examining the patient and performing a pathology test, the
doctor diagnosed the patient with streptococcal pneumoniae and prescribed a
two-week regimen of antibiotics.
Element 30 is the balance due for the procedure, which is arrived at by subtracting the amount paid (Element 29) from the total cost of the procedure (Element
28). The Balance is the amount that will be passed on to the patient.
Elements 31 and 32 are fields where the biller can put in information about the
provider (including the service facility location and the NPI). The final Element,
Element 33, is a space where you must enter the information about the provider/
billing party.
PROCEDURE
DIAGNOSIS
33 ELEMENTS OF
CMS-1500 FORM
Lets take a look at a simplified table of Element 24. Well use our first example to
enter in the codes. (Note that were actually leaving off a few columns to the left
of Column F. For the sake of this simplicity, we wont be getting into the information there).
The CMS-1500 form has 33 elements, or fields where the biller must enter in
data about the patient, the patients insurance, the provider, the procedures,
and the cost of the procedures, among other things.
Elements 1 through 20 are informational fields that include spaces to list the
patients name, ID number, DOB, address, insurance policy number, and other
vital information. These elements also include fields that indicate whether the
patient is the subscriber (the person paying for insurance) or is merely covered
by that insurance (as in the case of children on their parents insurance). For the
most part, these fields are self-explanatory, and the information you need to
fill them in will be provided by the superbill. For the sake of brevity, well move
right to the most important section of the claim.
Once we get to Element 21 we start getting into the meat of the claim. Billers
enter the diagnosis codes into Element 21. The next relevant Element is Element
24. Element 24 is divided into six horizontal rows. In these rows, you enter the
date of the procedure, the procedure code, and you re-enter in the procedures
codes and re-enter the diagnosis codes from Element 21, next to their relevant
procedure code. Remember, diagnosis codes on claims are used to demonstrate
medical necessity. Element 24 is where we put the what (the procedure) and the
why (the diagnosis) of the medical service. Element 24 also includes a column
where the biller can list the charges for each procedure. Were going to get to a
SIMPLIFIED VERSION
OF ELEMENT 24
24
A. Dates
of Service
B. Place of
service
C. Type of
service
D. Procedures, E.
Services, or
Diagnosis
Supplies
code
F. Charges
10/1/2013
XXXX
E&M
99203-4120F
481
???
10/1/2013
XXXX
Path
86060
481
Youll see that we attach the diagnosis codes to both of the procedures we enter.
Thats because we need to justify the medical necessity for both procedures.
Before we get into more detail about this example, well have to discuss charges.
Private practices may set the cost of their procedures, but they should align
closely to the Medicare costs of a procedure. The Medicare cost of a procedure
is determined by evaluating the Relative Value Units (RVU) of the procedure.
These RVUs depend on the amount of time the procedure takes (the Work RVU),
the cost of that time (called the Practice RVU) and the likelihood of complications for that procedure (the Malpractice RVU). These are each multiplied by a
geographic practice cost index and added up. These in turn are multiplied by a
conversion factor, which is the dollar amount per RVU.
So, for the sake of this example, lets say the cost of the E&M procedure is $200.
The cost of the Pathology procedure is $300. Wed put each of those in Column F
next to their respective procedure.
That brings the total cost of the procedure to a nice round $500. Thats what wed
put in Element 28.
144 | SECTION 4
ELEMENT 28
27. Accept
assignment?
28. Total
Charge
29. Amount
Paid
30. Balance
Due
XXX-XXXXXX
--
500
???
???
XXXX
24 A. Dates B. Place of
of Service service
How much the payer pays depends on the subscribers insurance agreement. For
this first example, lets say the our patient with pneumonia has a basic indemnity agreement, for which he owes a $200 deductible, and a $50 co-pay. After
hes paid that amount, his insurance will cover the rest of the procedure. The
deductible and the co-pay have already been assigned to the patient, so the first
$250 will be left off the bill. Instead, the amount paid by the pay will be listed as
$250, and the balance will be zero.
ELEMENT 24-30
24 A. Dates B. Place of
of Service service
C. Type of
service
10/1/2013
XXXX
E&M
99203-4120F
481
200
10/1/2013
XXXX
Path
86060
481
300
27. Accept
assignment?
28. Total
Charge
XXX-XXXXXX
--
500
250
XXXX
PROCEDURE
DIAGNOSIS
Our second patient is the 67-year-old female with appendicitis. If youll recall,
this example involved a lot more codes, because it was a much more complicated
set of procedures. The codes we came up with in the last example were
- 99284, (Emergency department visit for a condition that requires urgent evaluation by the physician but [does] not pose an immediate significant threat to
life or physiological function);
- 76705, ultrasound, abdominal, real time with image; limited (e.g. single organ)
- 44970, laparoscopy, surgical, appendectomy
- 00840-P3, Anesthesia for intraperitoneal procedures in lower abdomen
including laparoscopy; not otherwise specified; patient with severe systemic
disease
- 540.9, Acute appendicitis without mention of peritonitis
Now that weve reviewed the codes, lets just jump right into entering the
information in the proper elements.
9/30/2013
XXXX
E&M
99284
540.9
400
9/30/2013
XXXX
Radiology
76705
540.9
300
9/30/2013
XXXX
Surgery
44970
540.9
595
9/30/2013
XXXX
Anesthesia
00840-P3
540.9
600
27. Accept
assignment?
28. Total
Charge
XXX-XXXXXX
--
1895
???
XXXX
???
Medicare Part A can work as a co-insurance. For our example, lets say the patient has a 80-20 coinsurance. That means Medicare owes 80 percent of the cost
of the procedure, while shell owe the remaining 20 percent.
So we take 80 percent of the 1495 ($1,196) and put that in Element 29. That makes
the balance for the procedure (i.e., what the patient owes), $299. Lets look at the
completed Elements.
That, in a very simplified way, is what a medical claim looks like. This gets sent
to the payer and, if its approved, gets sent back to the biller for their records.
EXAMPLE 2
In order to determine the amount and balance due, we have to know what kind
of coverage our patient has. Our patient is 67 years old, which means she qualifies for Medicare. And, sure enough, shes on traditional Medicare, which covers
hospital services like the procedure above. Lets say she has $400 left to cover
her deductible. Wed take that our right away, so the amount left to cover is
$1,495.
Lets look at our second example, and throw in a few new elements.
C. Type of
service
COMPLETED TABLE
OF ELEMENTS
27. Accept
assignment?
28. Total
Charge
XXX-XXXXXX
--
1895
1196
XXXX
299
And there you have our second claim, or at least the parts of it that are most
relevant to the reimbursement process.
As you can see, the billing process requires a working knowledge of what codes
are and how they work, in addition to proficiency in the monetary side of healthcare. Youll need to know what codes are, how they work, but youll also need
to know how much procedures cost, and how to tailor each claim to a specific
patients insurance agreement.
146 | SECTION 4
BAD DOCUMENTATION/
MISSING DOCUMENTATION
Of course, not coding to the highest level isnt always the coders fault. In
certain cases, the provider wont give the coder enough information about the
procedure theyve performed. Providers may leave important details of the
procedure out of the report, or they may provide illegible medical reports. This
problem is exacerbated by the next trouble spot on the list.
Ideally, every coder would be in constant contact with the provider theyre
coding for. Unfortunately, thats not always the case. Providers arent always
available to consult on difficult-to-understand claims. Coders have to do the
best with what they have in these situations, but you should still try and clarify
the report as best as you can.
The organizations that maintain the three principal medical coding code sets
(the WHO for ICD, the AMA for CPT, and the CMS for HCPCS) update these manuals yearly. Its up to coders to learn any new or reorganized codes as they come
out, and use them correctly. This is partly why professional organizations like
the AAPC and AHIMA require every member to complete a certain amount of
educational credits every two years. Keeping your skills sharp is imperative.
UNBUNDLING
BE DILIGENT
Your work as a medical coder will be detail-oriented and full of tiny choices
to make every day. You can avoid a lot of medical coding errors just by double-checking your work. Read over every medical report twice (at least), and
never let yourself get too familiar with a particular code set or set of procedure codes.
COMMUNICATE OFTEN
Its not always possible to talk frequently with your provider (especially if youre
working for an off-site coding agency). Still, you should work to develop relationships at each providers office, and try and communicate with them regularly. This will make it easier for you to ask them for clarification on any particularly thorny medical reports.
STAY SHARP
Every year, youll have to update your coding manuals with their latest versions.
In many cases, brand new manuals will be provided by your employer as part of
a work expense. If not, its worth it to buy new ones every year yourself. These
manuals include new codes and new, revised guidelines, and having the latest
edition is imperative if you want to stay up-to-date.
148 | SECTION 5
24 SUBJECTS OF THE
CPC EXAM CONT.
Medicine
Nervous System
Endocrine System
Digestive System
Urinary System
Musculoskeletal System
Practice Management
Male/female Genital
ICD-9-CM
HCPCS Level II
Respiratory
Laboratory
The CPC exam thoroughly tests a coders grasp of the entire coding process,
from medical terminology to code sets and beyond. Per the AAPCs website, the
CPC exam covers 24 subject areas, including
Radiology
Integumentary
During the test, youll be presented with a number of tests cases pertaining to
the practice of coding. These test case questions will present you with a condensed medical report and ask you to select the correct set of codes from the
answers below.
The CPC exam is comprised of 150 multiple-choice questions. The test takes
five hours and 40 minutes to complete, making it fairly rigorous. There are two
breaks in the middle of the test. The CPC exam costs $300 to take, but only $260
if the test-taker is a member of the AAPC (annual dues are $125 for individuals
and $70 for students).
Anesthesia
Pathology
You should note that the questions on the exam are not divided or identified by
the topic they are related to. That is, questions on the CPC exam will test you on
all of the above 24 fields of medical coding, but they wont outright say, This is
an anesthesia question. Instead theyll just ask you about anesthesia, or surgery, or human anatomy.
There are a number of certifying bodies for the medical coder, but the American
Association of Professional Coders (AAPC) remains the largest and most influential of these. The AAPCs Certified Professional Coder (CPC) exam is currently
the gold standard of coding certifications. In this and the following twenty-plus
courses, well show you more about the
24 SUBJECTS OF THE
CPC EXAM
Medical Terminology
Certification also typically comes with membership in a professional organization, which is advantageous to the coder looking to stay up-to-date on new
trends and developments in the field.
WHAT IS IT?
Coding Guidelines
Sarah, a 45-year-old patient, visits the doctor and presents symptoms including
a sore throat, swollen lymph nodes, and a fever. After performing a rapid strep
test, the doctor confirms a diagnosis of streptococcal sore throat. The doctor
prescribes an Amoxicillin as an antibiotic. Which of the following are the correct codes for this diagnosis, procedure and prescription?
There are also general knowledge questions, like Which types of joints are
synovial? that dont have an attached test case. That questions related to the
musculoskeletal system, but the test wont come right out and say so. Youll have
to rely on your knowledge of code sets, medical terminology, best practices, and
the coding process in general to pass.
Individuals who earn a score of 70 percent or better (105 correct questions) will
pass the CPC exam. If you fail your first test, you are allowed one free retake.
GETTING CERTIFIED
Once you pass the CPC exam, you are not officially certified by the AAPC until you fulfill a few other criteria. In order to complete a CPC certification, you
must become a member of the AAPC. Certification is also limited to coders with
two years of professional experience or those willing to complete an apprentice
program.
As such, the CPC exam is recommended for individuals who have already started their coding career. That wont prevent us from going over the basics of this
important exam.
150 | SECTION 5
You should bear in mind, however, that none of the courses in this Section or
this e-book will fully prepare you for the exam, nor will the completion of this
e-book. Because the AAPC copyrights all of the information in the test, along
with past tests, the best way to prepare for these exams is to take a course administered by the AAPC itself.
Unfortunately, the prep course and materials offered by the AAPC cost a fair
amount of money, and so some coders find it worthwhile to track down less
expensive third-party preparation outfits. You can often find these in the form
of crash courses, which review large amounts of information in just a few days
as a sort of guided cram session.
In the next course, well give you some basic study strategies for the test.
152 | SECTION 5
CPC EXAM: GENERAL PREPARATION AND TEST STRATEGIES FOR THE CPC EXAM | 153
Its a good idea to mark the important or frequently used sections of your code
manuals. The 2013 CPT manual, for instance, comes with a number of tabs you
can place in the book to mark certain important places. Use these to mark off
where code sections begin (like the Surgery or Medicine sections in the CPT
manual), and where to find certain appendices.
Youll learn everything you need to pass the CPC exam in a coding course at a
university or community college. You should only purchase the AAPCs training
materials if youre very far out of practice.
You should, however, consider taking the AAPCs CPC practice exams.
PREP STRATEGIES
When youre taking the CPC exam, youll be asked to perform though you were
coding at your regular coding job, so set up your manual in the way that makes
the most sense for you.
Since the CPC exam covers so many topics, its easy to get overwhelmed in the
preparation stages. Here are a couple ways of to cope with this large, intimidating exam.
During the exam, youll spend the most time with the CPT manual. While there
are some questions on ICD-9-CM codes and HCPCS, there are far more questions
that relate to the CPT code set, so its good to focus your study efforts there.
Know the manual back to front, and be comfortable navigating it and using its
numerous appendices.
Also be aware that each manual has loads of helpful information beyond the
codes. The CPT manual has a number of diagrams of the human body, including
illustrations of the ocular system and adnexa, the musculoskeletal system, the
nervous system and much more. Mark these pages and refer to them during the
test if youre stumped on a question pertaining to anatomical terminology.
TIME MANAGEMENT
Most people take the exam only after theyve been working in coding for a little
while (to be certified, the CPC requires a passing score and two years of professional experience, or the educational equivalent). If youve amassed that experience, you should be relatively familiar with medical terminology and anatomy
and physiology. Still, its a very good idea to brush up with this through flash
cards or review courses.
When youre taking a test like the CPC exam, which is almost six hours long and
consists of 150 questions, its a good idea to break things down to make them
more manageable. Separate the questions into blocks of time, and work on one
block of questions for a fixed amount of time before moving on to the next set.
For example, you can divide the CPC exam into five groups of 30 questions. Take
one hour for every thirty questions. Or you could try and take on 10 questions
every 20 minutes. As soon as your designated block of time is up, skip to the
next block of questions. That is, if youve divided the test into five, hour-long
blocks of 30 questions, and you are on question 25 after the first hour elapses,
just skip ahead to question 31. If you finish a block of questions early, go back
and fill in questions you skipped.
There will be questions on the exam that explicitly reference medical or anatomical terminology (questions like, What kind of joint is this?), but having a
strong medical vocabulary will help you in deciphering other questions as well.
Once youve studied up, be sure to take advantage of as many practice exams
as you can. Treat these exams like real tests: study extensively for them, time
yourself as you take them, and then note which questions, and more importantly what type of questions, you regularly get wrong. On your first test, did you
struggle with the Anesthesia codes? Go back over that section. Were you sloppy
with your ICD-9-CM codes? Review the ICD-9-CM manual. A number of private
companies have practice CPC exams, but the AAPCs practice exams are probably your best bet.
Dont treat practice exams as formalities or wastes of time. Many practice exams can be easier than the actual exam, but you should still take them seriously. You should try and score at least an 80% on a practice exam before you take
the real CPC exam.
When you take the CPC exam, youre allowed to bring in each of the code manuals (the ICD, CPT, and HCPCS manuals). Youre allowed to have notes in the
margins of these manuals, but these notes cant contain any test-specific information. You are also not allowed to tape anything into these manuals.
In a test as long as the CPC, its important to keep your momentum as you take
the test. You dont want to spend too much time on any one questions. Make it
your goal to read and, if possible, answer every question on the test.
Its a good idea to bring a timer to the exam. This can be a kitchen timer or a
watch. Just make sure you dont have a distracting alarm set on it, and you
should be fine. (Your proctor wont let you use your cell phone, for obvious reasons).
In order to pass the CPC exam, you need to get a 70% or better on the test. Always keep that in mind when youre taking the test. The long, multi-part questions that might have you look up three, four, or five codes are worth the same
as the general knowledge questions. If youre stuck on a question, dont be afraid
to skip it and come back to it later.
154 | SECTION 5
CPC EXAM: GENERAL PREPARATION AND TEST STRATEGIES FOR THE CPC EXAM | 155
Another good way of managing your goals and your time is to remember that
your objective in the test is to pick the best available answer. This test is not an
exact duplication of what youll see in everyday coding. These are hypothetical
situations that may be shortened or simplified for space, so youll waste precious
time getting lost in the details of each questions. Pick the best possible answer
and move on.
Remember as you take the test that you can get 45 questions wrong. Dont waste
a lot of time on a question thats totally stumping you. Instead, move on and try
and regain your momentum with easier, less time-intensive questions. If youve
got extra time, go back to the more difficult questions after youve completed
the easier questions.
156 | SECTION 5
SUBSECTIONS OF THE
ANESTHESIOLOGY SECTION
FIELD
RANGE
FIELD
RANGE
Head
00100
00222
Neck
00300
00352
Thorax
00400 Intrathoracic
00474
00500
00580
00700
00797
Lower abdomen
00800 Perineum
00882
00902
00952
01112
01190
01200
01274
Lower leg
01462
01522
01610
01682
01710
01782
01810
01860
Radiological
procedures
01916
01936
Burn excisions or
debridement
01951
01953
Obstetric
01958
01969
Other procedures
01990
01999
99100
99140
Moderate (conscious)
99143 99150
On the exam, youll see approximately ten questions on Anesthesia. (Please note
that this is not an exact figure, as the AAPC has copyrighted their exam and has
not publicly released the exact amount of questions on each subject since 2004).
There are three main types of anesthesia: General, local, and conscious sedation. General anesthesia is the most dangerous, as it involves a person becoming
entirely unconscious. When a person is put under general anesthesia, the physicians (and anesthesiologist) must maintain all of the patients bodily functions,
including respiration.
Local anesthesia refers to the numbing of a particular body part or region of the
body. Conscious sedation refers to the process of heavily sedating, but not totally anesthetizing, a patient. Under conscious sedation a patient is able to respond
verbally to questions and commands, and does not require any intervention to
maintain their bodily functions (eg, cardio or respiratory).
Anesthesia codes are always tied to surgery codes. After all, we wouldnt just
anesthetize someone for the thrill of it! Whenever a surgical procedure is performed that requires anesthesia (which is most of them), we must always have
an Anesthesia code with the surgery codes. This Anesthesia code corresponds
to where on the body the surgery is performed.
Anesthesia codes are bundled. That is, each Anesthesia code contains a
number of things within it, including the pre- and post-operative visits from
the anesthesiologist, the monitoring of bodily functions (in the case of general
or large-scale local anesthesia), the administration of the anesthetic, etc. That
means you wont find specific procedure codes for the evaluation of the patient
and the administration of an intravenous anestheticboth are included in the
larger Anesthesia code.
In the case of multiple surgical procedures performed under one instance of
anesthesia (one administration of general anesthesia, for example), wed only
use one Anesthesia code.
During the CPC exam, the most useful resource is the set of guidelines at the
beginning of the Anesthesia section. Be sure to tab this and refer to it in case
youre feeling confused. The guidelines will tell you the proper way use Anesthesia codes (like how to list an Anesthesia code with a Surgery code).
Time reporting is a very important part of using Anesthesia codes. The longer
the patient is under anesthetic, the more expensive (and risky) the procedure
will be. An Anesthesia procedure begins the moment the anesthesiologist preps
the patient, and ends when the anesthesiologist hands the patient over to the
nurse or physician who is handling the patients recovery. The Anesthesia section of the CPT manual has guidelines for time reporting.
So a two hour procedure may require three hours of anesthesia: a half hour
before the procedure, the anesthesiologist preps the patient and administers
158 | SECTION 5
the anesthetic, the patient is under for the duration of the procedure, and then
the anesthesiologist monitors the patient following the operation until handing
them off to the nurse.
Physical status modifiers are alphanumeric modifiers specific to Anesthesia
codes. Every Anesthesia code must have a physical status modifier. These inform the payer of the patients condition, and thus the risk (and therefore cost)
of the procedure.
To review, these physical status modifiers are
PHYSICAL STATUS
MODIFIERS
160 | SECTION 5
RADIOLOGY SECTION
FIELD
RANGE
FIELD
RANGE
Diagnostic Imaging
70010
76499
Diagnostic Ultrasound
76506
76999
Radiologic Guidance
77001
77032
Breast Mammography
77051
77059
77071
77084
Radiation Oncology
Bone/joint Studies
Nuclear medicine
77261
77999
78000 79999
These fields and ranges can be informally arranged into four groups. Those
groups are: Diagnostic, Ultrasound, Radiation Oncology, and Nuclear Medicine.
Bear in mind that these are not official groupings laid out by the AAPC or by the
AMA. Theyre just there to help you visual the section.
Diagnostic is by far the largest, and covers everything not listed in the Diagnostic Ultrasound (76506 76999), Radiation Oncology (77261 77999), and Nuclear
Medicine (78000 79999) ranges.
For Diagnostic Radiology, we need to know the procedure codes for x-rays, computer tomography (CT) scans, and Magnetic Resonance Imagery (MRI). Diagnostic also covers mammograms, and studies of bones and joints.
Youll also need to know about contrast materials. Contrast materials are substances used to enhance the contrast of images taken with x-rays, MRIs, and
ultrasounds. These materials, like barium or iodine, help make certain elements of the body show up more starkly in the radiological exam. Some contrast
materials may be injected, while others are swallowed or delivered by enema.
162 | SECTION 5
33 SUBSECTIONS
OF MEDICINE
33 SUBSECTIONS
OF MEDICINE CONT.
FIELD
RANGE
FIELD
RANGE
Noninvasive cascular
diagnostic studies
9387593990
9500495199
Endocronology
9525095251
9580396020
9615096155
Photodynamic therapy
9656796571
Special dermatological
procedures
9690096999
9700197799
Medical nutrition
therapy
9780297804
Acupuncture
9781097814
9892598929
9894098943
9896698969
FIELD
RANGE
FIELD
RANGE
Immune globulines,
serum or recombiant
prods
9028190399
9056590474
Vaccines, toxoids
9047690749
Psychiatry
9080190899
Special services,
procedures and reports
900099091
9910099140
Biofeedback
9090190911
Dialysis
9093590999
Moderate (conscious)
sedation
9914399150
9917099199
Gastroenterology
9100091299
Ophthamology
9200292499
9950099602
Medication therapy
management
9960599607
9250292700
Cardiovascular
9295093799
164 | SECTION 5
As you can see, thats a lot of ground to cover. Since the Medicine section is so
large and since, unlike Surgery, it covers so many different types of medical procedures, its important to zero in on certain key terms while taking the exam.
(Surgery, while a very large section, is divided generally by where on the body
the procedure takes place, making it easier to navigate).
A question may come out and say, explicitly, that the patient received dialysis
for end-stage renal failure. If you spot the key term dialysis, youll know youre
looking for a code in the 90935 to 90999 range.
Likewise, if a question describes a catheterization of the heart, youll know to
look either in the Cardiovascular subsection or the Noninvasive vascular diagnostic studies. From there you can look at the question and ask: was surgery
required to perform this catheterization? That is, was it invasive? If it wasnt,
you can look for the code in the 93875 93990 (Noninvasive vascular) subsection. In questions involving Medicine, its important to find as many landmarks
as possible.
Like Anesthesia codes, many Medicine codes work as de facto Evaluation and
Management codes. For example, if a patient comes in expressly to have an injection of a certain vaccine or medication, we wouldnt need to use an E&M code
for that procedure. The evaluation portion before the injection would be covered
in the Medicine code already.
Medicine is one of the trickiest sections to work with in the CPC exam. It helps
to have a very strong base in medical terminology and anatomy and physiology. Test-takers should take heart, howeverin creating a test for such a broad,
diverse topic as Medicine, the AAPC often errs on the side of broader, more
general questions. Only rarely will you see a fine-grain question about Medicine
on the CPC exam.
166 | SECTION 5
Youre going to need to master the vocabulary of the skull as well. Because the
nervous system effectively encompasses the entire skull, surgical procedures on
the nervous system are identified by where inside the skull they take place.
When it comes to the spine and the Nervous System, were concerned more
with the spinal cord than the spinal column. Were coding for the thing that
transmits information through the spine (the nerves in the spinal cord), not the
things that physical support it (the vertebrae).
That doesnt mean you wont have to know your anatomy terminology when it
comes to the spine, however. Surgical procedures on the spinal cord are identified by where on the spinal cord they take place: A discectomy, for example,
would be identified by where in the spine the disc is being removed. Is it between the first and second lumbar vertebrae? The second and third cervical
vertebrae?
Youll also need to know the codes for injections into the nervous system, especially injections into the spine and spinal cord. This may include the injection of
diagnostic agents (dyes, for example), treatments, or anesthesia.
To review for your review: In order to nail your CPC exam question on the Nervous System, youll need to know the anatomy of the brain, meninges, skull, and
spine. You need to be able to navigate the nervous system based on the location
on the body. You should be familiar with surgical prefixes and suffixes.
Note that in your CPT manual, you can find informative diagrams of the skull,
spinal column, and nervous system. Make a master list of pages that feature
anatomical diagrams and refer to them during the test in case you get stuck.
168 | SECTION 5
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM
BREAKDOWN CONT.
PREFIX
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM
BREAKDOWN
PREFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
Hypothalamus
Pineal body
Monitors circadian
rhythms (24-hour cycle of
the body, commonly cited
with regard to sleep)
Pituitary gland
hypothalamus
Pancreas
In the abdomen, by
the duodenum
Adrenal glands
(made up of
Adrenal cortex
and adrenal
medulla)
In the abdomen,
immediately
superior to the
kidneys
Reproductive
glands (Ovaries
and testes)
In or below the
Testes: creates testosterabdomen
one, which affects muscle
growth and bone density,
along with development of
sex organs, deepening of
voice, etc.
Ovaries: creates progesterone and estrogen, which
support pregnancy, affect
growth, metabolism, increase bone formation, and
many other functions
These glands secrete hormones through the bloodstream or, in certain cases,
the nervous system. These hormones are slow-acting, long-lasting chemical
agents that affect and monitor everything from growth to mood. Unlike the
nervous system, which carries rapid, short-term electrical impulses, hormones
secreted by the endocrine system may have an effect for weeks or longer.
Heres a quick breakdown of the endocrine system, what each gland (or set of
glands) does, and where theyre located.
EXAMPLE
Thyroid
That doesnt mean you can breeze through the endocrine system, however. Lets
take a look at it now.
Surgical procedures on the endocrine system are found in the 60000 60699
numerical range, toward the end of the section.
MEANING
You can find an anatomical drawing of the endocrine system in your CPT
manual. Its helpful to refer to this if you get stuck.
170 | SECTION 5
Its important to note that a number of other organs interact with and affect the
endocrine system. These include, but are not limited to, the stomach, duodenum, liver, and kidneys, all of which can be classified as the alimentary system. Since each of these organs is an integral part of other, larger systems, we
wont be covering them here.
Because so many of the endocrine glands are found in other systems of the
body, the Endocrine System subsection of the Surgery section focuses mostly on
the thyroid gland. The thyroid is a butterfly-shaped gland located in the neck,
and is the largest gland in the endocrine system. Youll also find procedure
related to the adrenal glands, located superior to the kidneys.
As with all Surgery subsections, you should be familiar with the vocabulary of
surgery itself and the prefixes and suffixes related to the body. If you see a question with a thyroid lobectomy, unilateral, you should know this is the removal
of one half of the thyroid. You should be able to read that from the ectomy
(cutting away) and unilateral (one side of the butterfly).
Other endocrine glands, like the ovaries and testes, are covered in different sections of the CPT manual. The ovaries, for example, would be found in the male
or female genital system subsections, while the pancreas would be found in the
digestive system.
For this reason, you can think of the endocrine system subsection of Surgery
as a sort of basin that catches procedures on the endocrine system that arent
easily classifiable elsewhere.
172 | SECTION 5
The digestive system is one of the more straightforward fields of anatomy and
surgery that youll have to know for the CPC exam. In this course, well look at
the general structure of the digestive system and the types of surgery codes
youll need to know for the exam.
Not all exploratory surgical procedures on the digestive system go through one
of the openings of the alimentary canal. Several are performed via laparoscopy. A laparoscopy uses a thin tube, inserted via a small incision into the belly,
to look at the abdominal organs. Youll find laparoscopy codes in the digestive
system subsection, along with codes for laporotomy (mostly exploratory procedures with approaches made through large incisions in the belly) and other
surgical procedures.
Unfortunately we dont have a number for how many questions focus on the
digestive system. You will probably see at least a few (as always, the AAPC does
not release how many questions on the exam focus on a particular subject).
Note that the digestive system subsection extends beyond the alimentary canal,
and includes procedures performed on the pancreas and appendix, both of
which are attached to the digestive system.
Surgical procedures on the digestive system are found in the 40490 49999
numerical range, right in the middle of the Surgery section.
The digestive system subsection of Surgery closes with various codes for treating and repairing hernias and other malformations or injuries to the GI. Codes
for hernia repair procedures are separated by where on the body the hernia
occurs and by what type of hernia it is (for example, is the hernia recurring?).
Hernia codes also take into account how old the patient is, with different codes
for hernia repairs in infants, children, and adults.
The digestive system extends from where food enters to where it leaves the
body. That is, from the mouth to the rectum. This is called the alimentary canal,
and the digestive system subsection of Surgery is more or less arranged to follow the path from ingestion to excretion.
Generally, food enters the mouth and travels down the esophagus. From there it
enters the stomach (look for gastro if youre looking for key terms in an exam
question). The stomach is divided into two sections: the cardia (upper, not to be
confused with cardio) and fundus (lower).
Upon leaving the stomach, digested food moves into the duodenum. The duodenum is the end of the upper gastrointestinal tract (GI). This will be important
in coding procedures, as certain ones start in the mouth and move all the way
down to the duodenum, while others pass through the rectum into the lower GI.
From the duodenum, food travels to the small intestine and then to the large
intestine, also known as the colon. Food moves through the large intestine to
the rectum (look for procto-, as in proctology), and then is excreted through
the anus.
There are, as you might imagine, countless surgical procedures that affect this
long, complicated system.
When coding a procedure on the digestive system, its important to note where
the procedure starts. Some procedures start at the mouth and go all the way
to the duodenum. Others, like colonoscopies, start via the rectum and travel
through the colon. If given a choice between two procedures, we always code
the furthest-in one. That is, if we were removing polyps in the esophagus and
the duodenum, we would use the code for the polyp excision in the duodenum,
because its the furthest-in.
As with all Surgery section, youll need to be familiar with both the human
anatomy, and the terminology used in surgical procedures. Know the terms
for excision and incision, the otomies and ectomies. You should also know
to look for several scope procedures. These would include anything using an
endoscope, which is a long, flexible tube with a camera that helps doctors look
directly inside the GI tract.
174 | SECTION 5
The urinary system is found in the 50010 53899 range in the Surgery section
of the CPT manual. These codes are related to procedures directly affecting the
urinary system, which is made up of the kidneys, bladder, ureters, and urethra.
Included in the urinary system subsection are a number of procedures that are
performed by specialized medical or healthcare professionals. These, like radiology codes, are places where the -26 CPT modifier pops up. Remember, if the
medical professional only interpreted the results of the procedure (or exam), but
did not perform it themselves, thats a -26 modifier for a professional
component.
The urinary system starts in the kidneys. The kidneys produce urine, which
then travels down the first of two ureters to the bladder. You can identify kidneys by the word renal or the prefix nephr- and the bladder by the prefixes
cysto and vesico. (Think of it this way: a cyst is a sac filled with fluid, much
like the bladder).
In general, you shouldnt expect any highly specific questions on the urinary
system on the CPC exam. As with all Surgery codes, you should know your
medical terminology and anatomy. Look for keywords within questions. If you
see anything related to the nephrectomy or the renal system, then the urinary
system is the place to look.
After sitting in the bladder, urine travels through the urethra and leaves the
body from the penis or in front of the vagina. Its a pretty simple system, sort of
like a condensed digestive tract.
Procedure codes for the urinary system include a few systems that are not
directly related to the production or disposal of urine, including the prostate.
Sometimes, the prostate is accessed via the urethra, meaning the urinary system section is the best place for Surgery codes related to the prostate. For the
most part, however, codes in the urinary system subsection are related directly
to the urinary process.
In the urinary system section of Surgery, youll find codes for renal biopsies, and
the introduction of various medical equipment (like catheters or stents) into the
urinary tract. Youll also find codes for the removal of kidney stones (look for
the prefix litho-, which means stone).
The urinary system contains codes for kidney transplants, both for the donor
and the recipient. For the donor, youd see a code for a nephrectomy, and for the
recipient youd see a code for the graft. A graft a tissue or organ donation, while
an ectomy you should recognize as an excisionthe cutting out of something.
You will want to add a bracket to kidney donation codes that specify the person
receiving the code as the recipient.
Finally, youll also find a number of codes, as you did in the digestive system,
for scopes, meaning endoscopy and laproscopy. Laproscopy, if youll recall
from the Course on the digestive system, is an exploratory procedure performed
through an incision in the skin. That is, theyre not threaded through the urinary tract, but introduced through the abdomen.
176 | SECTION 5
BASIC VOCABULARY
A few basic, important vocabulary tips. Osteo means bone, while arthro
means joint. As with all Surgery codes, you need to know the difference between ostomies, -otomies, and ectomies, among other surgical vocab terms.
You should know the positional terms that tell you where something is, like
posterior, superior, inferior, and anterior. You can refer to Human Anatomy and
Medical Terminology in Section 2 for a more thorough breakdown of anatomy
and physiology terms.
One of the most complicated parts of the musculoskeletal system is the spine.
Bear in mind that procedures on the spine found in the musculoskeletal subsection of Surgery do not refer to the spinal cord itself, but rather to the vertebrae
supporting the spinal cord. Thats an important distinction to make.
If youve located a key term that tells you a question is related to the spine, double-check to figure out whether you should be looking at the bones of the spine
or the spinal cord and its relation to the nervous system. Procedures that affect
the nervous system, such as a decompression of pressure on the spine, will be
found in the Nervous System subsection of Surgery. Youll navigate the spine
using the numbers of the vertebrae. There are seven cervical vertebrae, twelve
thoracic vertebrae, and five lumbar vertebrae. Each of these is noted with an
alpha and a number, so the C6 would be the sixth cervical vertebrae.
Essentially, anything that relates to the bones and muscles of the body can be
found in the musculoskeletal subsection of Surgery. If a patient needs a bunion
removed, thats in the musculoskeletal section. Bone grafts, bone aspirations,
tendon repair, joint reconstructiontheyre all in the musculoskeletal subsection. By learning the proper terms for the area of the body, you can navigate
right to the correct part of the subsection, so its very important to get some
flash cards and get to work.
Like many subsections of Surgery, there are a number of exploratory procedure
codes included at the end of musculoskeletal. Youll find the usual suspects of
scopes, including endoscopes and arthroscopes, which is a camera inserted
into the joint. You may have heard of athletes receiving arthroscopic surgery.
That would be coded in the musculoskeletal subsection.
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SUBSECTIONS OF E&M
FIELD
RANGE
FIELD
RANGE
Office or other
outpatient services
99201
99213
Hospital observation
services
99201
99213
Hospital inpatient
services
99221
99239
Consultations
99221
99239
99281
99288
99304
99318
99339
99340
99460
99465
Prolonged
services
99354
99360
Case management
services
99354
99360
99441
99444
99441
99444
Newborn care
services
99460
99465
Home services
99341
99350
As we said, E&M is the first section of the CPT manual. Its placed there, out of
numerical order, because its referenced so frequently. E&M codes are found in
the 99201 99499 numerical range.
Within each of these fields of E&M, there are various codes that correspond to
evaluations of varying intensity. One of the main difficulties in coding E&M is
evaluating the intensity of the procedure performed.
Many E&M codes, like the ones in critical care and emergency department
services, are measured by time. That is, if a physician performs an exam and
evaluation for 30 minutes, that will be one code. If they do the same procedure
for 45 minutes or an hour, those will be two different codes.
Lets rewind for a second and talk about the most basic and important part of using E&M codes: the history, exam, and medical decision making portion, which
is often abbreviated as HEM. Generally speaking, there can be no E&M code
without a HEM. The history refers to the patients medical history and their
history with the provider performing the E&M procedure.
The exam refers to the examination of symptoms. This refers not only to the
physical examination, but to the verbal assessment as well. When a doctor evaluates a patient, they ask whats bothering them, where something hurts, how
long has the patient been experiencing the symptoms, etc. These are all parts
of the exam. Obviously, in cases where the patient is unconscious or unable to
voice their symptoms (like in the emergency department), the exam wont be
verbal.
The medical decision making process entails the doctor deciding on and in
some cases recommending treatment. This may be as simple as a doctor prescribing some medication, or it may involve the doctor passing the patient onto
a different specialist.
(One important caveat: some preventive medical services do not use HEM, because the patient does not have any symptoms to examine as yet).
When a patient goes to a specialist, this is often called a consult. However, in
E&M there are certain rules for consults. A consult must include three Rs: the
request for an opinion (from the initial physician), the rendering of the opinion
(from the second physician), and the reporting of the opinion (back to the initial
physician).
E&M is a difficult section to master, and its worth taking extra time to study it
before the CPC exam. Unlike Surgery, the section is not arranged intuitively by
parts of the body. Coders should look to the guidelines for various code-specific
rules. For example, E&M has a general rule that there is one E&M code per doctor, per patient, per day. That is, if a doctor sees a patient twice in one day, the
entire days E&M procedures would be bundled into one large code.
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Coders should also know the difference between emergency department services and urgent care services, which may be similar in practice, but completely
separate in the coding and billing world. Likewise, coders will need to know
when to use an outpatient code versus an emergency code.
The best way to handle E&M codes is to constantly narrow your focus. Start by
finding the right category of code. Where does the procedure take place? Does
the question say anything about critical care or the emergency department? Is it
a routine check-up? Then move to the category of E&M. From there you can look
for the HEM. A heads up: The CPC exam will sometimes forgo the H (history) of
HEM and focus instead on the the E (exam) and M (medical decision making).
Dont be thrown off if theres no mention of the H in HEM.
If you need a quick reference, in Appendix C of the CPT manual, youll a list of
commonly confused E&M codes and some examples of what types of evaluations they represent. Mark this page for future reference.
182 | SECTION 5
Anatomy is the study of the human body, while physiology is the study of how
that body works. Its a huge subject, and one that gets its proper due on the CPC
exam.
There will be approximately 10 questions on the CPC exam on anatomy and
physiology. (This, again, is not an exact number, as the AAPC does not release
the number of questions on each subject). Thats a relatively high number, about
as many as there will be on Medicine, Radiology, and the other major CPT sections.
On the CPC exam, youll use your knowledge of anatomy and physiology to
navigate through the CPT manual. Remember, youll use your CPT manual far
more often than you will the ICD-9-CM manual or HCPCS manual. If you know
the terminology for the human body, youll recognize fracture of the distal
phalanx, as a broken toe or finger, and move to the musculoskeletal subsection
of Surgery.
Below youll find a list of anatomical terms. If youll recall, these terms appear
in Course 2-10 on human anatomy. You can refer to that course for more information on human anatomy.
ANATOMY TERMS
WORD
BODY PART
Abdominal
Acromial
Antebrachial
Antecubital
Axillary
Brachial
Buccal
Calcaneal
Carpal
Caudal
Caphalic
Cervical
Clavicular
Costal
Coxal
Cranial
Crural
Cubital
Deltoid
Abdomen
Point of shoulder
Forearm
Front of elbow
Armpit
Arm
Cheek
Heel of foot
Wrist
Tail
Head
Neck
Collar bone
Rib
Hip
Skull
Leg
Elbow
Curve of shoulder
Digital
Dorsal
Femoral
Fibular
Frontal
Genital
Gluteal
Hallux
Inguinal
Lumbar
Mammary
Manual
Mental
Nasal
Nuchal
Occipital
Olecranal
Oral
Orbital
Otic
Palmar
Patellar
Pectoral
Pedal
Pelvic
Perineal
Peroneal
Plantar
Pollex
Popliteal
Pubic
Sacral
Scapular
Sternal
Sural
Tarsal
Thoracic
Umbilical
Ventral
Vertebral
184 | SECTION 5
As such, its a very good idea to take an anatomy and physiology (or medical
terminology) course before you take the CPC exam. On the plus side, youll
probably learn plenty about medical terminology in an anatomy and physiology
course, and vice versa, so you wont need to double-up.
Youve also already got some study materials, whether you know it or not. As
weve mentioned in previous courses, your CPT manual is full of helpful illustrations and diagrams. In the introduction to the manual, youll find a list of
illustrations and their page numbers. Ideally, by the time you take the exam
youll be familiar enough with anatomical terminology that you wont need to
rely on these illustrations, but theyre there for your perusal before the test and
for any last minute double-checks in the middle of the exam.
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The maternity and delivery subsection is rounded out with a variety of abortion
codes. These codes include procedures for treatment following an abortion (for
example, if the abortion goes septic, or if it only partially successful), and there
are also codes for induced abortions.
As youre studying for the CPC exam, be sure to keep an eye on the maternity
and delivery section. You will most likely see at least one question on these
codes, and it should be relatively obvious.
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Once you get to the tabular, youll need to pay attention to the notes included
with many of the ICD-9-CM codes. These notes include See, See Also, Includes,
Excludes, and Code First. If, for example, youre coding a retinal problem related
to diabetes, there will probably be a Code First note under the retinal diagnosis
that tells you to code the underlying condition (diabetes) before the present
diagnosis.
See and See Also codes are included to direct coders to better or more appropriate diagnosis codes. Includes and Excludes are relatively self-explanatory: they
tell the coder if the diagnosis theyre looking for does, in fact, live in that code.
These notes are part of the reason why we never code from the alphabetical
index. If you skip confirming your codes in the tabular index, you might miss
an important note that informs you of a better, more accurate diagnosis codes.
Remember, as medical coders, we always want to code to the highest degree of
specificity. Your job on the CPC exam will be to select the best possible answer
out of the four, so its imperative you use the most accurate codes possible.
You should also review the coding guidelines and conventions for ICD-9-CM.
These are found in the front of the ICD-9-CM manual, and will inform you of the
proper ways of using the code. The notes (See, See Also, Includes, etc) are part of
the guidelines and conventions, so you already know a bit about them. Just be
sure to read each code carefully and check the notes.
One final note about ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM. The American healthcare
industry, almost across the board, will upgrade to the newer ICD-10-CM set of
diagnostic codes on October 1 of 2015. Up until that point, youll still be tested on
ICD-9-CM. You may even be tested on ICD-9-CM after the changeover datethe
AAPC hasnt made that clear. As of this writing, however, only ICD-9-CM will be
on the exam, and so you should confine your preparation to that code set.
200 | SECTION 5
As such, its extremely important that, if you see a HCPCS question on the CPC
exam, you look up the code in your HCPCS manual. A question may have codes
for four different neck braces, and paying attention to the small details provided
in the question will help you select the correct answer.
HCPCS divided into two levels. The first level is identical to CPT Category I.
Whether a code is a HCPCS Level I code or a CPT code depends on what payer
its getting sent to. For the CPC exam, youll have to study HCPCS Level II, which
is where the codes for a number of healthcare services not easily classifiable in
CPT reside.
One final note on HCPCS: You may encounter some HCPCS modifiers on the CPC
exam. HCPCS modifiers, remember, are similar but different to CPT modifiers.
Like CPT modifiers, HCPCS modifiers are two characters long and are added to
the end of a procedure code with a hyphen. Unlike CPT modifiers, which are
entirely numeric, HCPCS modifiers can be alphanumeric or entirely alpha.
You will see approximately five questions on the CPC exam related to HCPCS
Level II. Lets take a look at HCPCS Level II now.
HCPCS Modifiers provide a range of extra information about medical procedures, including where on the body the procedure was performed (such as what
side of the body or which toe) and whether the procedure was performed in an
ambulance or other distinct location. These modifiers may be used with CPT
codes.
HCPCS Level II codes are five characters long, and each starts with a letter. This
letter denotes which grouping the code is in. Heres another look at the groupings of the Level II codes.
GROUPINGS OF
LEVEL II CODES
HCPCS Level II codes are the most specific out of any of the codes youll see on
the CPC exam. There are different codes for each amount of injectible medicine,
for instance, and each type of wrist brace, neck brace, wheelchair, and walker
gets its own specific code.
202 | SECTION 5
204 | SECTION 5
SUFFIXES CONT.
Much like anatomy and physiology, learning medical terminology is not something you can summarize in one simple video.
Youll need to know your ectomies from your otomies (as youve probably
already seen in the prior courses), and its very helpful to familiarize yourself
with the common prefixes and suffixes common to the medical vocabulary.
Below youll find a few tables from Human Anatomy and Physiology from Section 2.
Use these to brush up on your prefixes and suffixes.
PREFIXES
SUFFIXES
PREFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
Eu-
Good, normal
Eukaryote
Hetero-
Different
Heterogeneous
Homo-
Same
Homogeneous
Hyper-
Excessive, above
Hypertension
Hypo-
Lack, below
Hypoglycemic
Iso-
Equal, same
Isotope
PREFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
Ambi-
Both
Ambidextrous
Mal-
Bad, poor
Malnutrition
Aniso-
Unequal
Anisocytosis
Megalo-
Large
Megalomania
Dys-
Dyslexia
Eu-
Good, normal
Eukaryote
PREFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
Hetero-
Different
Heterogeneous
-centesis
Amniocentesis
Homo-
Same
Homogeneous
-ectomy
Hysterectomy
Hyper-
Excessive, above
Hypertension
-ostomy
Tracheostomy
Hypo-
Lack, below
Hypoglycemic
-otomy
Gastrotomy
Iso-
Equal, same
Isotope
-orrhaphy
Gastrorrhaphy
Mal-
Bad, poor
Malnutrition
-opexy
Surgical fixation
Nephropexy
Megalo-
Large
Megalomania
-oplasty
Surgical repair
Rhinoplasty
-otripsy
Crushing or destroying
Lithotripsy
SUFFIX
MEANING
EXAMPLE
Ambi-
Both
Ambidextrous
Aniso-
Unequal
Anisocytosis
Dys-
Dyslexia
SUFFIXES COMMON TO
SURGICAL PROCEDURES
By knowing your medical prefixes and suffixes, youll have a much easier time
navigating complicated medical terminology. If you know the root word and
the suffix, you already know the procedure. For instance, an orchiectomy is the
removal of a testicle. Orchi is testes, and an -ectomy is a surgical removal.
Yikes.
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Still, this course wont be enough to prepare you for the CPC exams question on
medical terminology. We recommend taking either an outside medical terminology and/or anatomy and physiology course before you take the CPC exam.
The bonus of this
Its also not a bad idea to look at some online flash cards. There are dozens of
different flash card sets out there, and most are entirely free. Dont use these
as your primary method of learning medical terminology, but theyre a good
resource if youre looking for a way to brush up.
208 | SECTION 5
FIELD
RANGE
FIELD
RANGE
80047
80076
Drug Testing
80100
80104
Therapeutic Drug
Assays
80150
80299
Consultations (Clinical
Pathology)
80500
80502
Urinalysis
81000
81099
Molecular Pathology
81200
81479
Multianalyte Assays
with Algorithmic
Analyses
81500
81599
85002
85999
Immunology
86850
86999
Microbiology
87001
87999
Anatomic Pathology
88000
88099
Cytopathology
88104
88199
Cytogenic Studies
88230
88299
Surgical Pathology
88300
88399
In Vivo Laboratory
Procedures
88720
88749
89049
89240
Chemistry
Other Procedures
There are two types of general tests in Path and Lab: qualitative and quantitative. Quantitative tests how much of a certain thing is in the body (say, calcium
or alcohol), while qualitative tests for the presence of a substance, period.
Path and Lab codes are measured by the number of tests performed, and not the
results of the test. That is, if you tested for Phenobarbital and alcohol, youd list
that as two procedures.
Lets look at the first section of panels. Each panel has a set of requirements. A
comprehensive metabolic panel, for instance, has to test for albumin, carbon
dioxide, potassium, sodium, total protein, and nine other substances. What
the panels require determines on the system or pathology the panel is trying to
determine.
Up next is drug testing. The first portion of this subsection is made up of qualitative assays. They test whether a drug is present. Then theres the drug assays.
Theres a specific code for each type of drug. These drug assay codes are all
quantitative (how much lidocaine in the system, for instance).
The Path and Lab section also includes a number of pathological tests. Molecular pathology procedures test genes, antigens, and a number of other biological
functions to assess the possibility, or confirm the diagnosis of, a condition. A
test for the genetic predisposition to a certain type of breast cancer, for example,
would be found here.
Following the molecular pathology is the chemistry subsection. In this subsection, there are tests for specific chemical compounds, which can tell the pathologist or physician about the patients condition. The immunology section is
similar. Tests in this section help determine the presence or response of certain
important chemicals in the body as they are related to the immune system. Here
youll find tests for certain allergens and quantitative assays for tumor antigens.
Path and Lab also contains a subsection for microbiological tests. These tests
determine the presence of organisms like giardia, rubeola, hepatitis, and HIV.
There are specific codes for each microbiological organism.
The section closes with anatomic pathology, surgical pathology, and a number
of others types of pathological investigation. In anatomic pathology youll find
procedure codes for autopsies.
Surgical pathology involves the assessment of human tissue. Any time tissue is
removed for examination, theres a relevant Path and Lab code. If a surgeon is
performing a biopsy of the bone marrow, theres a Path and Lab code for it. Ditto
for the resection of an adrenal gland, or a mastectomy. These surgical pathology codes are divided by level. Each level is rather large and covers a wide range
of things. Theyre grouped by the difficulty and/or expense of the excision or
resection procedure. So, the more difficult or costly a tissue sample is to obtain,
the higher the level of surgical pathology code youll use.
Surgical pathology also includes codes for Path and Lab tests that are performed
during surgery. You will probably see a question on this on the CPC exam. In
this procedure, a pathologist analyzes a tissue sample during the procedure in
order to ensure the surgeon has removed the appropriate amount of tissue.
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There is, as you might imagine, a wide variety of CABGs. Some are performed
with venous material only, while others use arterial grafts, or some combination
of the two. Know this section for the exam.
As the cardiovascular codes go up, the procedures move further away from the
heart. Youll find codes for arterial grafts, transluminal angioplasties (widening
of blockages via balloons), aneurysm repair, and more.
In order to prepare for the cardiovascular section of the CPC exam, its important
to review the anatomy of the heart and know the terms for the major cardiovascular throughways in the body. That means you should know your vena cava from
your carotid artery, in other words.
Since the cardiovascular section contains a lot of specific terminology and procedures, and since there are a number of code-specific guidelines for each procedure, its well worth your time to study the section thoroughly.
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As you can see, coding does pop up on the CPB exam, but the majority of the test
is devoted to how billers interact with insurance payers. Youll need to know the
ins and outs of managed care, Medicaid and Medicare, how to format and create
claims, how to adhere to the various billing regulations established by HIPAA
and other bodies, and lots more. The Case analysis questions will present you
with source documents that you must analyze to determine the correct answer,
not unlike the case studies questions youd see on the CPC.
To learn more about the CPB exam, visit the AAPCs website
222 | SECTION 6
Certificates, on the other hand, are usually completed in one year. Where associates degrees demonstrate both general knowledge and a focus in one area,
certificate programs are generally confined solely to one area of study. These
programs are often more affordable and easier to earn while working another
job. The tradeoff is that an associates degree may look better to a prospective
employer or certifying body.
The AAPC, for instance, recommends you have an associates degree before you
take the CPC exam to become a certified coder. Thats just a recommendation,
though, and many professional coders and billers enter into the field with only a
certificate in their respective subject.
As such, there are a lot of organizations, schools, and companies that offer
instruction and training in medical coding and billing. Some of these are
excellent, well-reputed schools. Well look at how to pick the right coding and
billing program in this course. Other programs are less respectable, and there
are a number of scams out there you should avoid. Well talk about how to avoid
medical billing and coding scams in the next Course.
THE IMPORTANCE OF
ACCREDITATION
Bachelors degrees in medical billing and coding are not offered frequently. If
youre going to earn a bachelors degree in health informatics (the general field
of health information, including collection, analysis, and management), youll
want to look for managerial positions related to coding and billing, rather than
coding and billing itself. We wont be covering bachelors degrees here.
PICKING A SCHOOL
Now that you know a little bit more about the different kinds of medical billing
and coding education you can receive, lets look at how to pick the right school
for you.
Community colleges and technical schools are the best option for learning
medical billing and coding. First, theyre less expensive than traditional universities. Second, several of them offer both associate and certificate programs,
meaning you can choose the path that works best for you. Third, theyre flexible.
Most community colleges and technical schools offer night classes, meaning
you can earn a certificate or degree while continuing your career.
Community colleges and technical schools also have the benefit of accreditation
and association with a larger, more renowned school. Better yet, theyll give
you the chance to receive face-to-face instruction from an instructor, which is
invaluable in a subject as complex as medical billing and coding.
At this point, you may be thinking about getting a medical billing and coding
degree online. Online education is one of the fastest-growing fields of education
in the U.S. today, but that doesnt mean its the right choice for everyone.
You should avoid, whenever possible, private, for-profit online schools like
the University of Phoenix and DeVry. While most for-profit online colleges
have accreditation, the quality of education there is lower than your average
community college, and the cost is often higher. These schools often promise
condensed classes and flexible schedules, but the result is diminished quality
of instruction. Thats something that a future employer will take into account
when youre applying for a job.
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You dont want to take a certificate program that takes less than a year to complete, in other words. If you are going to pursue an online degree, try and find
a program thats affiliated with not-for-profit public school or university. Many
schools now offer courses and even degree programs online. If youve got to get
an online coding or billing degree, pick one of these schools before you look into
a private, for-profit school.
Note that you may make an exception for professional organizations like the
AAPC and the American Health Information Management Association, or AHIMA. Both of these professional organizations offer courses in medical billing
and coding. However, since theyre not education bodies, they cant be accredited. Taking courses from these organizations can be expensive, though, and its
still better to pursue a degree or certificate at a community college or technical
school than take classes solely through the AAPC or AHIMA.
When youre looking into getting a degree or certificate in medical billing and
coding, there are a few things your should look for from a prospective school.
The first is, obviously, accreditation. The second is a dedicated program to
health information. Youll want to look for classes in coding and billing software, the healthcare process, anatomy and physiology, and general medical
terminology. If youre going to invest in a degree or certificate, make sure you
get the full spectrum of the medical billing and coding professions.
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The short take: Avoid any program that says youll be able to work at home or
start your own business.
The majority of scams youll see online promise you a billing or coding certification in less than a month. You can study from home! Youll get to work from
home! Just take these ten classes and youll have a job within weeks.
Medical billing and coding takes a long time to master. You should expect your
training in coding and billing to take at least six months to a year, and most
associates degree programs take two years. The coding and billing professions
are too complicated to master in just a month. Even with 36 hours in a day,
theres no way you could learn about anatomy and physiology, ICD-9-CM codes,
CPT codes, coding regulations, billing guidelines, payer structures, HCPCS complianceyou get the idea.
How long a program in billing and coding takes should be your first tip-off. If
you see anything promising a certification or completion of a program in under
half a year, just skip the whole thing.
WORKING AT HOME
Another favorite selling point of the billing and coding scam is the chance to
work at home. Maybe youre a stay-at-home parent, or maybe you just like the
idea of setting up your own home office. Another version of this is the start
your own billing/coding business scam. Plenty of programs offer software,
instructional courses, and a network of professional contacts looking for coding
and/or billing help.
Think about it: Billing and coding are incredibly important parts of the healthcare reimbursement process, and coders and billers handle loads of delicate
private information like social security numbers and the medical histories of
patients. Do you think any provider would fork that information over to someone with no experience in the field, and thus no professional references?
The people who do run billing and coding services out of their homes tend to
have years of experience, sometimes more than a decade. You have to prove that
you know the ins and outs of the whole enterprise, and no one will hire a brandnew coder with no track record of coding or billing employment. If youre going
to start out as a medical coder, youll do it at a providers office.
OTHER WAYS TO
SPOT A SCAM
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We talked at length in the last Section about preparing for the AAPCs CPC
exam. If youre looking to take that test at some point in the future, it makes
sense to join the AAPC now, especially if you can take advantage of their student rate, which is just $70 a year. Membership in either of these professional
organizations will grant you contacts and connections to coders and billers all
over the country. Both of these organizations also have excellent job boards and
provide lots of free job resources for new health information professionals.
Health informatics (the fancy term for the study, analysis, and management of
health information and data) isnt just coding and billing. Theres a huge range
of positions that support healthcare providers and help them run their practices.
If you cant get into coding right away, try working the office or front desk of
a physician. Make connections with the doctors and provider offices you visit
on a regular basis and see if theyre hiring or if they know of someone who is.
Clerical work might seem like a dead-end, but this type of work demonstrates
a commitment to the field and hands-on experience with how the business of
healthcare works.
You can also look for work in medical records. Like working at a receptionist or
front office position, its a slightly indirect way of getting into coding, but youre
familiarity with the providers office will serve you well. You can also look for
work through a temp agency, though your success there may vary.
Dont discount volunteering or job shadowing, either. While you dont want to
work for too long for free, volunteering at a providers office can give you some
first-hand experience and demonstrates your interest. Job shadowing is another
way of getting a great look at the business from the inside. If you have a relationship with a professional biller or coder, just ask them if you can trail them
for a day. Youll learn more in a day of watching how a biller works than you
would in a week in the classroom.
One of the best ways to get your foot in the door and get professional experience
is through an internship. These, like many coding positions they lead up to, can
be scarce.
Another option for those fresh out of school is to take the CPC exam right away,
without the two years recommended work experience. It will be a challenge, but
if youre confident in your schooling and your skills, you should be able to pass
the exam. Once you have passed, you can take part in the CPC Apprentice program. You wont be a fully certified coder, but youll have a leg up on the rest of
the uncertified competition. Plus, once you do find a coding job, you can use that
as a means of gathering work experience to put toward your full certification.
There are a variety of good job resources for medical billing and coding. You can
find internships on third-party aggregator sites like InternMatch, or you can
search for openings via LinkedIn.
Some of the best resources for finding new jobs are the professional organizations that we mentioned in the previous course: the American Association of
Professional Coders (AAPC) and the American Health Information Management
Association (AHIMA).
HOW TO INTERVIEW
FOR A JOB
Lets say youve managed to track down and apply to your first coding job. Next
up comes the interview process, which can be unnerving if youve never done it
before. Lets look at what to know and how to prepare for this important interview.
Firstly, youll want to do your research. Learn a little bit about the company
you plan on applying to, and bring that to bear in your interview. Youll want to
demonstrate how your particular skills can better the company, and how your
career goals could align with the goals of the company.
Be prepared to get tested. No ones going to plunk down a stack of multiple-choice problems, but they very well may test you on vocabulary and medical
terminology. You may have to work through some hypothetical patient interaction scenarios, in which you explain how youd communicate with a patient
who, lets say, is behind on their payments.
Speak to your experience, especially when it comes to coding or billing software. Its good to ask your interviewer some questions as wellWhat type of
practice management program do you use here? Whats your average case volume? Ask practical, serious-minded questions and base your responses to later
questions on the answers.
Its also good to state your goals for the future. If youre a non-certified biller or
coder, you should explain how youre interested in earning a certification in the
near future.
Even with these tips in mind, it wont always be easy to land your first coding or
billing job. Just remember to be patient and persistent, and you should do fine.