Showing posts with label ICD 10. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ICD 10. Show all posts

Monday, December 15, 2014

Is It Time to Start Downsizing?


The author of 12 Changes That Will Affect Doctors' income in 2015 lists major changes that should have a net negative effect on providers’ incomes due to the Affordable Care Act. I suggest you read this article.
 
1.      High deductibles is the new self-pay in disguise with many patients not aware of this serious issue.

2.      Decrease in malpractice premiums which will probably be a transient benefit. Caps are being overturned or litigated in most states.

3.      ICD-10 will begin in October and the true cost is not yet known. Most experts think practices should have a 90 day reserve fund to make payroll.

4.      Practices involved in Medicare Accountable Care Organizations will be losing their guaranteed contracts to avoid losing money. There is a bill in congress to keep the contracts viable for 3 more years. Not sure what will happen in new congress.

5.      The emergence of Telemedicine is affecting the growth of certain practices. The reimbursement for these services are still be battled over. The legal liability is also in flux.

6.      Retail clinic pharmacy driven practices are direct competition to the standard practitioner.

7.      Primary Care Physicians will lose their enhanced Medicaid payments. These payments will lower back to approximately 40 cents on the dollar.

8.      Meaningful use become more “mean” and will now penalize rather than reward the practitioner.  The government wants its money back.

9.      PQRS will no longer give maintenance of certification monies for meeting quality measures. Penalties will ensue.

10.   Medicare payments to specific providers are now available without context on new websites.  Bad publicity is the net effect.

11.   Medicare will start paying for chronic care outreach to providers who deal with patients with 2 or more chronic conditions. The downside is the necessary documentation to avoid future audit.

12.   New CPT modifiers to replace the 59 modifier for procedures. Make sure your billing team is ready to change. Failure to act will lead to another excuse to deny or delay
CLAIMS MADE.

 
Welcome to the electronic age to save Medicare money. These trends are just the beginning to try to save Medicare. Cost shifting to the provider is an easy route because they are all “rich doctors” anyway.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

How to Help the ICD 9/ICD 10 Blues


Doctors and providers are taught to come up with a medical diagnosis compatible with the patient's condition.  However, this diagnosis must be translated into an ICD9 or ICD 10 code to create a CPT code (billing codes), which may be a foreign language to the provider.
 
Most EHRs compel one to pick a diagnosis that has a specific code..  The search engines take you to a particular area, but not necessarily to the proper code without an extensive, time-consuming search.
 
A quick solution to become "trilingual" (speak English/ICD 9/ ICD 10) will be of great aid to providers, office staff, billers, etc.
 
When the clinician comes up with the diagnosis they can "Google" this with their diagnosis and ICD 9 or 10.  This will take you to the location that has proper way of writing the diagnosis in this alternative universe with a code.
 
The clinician can then properly search their diagnosis list saving time.  The office state gets the number they want to finish the billing summary.
 
The one feature can save frustration and time.  This may be the ICD9 / ICD 10 "Google Stone".