• E/M codes are used by all physician specialties and all other duly licensed
health providers.
• The definitions of new patient and established patient are important because
of the extensive use of these terms throughout the guidelines in the E/M section.
A new patient is defined as one who has not received any professional
services from the physician or another physician of the same specialty who
belongs to the same group within the past 3 years. An established patient
is one who has received professional services from the physician or another
physician of the same specialty who belongs to the same group within the past
3 years. When a physician is on call covering for another physician, the decision
as to whether the patient is new or established is determined by the relationship
of the covering physician to the physician group that has provided care
to the patient for whom the coverage is now being provided. If the doctor is
in the same practice, even though she has never seen the patient before, the
patient is considered established. There is no distinction made between new
and established patients in the emergency department
The other terms used in the E/M descriptors are equally as important.
The terms that follow are vital to correct E/M coding
• Problem-focused history
• Detailed history
• Expanded problem-focused history
• Comprehensive history
• Problem-focused examination
• Detailed examination
• Expanded problem-focused examination
• Comprehensive examination
• Straightforward medical decision making
• Low-complexity medical decision making
• Moderate-complexity medical decision making
• High-complexity medical decision making
• E/M codes have three to five levels of service based on increasing amounts of
work.
• Most E/M codes have time elements expressed as the time “typically” spent
face-to-face with the patient and/or family for outpatient care or unit floor
time for inpatient care.
• For each E/M code it is noted that “Counseling and/or coordination of care
with other providers or agencies is provided consistent with the nature of the
problem(s) and the patient’s and/or family’s needs.” When this counseling and
coordination of care accounts for more than 50% of the time spent, the typical
time given in the code descriptor may be used for selecting the appropriate code
rather than the other factors. (See p. 44 for a discussion of counseling and coordination
of care.)
• The 1995 and 1997 CMS documentation guidelines for E/M codes have become
the basis for sometimes draconian compliance requirements for clinicians
who treat Medicare beneficiaries. Commercial payers have adopted
elements of the documentation system in a variable manner. The fact is that
the documentation guidelines cannot be ignored by practitioners. To do so would
place the practitioner at risk for audits, civil actions by payers, and perhaps even
criminal charges and prosecution by federal agencies.
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