Guest guest Posted October 20, 2009 Report Share Posted October 20, 2009 Thought some of you might find this information helpful in reporting H1N1 Vaccines. These are the coding guidelines from the AMA and the CDC. Hope they are helpful Beth Sullivan, DO Clinical Administrator Ridgeway Family Practice Commerce, GA 30529 1 of 1 File(s) ama-fact-sheet-h1n1-reporting.pdf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2009 Report Share Posted October 21, 2009 Hey man that's dumb I'd give it:) How you gonna defend that if you coulda helped people? What reason would thay have for that? I received 100 doses of the H1N1 vaccine 2 days ago without the syringes, pads and such; the state of NC said do not dare give it out until we receive the syringes, the sharps container, etc. So the vaccine is here but we cannot give. They said it may be a week or two before the supplies arrive….Go figure. From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of jellsworth92@... Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 1:05 PM To: Cc: Beth Sullivan, DO Subject: RE: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide I was notified that the health department had free Tamiflu so I called them . They brought some over right away with limited paperwork requirements. Some of it expires end of December. But no seasonal flu vaccine or H1Ni or hope of any -- T. Ellsworth, MD 9377 E. Bell Road, Suite 175 sdale, AZ 85260 ---- " Beth Sullivan wrote: > I got 100 doses of the injectable vaccine Monday AM. Came complete with > alcohol pads, 2x2s, 1 cc syringes and 23 gauge needles. > > > > From: > [mailto: ] On Behalf Of joanne holland > Sent: Tuesday, October 20, 2009 9:45 PM > To: > Subject: Re: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide > > > > > > > Gosh, Beth. You have vaccines? > > Here in County, Oregon, poor rural area...we have none. But > H1N1 is all over the place. I am advising over the phone, calling in > Tambiflu for my HIV and Lupus family members who are getting exposed who get > any level of fever (only one of four nearby pharmacies has any left), > discussing systems for preventing transmission, sending notes to schools for > the time I am telling the famlies to keep the kids home (remember the > prolonged viral release found in some of the cases) and generally working > about the same way I did during parvovirus outbreak in dogs I went through in > 1976 in the Midwest. All unreimbursed of course, They can go to the ER if > they want and wait four hours by which time they will have been exposed for > sure if they don't have it now, and they will be sent home with the same thing > they get from me over the phone. I tell callers the party line about what > constitutes a danger and ER situation. > This is what my mother's mother did in 1919 when they told her to > isolate my sick mother at age six.....The house was not to be visited, and > anyone who went outside of the house to speak to the community or shop never > went into closed off " sick rooms. " Grandma never went in or out of mom's room > without washing hands, and changing her outer robe to the " in room " or the > " outer room " clothes hung by the door. Only one person took care of the sick > child. The treatment was only supportive: darkened room, mild chicken > broth, cool water, asprin (in those days) and damp cloth bathing for high > fevers. They read to the the patient in those days, and rocked her > sometimes. She did fine and no one else got sick in the family. > > Will all this work? Well, my daughter in Portland is teaching third > grade, has sanitizer gel at all the children's work tables, and kleenex there. > She has all of them cover their mouths when they cough and sanitize > immediately afterward. They are practicing not touching their faces, mouths or > noses. They do not get cozy this winter, with no hugs and no sharing coats or > clothes. She has had one case of flu, a very sick little boy three weeks ago. > No more so far. Her teaching partner with a matching third grade next door > has not done these things and has seven children out this week with flu, and > yesterday she went home with it. Maybe it is just coincidence. > > I told the Oregon Medical Association on the questionaire they sent > out about equipment I had to handle pandemic problems that their concerns were > laughable. I said " all these masks, and gloves....when you have a pandemic it > will be totally overwhelmed. We will not have enough material to stop it. " > I remember the parvovirus epidemic in my town in Wisconsin...one dog would get > diarrhea, turn around in a circle while pooping blood, and scatter splashes of > bloody feces as high as your shoulder all along a corridor in the time it took > you to reach for his leash. With flu, we just don't see it, that is all. > > So most of my patients stay home right now, and that is okey since I > am upgrading to a " meaningful use " variety of SOAPware. Learning it takes > time. Compared to previous SOAPware, it is not really intuitive, but > apparently it can send prescriptions and search for nearly any word you ask it > for in any or all records. Okey, whatever. They promised me to put in any > new thing required by the " meaningful use " final requirements put out in > December and let me upgrade over the next year free. About $3000 for my > upgrade, (maybe $4000 new use) for all five computers (two common use, a > portable, a spare in case there is a catastrophy and the server) for those of > you thinking about EMRs. > > And I owns it, My Precious > > > > > > Good luck Guys.... > > > > Joanne Holland DVM/MD Drain, Or > > > > > > > Subject: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide [1 Attachment] > To: ericacodes , " Practice Improvement " > < >, " Practice Management Issues " > > Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, 2:23 PM > > > > Thought some of you might find this information helpful in reporting H1N1 > Vaccines. These are the coding guidelines from the AMA and the CDC. > > > > Hope they are helpful > > > > Beth Sullivan, DO > > Clinical Administrator > > Ridgeway Family Practice > > Commerce, GA 30529 > > > > > > > -- If you are a patient please allow up to 24 hours for a reply by email/Remember that e-mail may not be entirely secure/ MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2009 Report Share Posted October 21, 2009 I agree. Replenish your supplies if/when that stuff arrives. Sharon From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Jean Antonucci Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 1:09 PM To: Subject: Re: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide Hey man that's dumb I'd give it:) How you gonna defend that if you coulda helped people? What reason would thay have for that? I received 100 doses of the H1N1 vaccine 2 days ago without the syringes, pads and such; the state of NC said do not dare give it out until we receive the syringes, the sharps container, etc. So the vaccine is here but we cannot give. They said it may be a week or two before the supplies arrive….Go figure. From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of jellsworth92@... Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 1:05 PM To: Cc: Beth Sullivan, DO Subject: RE: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide I was notified that the health department had free Tamiflu so I called them . They brought some over right away with limited paperwork requirements. Some of it expires end of December. But no seasonal flu vaccine or H1Ni or hope of any -- T. Ellsworth, MD 9377 E. Bell Road, Suite 175 sdale, AZ 85260 ---- " Beth Sullivan wrote: > I got 100 doses of the injectable vaccine Monday AM. Came complete with > alcohol pads, 2x2s, 1 cc syringes and 23 gauge needles. > > > > From: > [mailto: ] On Behalf Of joanne holland > Sent: Tuesday, October 20, 2009 9:45 PM > To: > Subject: Re: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide > > > > > > > Gosh, Beth. You have vaccines? > > Here in County, Oregon, poor rural area...we have none. But > H1N1 is all over the place. I am advising over the phone, calling in > Tambiflu for my HIV and Lupus family members who are getting exposed who get > any level of fever (only one of four nearby pharmacies has any left), > discussing systems for preventing transmission, sending notes to schools for > the time I am telling the famlies to keep the kids home (remember the > prolonged viral release found in some of the cases) and generally working > about the same way I did during parvovirus outbreak in dogs I went through in > 1976 in the Midwest. All unreimbursed of course, They can go to the ER if > they want and wait four hours by which time they will have been exposed for > sure if they don't have it now, and they will be sent home with the same thing > they get from me over the phone. I tell callers the party line about what > constitutes a danger and ER situation. > This is what my mother's mother did in 1919 when they told her to > isolate my sick mother at age six.....The house was not to be visited, and > anyone who went outside of the house to speak to the community or shop never > went into closed off " sick rooms. " Grandma never went in or out of mom's room > without washing hands, and changing her outer robe to the " in room " or the > " outer room " clothes hung by the door. Only one person took care of the sick > child. The treatment was only supportive: darkened room, mild chicken > broth, cool water, asprin (in those days) and damp cloth bathing for high > fevers. They read to the the patient in those days, and rocked her > sometimes. She did fine and no one else got sick in the family. > > Will all this work? Well, my daughter in Portland is teaching third > grade, has sanitizer gel at all the children's work tables, and kleenex there. > She has all of them cover their mouths when they cough and sanitize > immediately afterward. They are practicing not touching their faces, mouths or > noses. They do not get cozy this winter, with no hugs and no sharing coats or > clothes. She has had one case of flu, a very sick little boy three weeks ago. > No more so far. Her teaching partner with a matching third grade next door > has not done these things and has seven children out this week with flu, and > yesterday she went home with it. Maybe it is just coincidence. > > I told the Oregon Medical Association on the questionaire they sent > out about equipment I had to handle pandemic problems that their concerns were > laughable. I said " all these masks, and gloves....when you have a pandemic it > will be totally overwhelmed. We will not have enough material to stop it. " > I remember the parvovirus epidemic in my town in Wisconsin...one dog would get > diarrhea, turn around in a circle while pooping blood, and scatter splashes of > bloody feces as high as your shoulder all along a corridor in the time it took > you to reach for his leash. With flu, we just don't see it, that is all. > > So most of my patients stay home right now, and that is okey since I > am upgrading to a " meaningful use " variety of SOAPware. Learning it takes > time. Compared to previous SOAPware, it is not really intuitive, but > apparently it can send prescriptions and search for nearly any word you ask it > for in any or all records. Okey, whatever. They promised me to put in any > new thing required by the " meaningful use " final requirements put out in > December and let me upgrade over the next year free. About $3000 for my > upgrade, (maybe $4000 new use) for all five computers (two common use, a > portable, a spare in case there is a catastrophy and the server) for those of > you thinking about EMRs. > > And I owns it, My Precious > > > > > > Good luck Guys.... > > > > Joanne Holland DVM/MD Drain, Or > > > > > > > Subject: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide [1 Attachment] > To: ericacodes , " Practice Improvement " > < >, " Practice Management Issues " > > Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, 2:23 PM > > > > Thought some of you might find this information helpful in reporting H1N1 > Vaccines. These are the coding guidelines from the AMA and the CDC. > > > > Hope they are helpful > > > > Beth Sullivan, DO > > Clinical Administrator > > Ridgeway Family Practice > > Commerce, GA 30529 > > > > > > > -- If you are a patient please allow up to 24 hours for a reply by email/ Remember that e-mail may not be entirely secure/ MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2009 Report Share Posted October 21, 2009 Why? Why are they holding up vaccinations in the middle of a huge epidemic? Do you not have syringes? Sharps containers? Etc? Kathy Saradarian, MD Branchville, NJ www.qualityfamilypractice.com Solo 4/03, Practicing since 9/90 Practice Partner 5/03 Low staffing From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Will Conner Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 2:46 PM To: Subject: RE: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide I received 100 doses of the H1N1 vaccine 2 days ago without the syringes, pads and such; the state of NC said do not dare give it out until we receive the syringes, the sharps container, etc. So the vaccine is here but we cannot give. They said it may be a week or two before the supplies arrive….Go figure. From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of jellsworth92@... Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 1:05 PM To: Cc: Beth Sullivan, DO Subject: RE: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide I was notified that the health department had free Tamiflu so I called them .. They brought some over right away with limited paperwork requirements. Some of it expires end of December. But no seasonal flu vaccine or H1Ni or hope of any -- T. Ellsworth, MD 9377 E. Bell Road, Suite 175 sdale, AZ 85260 ---- " Beth Sullivan wrote: > I got 100 doses of the injectable vaccine Monday AM. Came complete with > alcohol pads, 2x2s, 1 cc syringes and 23 gauge needles. > > > > From: > [mailto: ] On Behalf Of joanne holland > Sent: Tuesday, October 20, 2009 9:45 PM > To: > Subject: Re: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide > > > > > > > Gosh, Beth. You have vaccines? > > Here in County, Oregon, poor rural area...we have none. But > H1N1 is all over the place. I am advising over the phone, calling in > Tambiflu for my HIV and Lupus family members who are getting exposed who get > any level of fever (only one of four nearby pharmacies has any left), > discussing systems for preventing transmission, sending notes to schools for > the time I am telling the famlies to keep the kids home (remember the > prolonged viral release found in some of the cases) and generally working > about the same way I did during parvovirus outbreak in dogs I went through in > 1976 in the Midwest. All unreimbursed of course, They can go to the ER if > they want and wait four hours by which time they will have been exposed for > sure if they don't have it now, and they will be sent home with the same thing > they get from me over the phone. I tell callers the party line about what > constitutes a danger and ER situation. > This is what my mother's mother did in 1919 when they told her to > isolate my sick mother at age six.....The house was not to be visited, and > anyone who went outside of the house to speak to the community or shop never > went into closed off " sick rooms. " Grandma never went in or out of mom's room > without washing hands, and changing her outer robe to the " in room " or the > " outer room " clothes hung by the door. Only one person took care of the sick > child. The treatment was only supportive: darkened room, mild chicken > broth, cool water, asprin (in those days) and damp cloth bathing for high > fevers. They read to the the patient in those days, and rocked her > sometimes. She did fine and no one else got sick in the family. > > Will all this work? Well, my daughter in Portland is teaching third > grade, has sanitizer gel at all the children's work tables, and kleenex there. > She has all of them cover their mouths when they cough and sanitize > immediately afterward. They are practicing not touching their faces, mouths or > noses. They do not get cozy this winter, with no hugs and no sharing coats or > clothes. She has had one case of flu, a very sick little boy three weeks ago. > No more so far. Her teaching partner with a matching third grade next door > has not done these things and has seven children out this week with flu, and > yesterday she went home with it. Maybe it is just coincidence. > > I told the Oregon Medical Association on the questionaire they sent > out about equipment I had to handle pandemic problems that their concerns were > laughable. I said " all these masks, and gloves....when you have a pandemic it > will be totally overwhelmed. We will not have enough material to stop it. " > I remember the parvovirus epidemic in my town in Wisconsin...one dog would get > diarrhea, turn around in a circle while pooping blood, and scatter splashes of > bloody feces as high as your shoulder all along a corridor in the time it took > you to reach for his leash. With flu, we just don't see it, that is all. > > So most of my patients stay home right now, and that is okey since I > am upgrading to a " meaningful use " variety of SOAPware. Learning it takes > time. Compared to previous SOAPware, it is not really intuitive, but > apparently it can send prescriptions and search for nearly any word you ask it > for in any or all records. Okey, whatever. They promised me to put in any > new thing required by the " meaningful use " final requirements put out in > December and let me upgrade over the next year free. About $3000 for my > upgrade, (maybe $4000 new use) for all five computers (two common use, a > portable, a spare in case there is a catastrophy and the server) for those of > you thinking about EMRs. > > And I owns it, My Precious > > > > > > Good luck Guys.... > > > > Joanne Holland DVM/MD Drain, Or > > > > > > > Subject: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide [1 Attachment] > To: ericacodes , " Practice Improvement " > < >, " Practice Management Issues " > > Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, 2:23 PM > > > > Thought some of you might find this information helpful in reporting H1N1 > Vaccines. These are the coding guidelines from the AMA and the CDC. > > > > Hope they are helpful > > > > Beth Sullivan, DO > > Clinical Administrator > > Ridgeway Family Practice > > Commerce, GA 30529 > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2009 Report Share Posted October 21, 2009 Yes. What said.Hey man that's dumb I'd give it:) How you gonna defend that if you coulda helped people? What reason would thay have for that?On Wed, Oct 21, 2009 at 2:46 PM, Will Conner <willconnerclinic> wrote: I received 100 doses of the H1N1 vaccine 2 days ago without the syringes, pads and such; the state of NC said do not dare give it out until we receive the syringes, the sharps container, etc. So the vaccine is here but we cannot give. They said it may be a week or two before the supplies arrive….Go figure. From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Ofjellsworth92Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 1:05 PMTo: Cc: Beth Sullivan, DOSubject: RE: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide I was notified that the health department had free Tamiflu so I called them . They brought some over right away with limited paperwork requirements. Some of it expires end of December. But no seasonal flu vaccine or H1Ni or hope of any-- T. Ellsworth, MD9377 E. Bell Road, Suite 175sdale, AZ 85260---- "Beth Sullivan wrote: > I got 100 doses of the injectable vaccine Monday AM. Came complete with> alcohol pads, 2x2s, 1 cc syringes and 23 gauge needles. > > > > From: > [mailto: ] On Behalf Of joanne holland> Sent: Tuesday, October 20, 2009 9:45 PM> To: > Subject: Re: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide> > > > > > > Gosh, Beth. You have vaccines? > > Here in County, Oregon, poor rural area...we have none. But> H1N1 is all over the place. I am advising over the phone, calling in> Tambiflu for my HIV and Lupus family members who are getting exposed who get> any level of fever (only one of four nearby pharmacies has any left),> discussing systems for preventing transmission, sending notes to schools for> the time I am telling the famlies to keep the kids home (remember the> prolonged viral release found in some of the cases) and generally working> about the same way I did during parvovirus outbreak in dogs I went through in> 1976 in the Midwest. All unreimbursed of course, They can go to the ER if> they want and wait four hours by which time they will have been exposed for> sure if they don't have it now, and they will be sent home with the same thing> they get from me over the phone. I tell callers the party line about what> constitutes a danger and ER situation. > This is what my mother's mother did in 1919 when they told her to> isolate my sick mother at age six.....The house was not to be visited, and> anyone who went outside of the house to speak to the community or shop never> went into closed off "sick rooms." Grandma never went in or out of mom's room> without washing hands, and changing her outer robe to the "in room" or the> "outer room" clothes hung by the door. Only one person took care of the sick> child. The treatment was only supportive: darkened room, mild chicken> broth, cool water, asprin (in those days) and damp cloth bathing for high> fevers. They read to the the patient in those days, and rocked her> sometimes. She did fine and no one else got sick in the family. > > Will all this work? Well, my daughter in Portland is teaching third> grade, has sanitizer gel at all the children's work tables, and kleenex there.> She has all of them cover their mouths when they cough and sanitize> immediately afterward. They are practicing not touching their faces, mouths or> noses. They do not get cozy this winter, with no hugs and no sharing coats or> clothes. She has had one case of flu, a very sick little boy three weeks ago.> No more so far. Her teaching partner with a matching third grade next door> has not done these things and has seven children out this week with flu, and> yesterday she went home with it. Maybe it is just coincidence. > > I told the Oregon Medical Association on the questionaire they sent> out about equipment I had to handle pandemic problems that their concerns were> laughable. I said "all these masks, and gloves....when you have a pandemic it> will be totally overwhelmed. We will not have enough material to stop it."> I remember the parvovirus epidemic in my town in Wisconsin...one dog would get> diarrhea, turn around in a circle while pooping blood, and scatter splashes of> bloody feces as high as your shoulder all along a corridor in the time it took> you to reach for his leash. With flu, we just don't see it, that is all. > > So most of my patients stay home right now, and that is okey since I> am upgrading to a "meaningful use" variety of SOAPware. Learning it takes> time. Compared to previous SOAPware, it is not really intuitive, but> apparently it can send prescriptions and search for nearly any word you ask it> for in any or all records. Okey, whatever. They promised me to put in any> new thing required by the "meaningful use" final requirements put out in> December and let me upgrade over the next year free. About $3000 for my> upgrade, (maybe $4000 new use) for all five computers (two common use, a> portable, a spare in case there is a catastrophy and the server) for those of> you thinking about EMRs. > > And I owns it, My Precious> > > > > > Good luck Guys....> > > > Joanne Holland DVM/MD Drain, Or > > > > > > From: Beth Sullivan, DO <bethdo97windstream (DOT) net>> Subject: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide [1 Attachment]> To: ericacodes , "Practice Improvement"> < >, "Practice Management Issues"> <practicemgtlyris (DOT) aafp.org>> Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, 2:23 PM> > > > Thought some of you might find this information helpful in reporting H1N1> Vaccines. These are the coding guidelines from the AMA and the CDC.> > > > Hope they are helpful> > > > Beth Sullivan, DO> > Clinical Administrator > > Ridgeway Family Practice > > Commerce, GA 30529 > > > > > > >-- If you are a patient please allow up to 24 hours for a reply by email/Remember that e-mail may not be entirely secure/ MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 22, 2009 Report Share Posted October 22, 2009 I'm in NC and got my supplies just before my vaccine. So it may be that you'll never get the supplies. I say give it. Haresch > > > > > > From: Beth Sullivan, DO <bethdo97@windstream > <mailto:bethdo97%40windstream.net> .net> > > Subject: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide [1 > Attachment] > > To: ericacodes@yahoogro <mailto:ericacodes%40yahoogroups.com> ups.com, > " Practice Improvement " > > <Practiceimprovement <mailto:%40yahoogroups.com> > 1 >, " Practice Management Issues " > > <practicemgt@ <mailto:practicemgt%40lyris.aafp.org> lyris.aafp.org> > > Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, 2:23 PM > > > > > > > > Thought some of you might find this information helpful in reporting H1N1 > > Vaccines. These are the coding guidelines from the AMA and the CDC. > > > > > > > > Hope they are helpful > > > > > > > > Beth Sullivan, DO > > > > Clinical Administrator > > > > Ridgeway Family Practice > > > > Commerce, GA 30529 > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 22, 2009 Report Share Posted October 22, 2009 I’ m with you . What will they do to me? Throw me in jail for trying to prevent disease? From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of newfloc Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 8:24 PM To: Subject: Re: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide I'm in NC and got my supplies just before my vaccine. So it may be that you'll never get the supplies. I say give it. Haresch > > > > > > From: Beth Sullivan, DO <bethdo97@windstream > <mailto:bethdo97%40windstream.net> .net> > > Subject: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide [1 > Attachment] > > To: ericacodes@yahoogro <mailto:ericacodes%40yahoogroups.com> ups.com, > " Practice Improvement " > > <Practiceimprovement <mailto:%40yahoogroups.com> > 1 >, " Practice Management Issues " > > <practicemgt@ <mailto:practicemgt%40lyris.aafp.org> lyris.aafp.org> > > Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, 2:23 PM > > > > > > > > Thought some of you might find this information helpful in reporting H1N1 > > Vaccines. These are the coding guidelines from the AMA and the CDC. > > > > > > > > Hope they are helpful > > > > > > > > Beth Sullivan, DO > > > > Clinical Administrator > > > > Ridgeway Family Practice > > > > Commerce, GA 30529 > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 22, 2009 Report Share Posted October 22, 2009 I'm with . Give it. Maybe they'll put you into a jail cell next to Jean's HIPAA jail.We'll all come to visit.I’ m with you . What will they do to me? Throw me in jail for trying to prevent disease? From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of newflocSent: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 8:24 PMTo: Subject: Re: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide I'm in NC and got my supplies just before my vaccine. So it may be that you'll never get the supplies. I say give it. Haresch> > > > > > From: Beth Sullivan, DO <bethdo97@windstream> <mailto:bethdo97%40windstream.net> .net>> > Subject: AMA H1N1 Vaccine Coding Guide [1> Attachment]> > To: ericacodes@yahoogro <mailto:ericacodes%40yahoogroups.com> ups.com,> "Practice Improvement"> > <Practiceimprovement <mailto:%40yahoogroups.com>> 1 >, "Practice Management Issues"> > <practicemgt@ <mailto:practicemgt%40lyris.aafp.org> lyris.aafp.org>> > Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, 2:23 PM> > > > > > > > Thought some of you might find this information helpful in reporting H1N1> > Vaccines. These are the coding guidelines from the AMA and the CDC.> > > > > > > > Hope they are helpful> > > > > > > > Beth Sullivan, DO> > > > Clinical Administrator > > > > Ridgeway Family Practice > > > > Commerce, GA 30529 > > > > > > > > > > > > > >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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