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Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been

forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast

majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded

with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is

forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown

to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill.

If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your

doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him

and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey,

this code you continually use does not work anymore” and when I call the

lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were

rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap

shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my

fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please

point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like

plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send

my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible

for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of

how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming

everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down

and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

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Share on other sites

I order my labs through the labs computer now, and with LabCorp,

at least, it automatically checks to see if ABN needed and will suggest ICD-9

codes that do not need an ABN. I think Quest has a “public”

web site that does the same. Otherwise, I know there are sites that have

this info, possibly the local Medicare site. I think there is a site

called www.mlrp.com or .org and I might be

confusing the order of the letters, it could be mrlp (Medicare Local Review

Policy are the words that go with the letters.)

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 Dr.

Brady

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 2:04 PM

To:

Subject: Coding question

Group,

Over

the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced to pay for

their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast majority of these

are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0

code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an

ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not

involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient

calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your

doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him

and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab saying

“hey, this code you continually use does not work anymore” and when

I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different

codes were rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be

a crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is

somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can

someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do

something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance

will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs

they will then be responsible for?

P.S.

I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque

this whole system is and how continually blaming everything on the primary care

doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join

us in choosing primary care.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't know much butI use 272.4 all the time and  nothing happensYour lab does not sound  very nice If they can't take the time then they apparently do not care if they  get paid because patients are so much less likely to pay than a third party payor.. Sendd them elsewhere..They won;t mind when you tell them why.

As an aside today i called the hospital to find out what a    cas h paying patient would pay for a colonoscopy  All they could tell me was the average cost over 445 patients and when I  was smart enough to inquire  about the doctors fees they said oh that is different.Though I had said, please  tell me the entire costs including the surgeon  and anestheisa room fee etc. They  w en t  into the   oh but  it depends   on  the  patient   YES I uh know  that some people  had  a polyp  some have two some have none , what are the charges for each? and they were absolutely  unable to  answer and rather miffed with me that I wo uld have a cash paying paitent. I was told that after a procedure  it goes to coding Right I know that! so each procedure has a code and a charge would be listed  WHat are  they?  What is this the KGB?  Do we  have average charges for the cheerios at the grocery store?? I was referred to some one else who has not calle d   me  back yet.

 

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been

forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast

majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded

with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is

forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown

to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill.

If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your

doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him

and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey,

this code you continually use does not work anymore” and when I call the

lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were

rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap

shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my

fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please

point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like

plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send

my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible

for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of

how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming

everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down

and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

-- PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is part of the medical  record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and  brief  questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL  if the  matter is more urgent .     MD         ph   fax

impcenter.org

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I can bet that you are not the problem; the lab has some billing

issue.

from The Barrio

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Jean

Antonucci

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 3:01 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

I don't know much but

I use 272.4 all the time and nothing happens

Your lab does not sound very nice

If they can't take the time then they apparently do not care if

they get paid because patients are so much less likely to pay than a

third party payor.. Sendd them elsewhere..They won;t mind when you tell them

why.

As an aside today i called the hospital to find out what a

cas h paying patient would pay for a colonoscopy All they could tell me

was the average cost over 445 patients and when I was smart enough to

inquire about the doctors fees they said oh that is different.Though I

had said, please tell me the entire costs including the surgeon and

anestheisa room fee etc. They w en t into the oh

but it depends on the patient YES I uh

know that some people had a polyp some have two some

have none , what are the charges for each? and they were absolutely

unable to answer and rather miffed with me that I wo uld have a cash

paying paitent. I was told that after a procedure it goes to coding Right

I know that! so each procedure has a code and a charge would be listed

WHat are they? What is this the KGB? Do we have average

charges for the cheerios at the grocery store?? I was referred to some one else

who has not calle d me back yet.

On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:03 PM, Dr. Brady

wrote:

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have

been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The

vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol

coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab,

is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons

unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the

bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are

told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you

need to call him and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab saying

“hey, this code you continually use does not work anymore” and when

I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different

codes were rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be

a crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is

somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can

someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do

something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance

will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs

they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of

how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming everything

on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down and

encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

--

PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is

part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what

you say!)

Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the

matter is more urgent .

MD

ph fax

impcenter.org

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

What test are you trying to order that you are using the 272

code to justify? Train you patients to refuse to sign the ABN unless you

know ahead of time that it is not a covered test and the patient just wants

it. Then you will get these problems before the patient is mad they are

stuck with a bill and maybe the lab will call you for a “better”

code?

BTW, the lrmp site is down. I saw it referred to in an

article and it’s no longer functional. I have been trying to find a

site. Must be on CMS, the have all these National policies but local

policies come from your Medicare carrier.

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 Batlle

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:14 PM

To:

Subject: RE: Coding question

I can bet that you are not the problem;

the lab has some billing issue.

from The Barrio

From:

[mailto: ]

On Behalf Of

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 3:01 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

I don't know much but

I use 272.4 all the time and nothing happens

Your lab does not sound very nice

If they can't take the time then they apparently do not care if

they get paid because patients are so much less likely to pay than a

third party payor.. Sendd them elsewhere..They won;t mind when you tell them

why.

As an aside today i called the hospital to find out what a

cas h paying patient would pay for a colonoscopy All they could tell me

was the average cost over 445 patients and when I was smart enough to

inquire about the doctors fees they said oh that is different.Though I

had said, please tell me the entire costs including the surgeon and

anestheisa room fee etc. They w en t into the oh

but it depends on the patient YES I uh

know that some people had a polyp some have two some

have none , what are the charges for each? and they were absolutely

unable to answer and rather miffed with me that I wo uld have a cash

paying paitent. I was told that after a procedure it goes to coding Right

I know that! so each procedure has a code and a charge would be listed

WHat are they? What is this the KGB? Do we have average

charges for the cheerios at the grocery store?? I was referred to some one else

who has not calle d me back yet.

On

Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:03 PM, Dr. Brady

wrote:

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have

been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The

vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol

coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab,

is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons

unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the

bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are

told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you

need to call him and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab

saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work anymore”

and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why

different codes were rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it

appears to be a crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it

doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else

faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be

able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the

insurance will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth

of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of

how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming

everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down

and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

--

PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is

part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what

you say!)

Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the

matter is more urgent .

MD

ph fax

impcenter.org

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

Looks like your code should be good according to this document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a non-screening lipid panel.

Carla

To: Sent: Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PMSubject: Coding question

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.†Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work anymore†and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if

something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

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Share on other sites

Thanks Carla, it looks like the code should be accepted. I may

need to just go back to the lab and try and figure all this out.

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Carla Gibson

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:41 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

Looks like your code should be good according to this

document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a non-screening lipid

panel.

Carla

From: Dr. Brady

To:

Sent: Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PM

Subject: Coding question

Group,

Over

the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced to pay for

their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast majority of these

are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0

code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an

ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not

involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient

calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor

gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work

it out.†Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you

continually use does not work anymore†and when I call the lab(s), they say

they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what

will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if

something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the

patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a

direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab

and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to

get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S.

I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque

this whole system is and how continually blaming everything on the primary care

doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join

us in choosing primary care.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Kathy,

I am using the 272.0 to justify a lipid panel. I will talk to my

patients about not signing the ABN. I wonder if they refuse to sign if they

will be refused service. Hmmm, might be good to find out.

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Kathy

Saradarian

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:28 PM

To:

Subject: RE: Coding question

,

What test are you trying to order that

you are using the 272 code to justify? Train you patients to refuse to

sign the ABN unless you know ahead of time that it is not a covered test and

the patient just wants it. Then you will get these problems before the

patient is mad they are stuck with a bill and maybe the lab will call you for a

“better” code?

BTW, the lrmp site is down. I saw

it referred to in an article and it’s no longer functional. I have been

trying to find a site. Must be on CMS, the have all these National

policies but local policies come from your Medicare carrier.

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 Batlle

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:14 PM

To:

Subject: RE: Coding question

I can bet that you are not the problem;

the lab has some billing issue.

from The Barrio

From:

[mailto: ]

On Behalf Of

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 3:01 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

I don't know much but

I use 272.4 all the time and nothing happens

Your lab does not sound very nice

If they can't take the time then they apparently do not care if

they get paid because patients are so much less likely to pay than a

third party payor.. Sendd them elsewhere..They won;t mind when you tell them

why.

As an aside today i called the hospital to find out what a

cas h paying patient would pay for a colonoscopy All they could tell me

was the average cost over 445 patients and when I was smart enough to

inquire about the doctors fees they said oh that is different.Though I

had said, please tell me the entire costs including the surgeon and

anestheisa room fee etc. They w en t into the oh

but it depends on the patient YES I uh

know that some people had a polyp some have two some

have none , what are the charges for each? and they were absolutely

unable to answer and rather miffed with me that I wo uld have a cash

paying paitent. I was told that after a procedure it goes to coding Right

I know that! so each procedure has a code and a charge would be listed

WHat are they? What is this the KGB? Do we have average

charges for the cheerios at the grocery store?? I was referred to some one else

who has not calle d me back yet.

On

Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:03 PM, Dr. Brady

wrote:

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have

been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The

vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol

coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab,

is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons

unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the

bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are

told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to

call him and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey,

this code you continually use does not work anymore” and when I call the

lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were

rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap

shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault

(at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point

me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug

in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my

patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible

for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of

how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming

everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down

and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

--

PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is

part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what

you say!)

Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the

matter is more urgent .

MD

ph fax

impcenter.org

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

The problem is that I still get blamed for it. That is what I

have to sort out.

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Batlle

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:14 PM

To:

Subject: RE: Coding question

I can bet that you are not the problem;

the lab has some billing issue.

from The Barrio

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Jean

Antonucci

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 3:01 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

I don't know much but

I use 272.4 all the time and nothing happens

Your lab does not sound very nice

If they can't take the time then they apparently do not care if

they get paid because patients are so much less likely to pay than a

third party payor.. Sendd them elsewhere..They won;t mind when you tell them

why.

As an aside today i called the hospital to find out what a

cas h paying patient would pay for a colonoscopy All they could tell me

was the average cost over 445 patients and when I was smart enough to

inquire about the doctors fees they said oh that is different.Though I

had said, please tell me the entire costs including the surgeon and

anestheisa room fee etc. They w en t into the oh

but it depends on the patient YES I uh

know that some people had a polyp some have two some

have none , what are the charges for each? and they were absolutely

unable to answer and rather miffed with me that I wo uld have a cash

paying paitent. I was told that after a procedure it goes to coding Right

I know that! so each procedure has a code and a charge would be listed

WHat are they? What is this the KGB? Do we have average

charges for the cheerios at the grocery store?? I was referred to some one else

who has not calle d me back yet.

On

Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:03 PM, Dr. Brady

wrote:

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have

been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The

vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol

coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab,

is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons

unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the

bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are

told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to

call him and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey,

this code you continually use does not work anymore” and when I call the

lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were

rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap

shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault

(at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point

me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug

in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my

patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible

for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of

how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming

everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down

and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

--

PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is

part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what

you say!)

Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the

matter is more urgent .

MD

ph fax

impcenter.org

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,Have you tried contacting Medicare directly and asking them why the charge was denied? It could be something as simple as the lab clerk entering the ICD9 code incorrectly. SetoSouth Pasadena, CAThanks Carla, it looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to just go back to the lab and try and figure all this out. From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Carla GibsonSent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:41 PMTo: Subject: Re: Coding question http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf Looks like your code should be good according to this document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a non-screening lipid panel. Carla From: Dr. Brady <drbradythevillagedoctor (DOT) hrcoxmail.com>To: Sent: Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PMSubject: Coding question Group,Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work anymore” and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

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Share on other sites

I thought about doing the order entry with the lab thing, but

then I have to put in all the demographics over again. Historically, this

seemed like increasing the admin burden for no reimbursement. Why should I do

it if the lab is getting paid for the test? My EMR can do this automatically,

but I would have to use LabCorp which is not well run in this area and my patients

have to wait hours to get stuck and routinely have labs lost. Maybe I should

relook at the issue.

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Kathy

Saradarian

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 2:50 PM

To:

Subject: RE: Coding question

I order my labs through the labs

computer now, and with LabCorp, at least, it automatically checks to see if ABN

needed and will suggest ICD-9 codes that do not need an ABN. I think

Quest has a “public” web site that does the same. Otherwise, I know there

are sites that have this info, possibly the local Medicare site. I think

there is a site called www.mlrp.com or .org

and I might be confusing the order of the letters, it could be mrlp (Medicare

Local Review Policy are the words that go with the letters.)

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 Dr. Brady

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 2:04 PM

To:

Subject: Coding question

Group,

Over

the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced to pay for

their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast majority of these

are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0

code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an

ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not

involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient

calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor

gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work

it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you

continually use does not work anymore” and when I call the lab(s), they say

they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what

will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if

something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the

patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction

as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an

ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to get

hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S.

I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque

this whole system is and how continually blaming everything on the primary care

doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join

us in choosing primary care.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not yet,

I’m getting all this third hand from 2 angry patients who called

this am wondering why I messed up. I’ll have them bring in the bill and I will

call Medicare.

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Seto

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 7:19 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

,

Have you tried contacting Medicare directly and asking them

why the charge was denied? It could be something as simple as the lab clerk

entering the ICD9 code incorrectly.

Seto

South Pasadena, CA

Thanks Carla, it

looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to just go back to the lab

and try and figure all this out.

From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Carla Gibson

Sent: Monday, February 08,

2010 4:41 PM

To:

Subject: Re:

Coding question

http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

Looks like your code should be good

according to this document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a

non-screening lipid panel.

Carla

To:

Sent: Mon, February 8,

2010 12:03:52 PM

Subject:

Coding question

Group,

Over the past few months more and

more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding

of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow

up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the

patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare

rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process),

and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they

are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was

rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.” Note: I never

get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not

work anymore” and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time

looking up why different codes were rejected or what will actually work. So

essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if

it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else

faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be

able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the

insurance will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth

of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from

going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how

continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to

ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary

care.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

272.0 should definitely justify a lipid panel. I wonder if

the lab even bills Medicare after they have gotten an ABN. If the patient

refuses to sign, the lab will refuse to draw that test. But then , at

least, you will know before the fact there is a problem, instead of after the fact.

I have an interface with LabCorp with my EMR. I hand input

Quest. Now it’s not that many, but I only have to add the patient

to Quest once. And their site is pretty easy and does live eligibility

checking. I figure it reduces transcription errors and I get the labs I

order if I put them in the computer. If there’s a mess up, it’s

usually on me. But I never mess up ;-)

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 Dr.

Brady

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 7:15 PM

To:

Subject: RE: Coding question

Kathy,

I am using the 272.0 to justify a lipid

panel. I will talk to my patients about not signing the ABN. I wonder if they

refuse to sign if they will be refused service. Hmmm, might be good to find out.

From:

[mailto: ]

On Behalf Of Kathy Saradarian

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:28 PM

To:

Subject: RE: Coding question

,

What test are you trying to order that

you are using the 272 code to justify? Train you patients to refuse to

sign the ABN unless you know ahead of time that it is not a covered test and

the patient just wants it. Then you will get these problems before the

patient is mad they are stuck with a bill and maybe the lab will call you for a

“better” code?

BTW, the lrmp site is down. I saw

it referred to in an article and it’s no longer functional. I have

been trying to find a site. Must be on CMS, the have all these National

policies but local policies come from your Medicare carrier.

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 Batlle

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:14 PM

To:

Subject: RE: Coding question

I can bet that you are not the problem;

the lab has some billing issue.

from The Barrio

From:

[mailto: ]

On Behalf Of

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 3:01 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

I don't know much but

I use 272.4 all the time and nothing happens

Your lab does not sound very nice

If they can't take the time then they apparently do not care if

they get paid because patients are so much less likely to pay than a

third party payor.. Sendd them elsewhere..They won;t mind when you tell them

why.

As an aside today i called the hospital to find out what a

cas h paying patient would pay for a colonoscopy All they could tell me

was the average cost over 445 patients and when I was smart enough to

inquire about the doctors fees they said oh that is different.Though I

had said, please tell me the entire costs including the surgeon and

anestheisa room fee etc. They w en t into the oh

but it depends on the patient YES I uh

know that some people had a polyp some have two some

have none , what are the charges for each? and they were absolutely

unable to answer and rather miffed with me that I wo uld have a cash

paying paitent. I was told that after a procedure it goes to coding Right

I know that! so each procedure has a code and a charge would be listed

WHat are they? What is this the KGB? Do we have average

charges for the cheerios at the grocery store?? I was referred to some one else

who has not calle d me back yet.

On

Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:03 PM, Dr. Brady

wrote:

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have

been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The

vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol

coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab,

is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons

unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the

bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are

told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you

need to call him and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab

saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work anymore”

and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why

different codes were rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it

appears to be a crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it

doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else

faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be

able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the

insurance will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth

of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of

how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming

everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down

and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

--

PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is

part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what

you say!)

Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the

matter is more urgent .

MD

ph fax

impcenter.org

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Share on other sites

I never submit ABNs with the requisitions for blood drawn in my office. The labs usually call me up if a code is not sufficiently truncated. The way I see it is that the lab has much more lattitude in billing the patient with a signed ABN on hand. I suspect your code was either keyed in wrong or omitted altogether, resulting in denial by Medicare. I also read somewhere that there is a limitation issue when it comes to repeat ambulatory testing with Medicare.

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.†Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work anymore†and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a

crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

-- PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org

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Share on other sites

why should call Medicare??Why a re the patients angry at him?This is a lab issueLookI have a lab   and they call me and say this dx isn't covered  in the  rare case of that being true and i say  ok try X or   i say  well that's all I got., tell the patient  if he wants it it isn;t covered.

in fact my lab is  hysterical they call and want me to clarify dm type 1 or  2 controlled or uncontrolled HOW DO I KNOW UNTIL I SEE THE RESULTS??they want BPH with or without obstruction and they want , get this,  when I order a psa and say screenign they  w ant me to tell them screening for what.   WHAT DO YOU THINK, DONNA ,  I SAY,  HEART DISEASE?? IT " S A PSA!!??

 So now they call me an d say I need clarification on s labs and I just include it all  Obstructed I say type 2  controlled No dysuria  has prostatecancer.I mean lighten up  pupcakes.It isn;t ;s problem, and if he sucks it up how exactly does that  help anyone except his kids have to  learn  to cook dinner cuz he ain;t home  to do it ??

His job is to dx and  treat  I would call the  lab supervisor once MAybe i would tell the patietn  that   this was bizarre or maybe if i was in a good mood  I would say it was nuts  and tell the patietn to speak to the lab supervisor or take it elsewhere  and be  done with it  A good lab figures this stuff out!

it ain;t Brady's job to supervise every little  niggel and squiqqle of the  system Good lord this is exaclty why no one will go into primary care!!!

 

Not yet,

I’m getting all this third hand from 2 angry patients who called

this am wondering why I messed up. I’ll have them bring in the bill and I will

call Medicare.

 

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Seto

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 7:19 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

 

 

,

Have you tried contacting Medicare directly and asking them

why the charge was denied? It could be something as simple as the lab clerk

entering the ICD9 code incorrectly. 

 

Seto

South Pasadena, CA

 

 

Thanks Carla, it

looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to just go back to the lab

and try and figure all this out.

 

From:  [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Carla Gibson

Sent: Monday, February 08,

2010 4:41 PM

To: 

Subject: Re:

Coding question

 

 

http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

 

Looks like your code should be good

according to this document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a

non-screening lipid panel.

 

Carla

 

From: Dr. Brady

To: 

Sent: Mon, February 8,

2010 12:03:52 PM

Subject: 

Coding question

 

Group,

Over the past few months more and

more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding

of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow

up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the

patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare

rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process),

and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they

are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was

rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.” Note: I never

get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not

work anymore” and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time

looking up why different codes were rejected or what will actually work. So

essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if

it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else

faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be

able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the

insurance will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth

of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from

going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how

continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to

ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary

care.

 

 

-- PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is part of the medical  record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and  brief  questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL  if the  matter is more urgent .     MD         ph   fax

impcenter.org

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The labs I deal with also require an ABN for all medical

necessity dictated lab tests. Most of these have not only diagnostic code

requirements but also minimum frequency requirements that dictate if a lab will

be paid for too. Per my LabCorp representative, patients are required to

sign an ABN anytime they have these tests done because if they have had the same

test ordered by another doctor within the frequency limits and you then order

the test it will be denied. Unfortunately, what I have found in terms of

the labs is that if it is denied its denied, trying to find out the exact reason

for the denial is next to impossible from the lab. What I usually do is

have the patient bring in their EOB so I can look at the actual denial codes.

I would bet that the timing issue is the more likely reason for your problem

than the diagnosis code being wrong.

Beth Sullivan, DO

Ridgeway Family Practice

Commerce, GA 30529

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Seto

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 7:19 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

,

Have you tried contacting Medicare directly and asking them

why the charge was denied? It could be something as simple as the lab clerk

entering the ICD9 code incorrectly.

Seto

South Pasadena, CA

Thanks Carla, it

looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to just go back to the lab

and try and figure all this out.

From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Carla Gibson

Sent: Monday, February 08,

2010 4:41 PM

To:

Subject: Re:

Coding question

http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

Looks like your code should be good

according to this document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a

non-screening lipid panel.

Carla

To:

Sent: Mon, February 8,

2010 12:03:52 PM

Subject:

Coding question

Group,

Over the past few months more and

more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding

of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow

up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the

patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare

rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process),

and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they

are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was

rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.” Note: I

never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use

does not work anymore” and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot

spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will

actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if something

gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the

patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a

direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab

and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to

get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from

going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how

continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to

ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary

care.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

I use 272.4

I cant say what the difference is between the two codes. Just know that it seems to work and I have not fielded significant calls / complaints about it so I keep using it.

I'm sorry about the rejections and the complaints. That is so frustrating.

Mike Safran

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It’s true that the system is stupid. But the bottom

line is the patient has no control over the codes, the doctor picks the codes

which makes the doctor responsible. The patient can’t change the

codes. It’s always the doctor’s fault, everything is the

doctor’s fault.

Now once the doctor has ascertained that they did indeed code correctly and it

should be covered, then the patient can fight it directly with their insurance

and with the lab. But until the correct code is used, they can’t do

a thing other than pay.

BTW, you are very lucky your lab accepts words. But that

does open you to error as you are expecting a lab tech to interpret your words

into codes. It’s a risk.

PS: Chocolate gone, can’t send

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 Jean

Antonucci

Sent: Tuesday, February 09, 2010 8:11 AM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

The other thing that is fascinating here is

that Brady gets blamed

I bet Brady gets blmed becasue he has a relationship with the

patient and they CAN FIND him to blame him He has aface and a voice

and is a real person they can access.

The lab is a mindless bureaucracy staffed by anonymous ever changing

people handing papers back to people saying " yourdoctordiditwrong "

eg " go away it would take work to problem solve this "

Becasue Brady is an IMP he gets MORE stuff that flows downhill to him

People expect him to do better becasue he always does. I bet this does

not happen in big practices- I bet I bet patients there do not get the

labs done, can';t find anyone to tell and disappaer without

care

How perverted

Brady does good

Brady gets punished.

egads

Send chocolate

Jean

On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 7:26 PM, Dr. Brady

wrote:

Not yet,

I’m

getting all this third hand from 2 angry patients who called this am wondering

why I messed up. I’ll have them bring in the bill and I will call

Medicare.

From: [mailto: ]

On Behalf Of Seto

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 7:19 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

,

Have you tried contacting Medicare directly and asking them

why the charge was denied? It could be something as simple as the lab clerk

entering the ICD9 code incorrectly.

Seto

South Pasadena, CA

Thanks Carla, it

looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to just go back to the lab

and try and figure all this out.

From:

[mailto: ] On

Behalf Of Carla Gibson

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:41 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

Looks like your code should be good

according to this document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a

non-screening lipid panel.

Carla

To:

Sent: Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PM

Subject: Coding question

Group,

Over the past few months more and

more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding

of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow

up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the

patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare

rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process),

and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they

are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was

rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.” Note: I

never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use

does not work anymore” and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot

spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will

actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if something

gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the

patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a

direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab

and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to

get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from

going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how

continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to

ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary

care.

--

PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is

part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what

you say!)

Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the

matter is more urgent .

MD

ph fax

impcenter.org

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

It’s true that the system is stupid.  But the bottom

line is the patient has no control over the codes, the doctor picks the codes

which makes the doctor responsible.  The patient can’t change the

codes.  It’s always the doctor’s fault, everything is the

doctor’s fault. I do apologize for things alot,  tell my patients everything is my fault I tell them that if they get admitted and the nurse brings lunch and dumps the soup in their lap it is my fault.Perhaps I should cut that out-it is casuing JOhn Brady trouble.

 

Now once the doctor has ascertained that they did indeed code correctly and it

should be covered, then the patient can fight it directly with their insurance

and with the lab.  But until the correct code is used, they can’t do

a thing other than pay.

 

BTW, you are very lucky your lab accepts words.  But that

does open you to error as you are expecting a lab tech to interpret your words

into codes.  It’s a risk. 

 

PS:  Chocolate gone, can’t send

 

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 Jean

Antonucci

Sent: Tuesday, February 09, 2010 8:11 AM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

 

 

The other thing that is fascinating here is

that Brady gets blamed

I bet  Brady gets blmed becasue  he has a relationship with the

patient and  they CAN FIND him to blame him  He has aface and a voice

and is a real person they can access.

 The lab is a mindless bureaucracy staffed by anonymous ever changing

people handing papers back to people  saying " yourdoctordiditwrong "

eg  " go away it would take work to problem solve this "

 Becasue Brady is an IMP he gets MORE stuff that flows downhill to him

People expect him to do better becasue he always does.  I bet this does

not happen in big practices- I bet I bet patients there  do not get the

labs done,  can';t find anyone   to tell and disappaer without

care

How perverted

Brady does good

 Brady gets  punished.

 egads

Send chocolate

Jean

On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 7:26 PM, Dr. Brady

wrote:

 

Not yet,

I’m

getting all this third hand from 2 angry patients who called this am wondering

why I messed up. I’ll have them bring in the bill and I will call

Medicare.

 

From: [mailto: ]

On Behalf Of Seto

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 7:19 PM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

 

 

,

Have you tried contacting Medicare directly and asking them

why the charge was denied? It could be something as simple as the lab clerk

entering the ICD9 code incorrectly. 

 

Seto

South Pasadena, CA

 

 

 

Thanks Carla, it

looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to just go back to the lab

and try and figure all this out.

 

From: 

[mailto: ] On

Behalf Of Carla Gibson

Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:41 PM

To: 

Subject: Re: Coding question

 

 

http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

 

Looks like your code should be good

according to this document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a

non-screening lipid panel.

 

Carla

 

From: Dr. Brady

To: 

Sent: Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PM

Subject:  Coding question

 

Group,

Over the past few months more and

more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding

of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow

up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the

patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare

rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process),

and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they

are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was

rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.” Note: I

never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use

does not work anymore” and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot

spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will

actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if something

gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the

patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a

direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab

and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to

get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from

going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how

continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to

ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary

care.

 

 

--

PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is

part of the medical  record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what

you say!)

Email is best used for appointment making and  brief  questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL  if the

 matter is more urgent .

    MD

   

   

ph   fax

impcenter.org

-- PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is part of the medical  record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and  brief  questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL  if the  matter is more urgent .     MD         ph   fax

impcenter.org

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yes blame bradyfor a lithe kind of runner guy, he has big shouldersLynnTo: From: mkcl6@...Date: Tue, 9 Feb 2010 12:56:13 -0500Subject: Re: Coding question

I can tell you from patient's side this is frustrating too. We get taken to collections almost monthly by Quest for labs done by my husband's oncologist, with no ABN signed, and then paid for by the insurance at 100%. I fight with them MONTHLY! It is amazing to me that they would send someone to collections (or even could) when there is no abn or consent for payment signed.

Can I blame Brady, just for one of them, please? Kris

In a message dated 2/9/2010 10:02:19 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, jbatlleoptonline (DOT) net writes:

Is not true what you state. The patient pays for the insurance that he or she wants, allows the insurance company that he or she pays for to make all theses shenanigans, votes for representatives in the pocket of the insurers that rig the system against their benefit. This is a DEMOCRACY, a market driven one supposedly, and people get what they want and allow for.

I am not at fault for the system; I tell patients that if they don’t like it they should vote or organize and stop paying for bad service.

José from The Barrio

From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Tuesday, February 09, 2010 8:31 AMTo: Subject: Re: Coding question

On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 8:25 AM, Kathy Saradarian <qualityfphughes (DOT) net> wrote:

It’s true that the system is stupid. But the bottom line is the patient has no control over the codes, the doctor picks the codes which makes the doctor responsible. The patient can’t change the codes. It’s always the doctor’s fault, everything is the doctor’s fault. I do apologize for things alot, tell my patients everything is my fault I tell them that if they get admitted and the nurse brings lunch and dumps the soup in their lap it is my fault.Perhaps I should cut that out-it is casuing JOhn Brady trouble.

Now once the doctor has ascertained that they did indeed code correctly and it should be covered, then the patient can fight it directly with their insurance and with the lab. But until the correct code is used, they can’t do a thing other than pay.

BTW, you are very lucky your lab accepts words. But that does open you to error as you are expecting a lab tech to interpret your words into codes. It’s a risk.

PS: Chocolate gone, can’t send

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 Sent: Tuesday, February 09, 2010 8:11 AM

To: Subject: Re: Coding question

The other thing that is fascinating here is that Brady gets blamedI bet Brady gets blmed becasue he has a relationship with the patient and they CAN FIND him to blame him He has aface and a voice and is a real person they can access. The lab is a mindless bureaucracy staffed by anonymous ever changing people handing papers back to people saying "yourdoctordiditwrong" eg "go away it would take work to problem solve this" Becasue Brady is an IMP he gets MORE stuff that flows downhill to him People expect him to do better becasue he always does. I bet this does not happen in big practices- I bet I bet patients there do not get the labs done, can';t find anyone to tell and disappaer without careHow perverted Brady does good Brady gets punished. egadsSend chocolateJean

On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 7:26 PM, Dr. Brady <drbradythevillagedoctor (DOT) hrcoxmail.com> wrote:

Not yet,

I’m getting all this third hand from 2 angry patients who called this am wondering why I messed up. I’ll have them bring in the bill and I will call Medicare.

From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of SetoSent: Monday, February 08, 2010 7:19 PM

To: Subject: Re: Coding question

,

Have you tried contacting Medicare directly and asking them why the charge was denied? It could be something as simple as the lab clerk entering the ICD9 code incorrectly.

Seto

South Pasadena, CA

Thanks Carla, it looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to just go back to the lab and try and figure all this out.

From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Carla GibsonSent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:41 PMTo: Subject: Re: Coding question

http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

Looks like your code should be good according to this document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a non-screening lipid panel.

Carla

From: Dr. Brady <drbradythevillagedoctor (DOT) hrcoxmail.com>To: Sent: Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PMSubject: Coding question

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.” Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work anymore” and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

-- PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org

-- PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org

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Not so. Happens in the big practices too, including the last two I worked for. Just depends on how big. First the biller will call the lab and get the specifics. If big enough that they have coders then the billing department calls them and says "patient complaint, can you change the code?" and the coder will read the physicain note again and pick a code. If there is no coding department then the billing will pull the note and the pattients Problem List and sometimes even a list of what codes will cover that lab and walk it to the doctor. Doctor picks. Biller leaves and redoes it. But in an IMP world there is no such buffer. (But you are right -- more patients skip getting the labs done in the first place in the big practice.)

Kris - I would check with the oncologist office -- I bet the doc is using one of those 4 digit codes instead of 5 digits or something like that. My prostate cancer patient s get PSA's every 3 months and it's never kicked back even tho' it's a "limited frequency" test.

, I do the same thing for my patients. It's a hassle but fortunately hasn't happened very often for me. Fortunatley when I screw up I get forgiven by my patients. I like to think some of that is because I helped with this nonsense.

To: Sent: Tue, February 9, 2010 12:56:13 PMSubject: Re: Coding question

I can tell you from patient's side this is frustrating too. We get taken to collections almost monthly by Quest for labs done by my husband's oncologist, with no ABN signed, and then paid for by the insurance at 100%. I fight with them MONTHLY! It is amazing to me that they would send someone to collections (or even could) when there is no abn or consent for payment signed.

Can I blame Brady, just for one of them, please? Kris

In a message dated 2/9/2010 10:02:19 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, jbatlleoptonline (DOT) net writes:

Is not true what you state. The patient pays for the insurance that he or she wants, allows the insurance company that he or she pays for to make all theses shenanigans, votes for representatives in the pocket of the insurers that rig the system against their benefit. This is a DEMOCRACY, a market driven one supposedly, and people get what they want and allow for.

I am not at fault for the system; I tell patients that if they don’t like it they should vote or organize and stop paying for bad service.

José from The Barrio

From: Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) com [mailto:Practiceimp rovement1@ yahoogroups. com] On Behalf Of Sent: Tuesday, February 09, 2010 8:31 AMTo: Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) comSubject: Re: [Practiceimprovemen t1] Coding question

On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 8:25 AM, Kathy Saradarian <qualityfphughes (DOT) net> wrote:

It’s true that the system is stupid. But the bottom line is the patient has no control over the codes, the doctor picks the codes which makes the doctor responsible. The patient can’t change the codes. It’s always the doctor’s fault, everything is the doctor’s fault. I do apologize for things alot, tell my patients everything is my fault I tell them that if they get admitted and the nurse brings lunch and dumps the soup in their lap it is my fault.Perhaps I should cut that out-it is casuing JOhn Brady trouble.

Now once the doctor has ascertained that they did indeed code correctly and it should be covered, then the patient can fight it directly with their insurance and with the lab. But until the correct code is used, they can’t do a thing other than pay.

BTW, you are very lucky your lab accepts words. But that does open you to error as you are expecting a lab tech to interpret your words into codes. It’s a risk.

PS: Chocolate gone, can’t send

Kathy Saradarian, MD

Branchville, NJ

www.qualityfamilypr actice.com

Solo 4/03, Practicing since 9/90

Practice Partner 5/03

Low staffing

From: Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) com [mailto:Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) com] On Behalf Of Sent: Tuesday, February 09, 2010 8:11 AM

To: Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) comSubject: Re: [Practiceimprovemen t1] Coding question

The other thing that is fascinating here is that Brady gets blamedI bet Brady gets blmed becasue he has a relationship with the patient and they CAN FIND him to blame him He has aface and a voice and is a real person they can access. The lab is a mindless bureaucracy staffed by anonymous ever changing people handing papers back to people saying "yourdoctordiditwro n g" eg "go away it would take work to problem solve this" Becasue Brady is an IMP he gets MORE stuff that flows downhill to him People expect him to do better becasue he always does. I bet this does not happen in big practices- I bet I bet patients there do not get the labs done, can';t find anyone to tell and disappaer without careHow perverted Brady does good Brady gets punished. egadsSend chocolateJean

On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 7:26 PM, Dr. Brady <drbrady@thevillaged octor.hrcoxmail. com> wrote:

Not yet,

I’m getting all this third hand from 2 angry patients who called this am wondering why I messed up. I’ll have them bring in the bill and I will call Medicare.

From: Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) com [mailto:Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) com] On Behalf Of SetoSent: Monday, February 08, 2010 7:19 PM

To: Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) comSubject: Re: [Practiceimprovemen t1] Coding question

,

Have you tried contacting Medicare directly and asking them why the charge was denied? It could be something as simple as the lab clerk entering the ICD9 code incorrectly.

Seto

South Pasadena, CA

Thanks Carla, it looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to just go back to the lab and try and figure all this out.

From: Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) com [mailto:@yahoogrou ps.com] On Behalf Of Carla GibsonSent: Monday, February 08, 2010 4:41 PMTo: Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) comSubject: Re: [Practiceimprovemen t1] Coding question

http://www.sonoraqu est.com/document s/mdg-lipid_ profile_choleste rol_testing. pdf

Looks like your code should be good according to this document that lists all the codes that should be paid for a non-screening lipid panel.

Carla

From: Dr. Brady <drbrady@thevillaged octor.hrcoxmail. com>To: Practiceimprovement 1yahoogroups (DOT) comSent: Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PMSubject: [Practiceimprovemen t1] Coding question

Group,

Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case), Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you need to call him and work it out.†Note: I never get a call from the lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work anymore†and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will actually work. So

essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of labs they will then be responsible for?

P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming everything on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

-- PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org

-- PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org

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I, too, use 272.4. I wonder if the 272.0 is being treated as a not specific enough code? Good luck.

To: Sent: Mon, February 8, 2010 10:51:15 PMSubject: Re: Coding question

, I use 272.4

I cant say what the difference is between the two codes. Just know that it seems to work and I have not fielded significant calls / complaints about it so I keep using it.

I'm sorry about the rejections and the complaints. That is so frustrating.

Mike Safran

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The lab can't tell you which code will work. They probably don't know

for one, and it's probably not legal for another. The doctor does have

to make the best choice s/he can for the given dx.

That's all we can do.

Dr. Brady wrote:

>

> Thanks Carla, it looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to

> just go back to the lab and try and figure all this out.

>

> *From:*

> [mailto: ] *On Behalf Of *Carla Gibson

> *Sent:* Monday, February 08, 2010 4:41 PM

> *To:*

> *Subject:* Re: Coding question

>

> http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

>

<http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf>

>

> Looks like your code should be good according to this document that

> lists all the codes that should be paid for a non-screening lipid panel.

>

> Carla

>

> ------------------------------------------------------------------------

>

> *From:* Dr. Brady

> *To:*

> *Sent:* Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PM

> *Subject:* Coding question

>

> Group,

>

> Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced

> to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The

> vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high

> cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the

> patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case),

> Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved

> in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient

> calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told

> “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you

> need to call him and work it out.†Note: I never get a call from the

> lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work

> anymore†and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the

> time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will

> actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if

> something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at

> least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please

> point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something

> simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance

> will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of

> labs they will then be responsible for?

>

>

>

> P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid

> and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming everything

> on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down

> and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

>

>

Attachment: vcard [not shown]

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the lab  does know which codes are acceptable for medicare fo a certain dx. They tell me that all the time.   LIke I order a sed rate and  say hopefully X dx  NOPe they say. Hmm Y? nope.  I say waddya  got ?They say   ABCD I say  either well C  fits or nope none is tue  offer it to the patietn  she might decline

I think  t hat kind of partnership is how health care SHOULD work  Not this blaming stupid  fragmenting make-the-other-person-the enemy stuff. alien.

 

The lab can't tell you which code will work. They probably don't know

for one, and it's probably not legal for another. The doctor does have

to make the best choice s/he can for the given dx.

That's all we can do.

Dr. Brady wrote:

>

> Thanks Carla, it looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to

> just go back to the lab and try and figure all this out.

>

> *From:*

> [mailto: ] *On Behalf Of *Carla Gibson

> *Sent:* Monday, February 08, 2010 4:41 PM

> *To:*

> *Subject:* Re: Coding question

>

> http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

> <http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf>

>

> Looks like your code should be good according to this document that

> lists all the codes that should be paid for a non-screening lipid panel.

>

> Carla

>

> ----------------------------------------------------------

>

> *From:* Dr. Brady

> *To:*

> *Sent:* Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PM

> *Subject:* Coding question

>

> Group,

>

> Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced

> to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The

> vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high

> cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the

> patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case),

> Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved

> in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient

> calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told

> “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you

> need to call him and work it out.†Note: I never get a call from the

> lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work

> anymore†and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the

> time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will

> actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if

> something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at

> least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please

> point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something

> simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance

> will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of

> labs they will then be responsible for?

>

>

>

> P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid

> and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming everything

> on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down

> and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

>

>

-- PATIENTS,please remember email may not be entirely secure and that Email is part of the medical  record and is placed into the chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and  brief  questions

Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL  if the  matter is more urgent .     MD         ph   fax

impcenter.org

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Share on other sites

Ellen,

That is the exact frustration. I code it, the lab gets the

patient to sign an ABN, they put the code in, the code is rejected and the

patient gets billed being told that it was the doctor’s fault for using the

wrong code. I call the lab and they say, “sorry, we can’t tell you which code

will work because we can’t make medical diagnoses and we only know when we put

it in.†In the past, the lab would call and my nurse would just keep giving

codes until we found one that worked. I believe the lab has made a decision to no

longer provide this service and just roll with the system—even if the doc ends

up getting blamed. The problem is not the lab, per se, but the stupid, ever changing

rules of the insurance companies whose only goal is to make their shareholders

happy. I realize this, but my patients don’t. And honestly, in this tight

economy, I don’t blame my patients one bit for getting mad and confused and

frustrated. My dilemma is that I don’t want to be the whipping boy for all the

other dysfunctional aspects of the health care system but I also feel obligated

to be an advocate for my patients. It is this underlying conflict which drives

me nuts.

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Ellen

son

Sent: Thursday, February 11, 2010 2:36 AM

To:

Subject: Re: Coding question

The lab can't tell you which code will work. They probably don't know

for one, and it's probably not legal for another. The doctor does have

to make the best choice s/he can for the given dx.

That's all we can do.

Dr. Brady wrote:

>

> Thanks Carla, it looks like the code should be accepted. I may need to

> just go back to the lab and try and figure all this out.

>

> *From:*

> [mailto: ]

*On Behalf Of *Carla Gibson

> *Sent:* Monday, February 08, 2010 4:41 PM

> *To:*

> *Subject:* Re: Coding question

>

> http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf

> <http://www.sonoraquest.com/documents/mdg-lipid_profile_cholesterol_testing.pdf>

>

> Looks like your code should be good according to this document that

> lists all the codes that should be paid for a non-screening lipid panel.

>

> Carla

>

> ----------------------------------------------------------

>

> *From:* Dr. Brady

> *To:*

> *Sent:* Mon, February 8, 2010 12:03:52 PM

> *Subject:* Coding question

>

> Group,

>

> Over the past few months more and more of my patients have been forced

> to pay for their own labs due to my coding of the lab request. The

> vast majority of these are Medicare and involve follow up for high

> cholesterol coded with the 272.0 code. From what I understand the

> patient goes to the lab, is forced to sign an ABN (just in case),

> Medicare rejects the lab (reasons unknown to me as I am not involved

> in the process), and the patient is sent the bill. If the patient

> calls the lab to ask why they are getting a bill, they are told

> “your doctor gave us a code which was rejected by Medicare, so you

> need to call him and work it out.†Note: I never get a call from the

> lab saying “hey, this code you continually use does not work

> anymore†and when I call the lab(s), they say they cannot spend the

> time looking up why different codes were rejected or what will

> actually work. So essentially it appears to be a crap shoot to see if

> something gets paid, and if it doesn’t it is somehow my fault (at

> least to the patient). Has anyone else faced this? Can someone please

> point me in a direction as to where I might be able to do something

> simple like plug in a lab and an ICD code and see if the insurance

> will pay before I send my patients to get hundreds of dollars worth of

> labs they will then be responsible for?

>

>

>

> P.S. I am trying to refrain from going onto the soap box of how stupid

> and opaque this whole system is and how continually blaming everything

> on the primary care doc is not the way to ultimately keep costs down

> and encourage others to join us in choosing primary care.

>

>

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