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First Pst after migration to Cloud in Health care Blog

Published: February 21, 2025 by QA MarketingTechnologists

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JW Modifier: Drug Amount Discarded/Not Administered to any Patient

Effective January 1, 2017, when processing claims for Part B drugs and biologicals, except those provided under Competitive Acquisition Program (CAP), the use of the JW modifier to identify unused drugs or biologicals that are appropriately discarded is required.  The current policy allows contractors the discretion to determine whether to require the JW modifier for any claims with discarded drugs or biologicals, and the specific details regarding how the discarded drug or biological information should be documented. In order to more effectively identify and monitor billing and payment for discarded drugs and biologicals, CMS is revising this policy to require the uniform use of the JW modifier for all claims with discarded Part B drugs and biologicals. Also, effective January 1, 2017, providers are required to document the discarded drug or biological in the patient's medical record. CMS encourages physicians, hospitals and other providers and suppliers to care for and administer drugs and biologicals to patients in such a way that they can use drugs or biologicals most efficiently, in a clinically appropriate manner. Read the entire MedLearn Matter Article 9963 here: https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/MM9603.pdf

Aug 09,2016 by

New Unspecified Diagnosis Codes Excluded by CMS for 2017

On May 26, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) outlined additional unspecified diagnosis codes the agency is excluding from both ICD-9 and ICD-10 reporting beginning January 2, 2017. The technical alert states the codes, “will not be accepted in the in the Alleged Cause of Injury, Incident or Illness (Field 15) or in any ICD Diagnosis Code field starting with Field 18. Updates to previously submitted records using these excluded codes, will also be rejected.” These additions and upcoming changes to the ICD-10 codeset underline the need for clinical documentation improvement and ICD-10 training, experts say, as code and rule freezes are lifted by the healthcare payment agency. ICD-10-CM will include 1900 new codes and several more changes and deletions. Attention to documentation quality will be paramount. Impacts Workers’ Comp and Auto CMS writes that this change supersedes the applicable language in the MMSEA Section 111 Medicare Secondary Payer Mandatory Reporting Liability Insurance (Including Self-Insurance), No Fault Insurance, and Workers’ Compensation User Guide (Version 4.9). The following ICD-9-CM will be added to the list of excluded diagnosis codes: 999.9 (Other and unspecified complications of medical care, not elsewhere classified) The following ICD-10-CM will be added to the list of excluded diagnosis codes: T88.7XXA (Unspecified adverse effect of drug or medicament, initial encounter) T88.7XXD (Unspecified adverse effect of drug or medicament, subsequent encounter) T88.7XXS (Unspecified adverse effect of drug or medicament, sequela) T88.8XXA (Other specified complications of surgical and medical care, not elsewhere classified, initial encounter) T88.8XXD (Other specified complications of surgical and medical care, not elsewhere classified, subsequent encounter) T88.8XXS (Other specified complications of surgical and medical care, not elsewhere classified, sequela) T88.9XXA (Complication of surgical and medical care, unspecified, initial encounter) · T88.9XXD (Complication of surgical and medical care, unspecified, subsequent encounter) T88.9XXS (Complication of surgical and medical care, unspecified, sequela) Read the Technical Alert here: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coordination-of-Benefits-and-Recovery/Mandatory-Insurer-Reporting-For-Non-Group-Health-Plans/Downloads/New-Downloads/Technical-Alert-New-Excluded-Diagnosis-Codes.pdf

Aug 09,2016 by

Add-On Codes: CMS and Payment Policy

An add-on code is a HCPCS/CPT code that describes a service that, with one exception (see next paragraph), is always performed in conjunction with another primary service. An add-on code with one exception is eligible for payment only if it is reported with an appropriate primary procedure performed by the same practitioner. An add-on code with one exception is never eligible for payment if it is the only procedure reported by a practitioner. The Internet Only Manual, Claims Processing Manual, Publication 100-04, Chapter 12, Section 0.6.12(I) requires a provider to report CPT code 99292 (Critical care, evaluation and management of the critically ill or critically injured patient; each additional 30 minutes (List separately in addition to code for primary service)) without its primary code CPT code 99291 (Critical care, evaluation and management of the critically ill or critically injured patient; first 30-74 minutes) if two or more physicians of the same specialty in a group practice provide critical care services to the same patient on the same date of service. For the same date of service only one physician of the same specialty in the group practice may report CPT code 99291 with or without CPT code 99292, and the other physician(s) must report their critical care services with CPT code 99292. Add-on codes may be identified in three ways per CMS Transmittal 2636 The code is listed in this CR or subsequent ones as a Type I, Type II, or Type III, add-on code. On the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Database an add-on code generally has a global surgery period of "ZZZ". In the CPT Manual an add-on code is designated by the symbol "+". The code descriptor of an add-on code generally includes phrases such as "each additional" or "(List separately in addition to primary procedure)." CMS has divided the add-on codes into three Groups to distinguish the payment policy for each group. Type I – This type of add-on code has a limited number of identifiable primary procedure codes. The CR lists the Type I add-on codes with their acceptable primary procedure codes. A Type I add-on code, with one exception, is eligible for payment if one of the listed primary procedure codes is also eligible for payment to the same practitioner for the same patient on the same date of service Type II –. A Type II add-on code does not have a specific list of primary procedure codes. The CR lists the Type II add-on codes without any primary procedure codes. Claims processing contractors are encouraged to develop their own lists of primary procedure codes for this type of add-on codes. Like the Type I add-on codes, a Type II add-on code is eligible for payment if an acceptable primary procedure code as determined by the claims processing contractor is also eligible for payment to the same practitioner for the same patient on the same date of service. Type III – The third type of add-on code has some, but not all, specific primary procedure codes identified in the CPT® manual. CMS advises claims processing contractors that the primary procedure codes in the CPT® manual are not exclusive, and encourages contractors to develop their own lists of additional primary procedure codes. To reference the Type I, Type II or Type III lists of CMS add-on CPT® codes, see the bottom pages of the transmittal here:  https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R2636CP.pdf

Aug 09,2016 by

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Patient SummaryKeep the records of the patients to know their health details

This is a component in AEM which is tested sprint 102 and released to Production.

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