Coding
A Potpourri of Things to Do Correctly
When you pick up the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) manual and read it, you may wonder what certain terms mean and how they may be looked at...
Dr. Kaufmann is from the Department of Dermatology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York. Dr. Siegel is from the Department of Dermatology, SUNY Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn.
The authors report no conflict of interest.
Correspondence not available.
To learn what you need to do or can do, pay a visit to the Quality Payment Program website (https://qpp.cms.gov/) where you can look yourself up with your national provider identifier number and find out what system you are under. Unless you are part of a large enterprise, you are likely under MIPS, but it never hurts to check.
It will then give you the options for reporting as an individual or a group. Either way, you can send in quality data through your routine Medicare claims process, which is our suggested route; no registry, no EMR, just an extra line on a claim form. You can review the complete list of quality measures that are available on the Quality Payment Program website (https://qpp.cms.gov/mips/quality-measures). There are 271 measures to read through and ponder, but by now you already have a headache, so take the following advice:
You can see the MIPS program information in all its bureaucratic glory on the Quality Payment Program website (https://qpp.cms.gov/resources/education); click on “Quality Measure Specifications” to download a 250 MB zip file that contains information on all the measures in detail. The Measure #130 (Documentation of Current Medications in the Medical Record) file indicates that the clinician must use a G code (G8427) to report that current medications have been documented. The measure reads: “Eligible clinician attests to documenting, updating or reviewing a patient’s current medications using all immediate resources available on the date of encounter. This list must include ALL known prescriptions, over-the counters, herbals, and vitamin/mineral/dietary (nutritional) supplements AND must contain the medications’ name, dosages, frequency and route of administration.”5
You likely already confirm current medications with patients in some form or other, so simply look at the list of medications and supplements with all their dosages, frequencies, and routes of administration and sign the sheet of paper your practice likely already uses as an extra way of confirming that you have reviewed it. You report code G8427 as you would any Current Procedural Terminology code and link it to any International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, code in your claim along with any evaluation and management and/or procedure codes that you would otherwise report for that encounter.
Some clearinghouses will not accept $0 charges, so we recommend you place a $0.01 charge for G8427 and write it off later. Upon receiving your explanation of benefits, you should notice 2 remark codes relating to the G8427 line: CO-246 and N620. Both of these codes indicate that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services acknowledge your quality submission. To avoid that 4% penalty in 2019, you only need to do it once, but doing it a few times until you get back an explanation of benefits acknowledging it may help you sleep better.
Although the future of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is still unclear, one thing is for sure: MACRA and MIPS are here to stay. Avoid the 4% penalty in 2019 and take good care of your patients and, if eligible, make donations to the American Academy of Dermatology Association Political Action Committee (skinPAC). It is going to be a wild ride.
When you pick up the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) manual and read it, you may wonder what certain terms mean and how they may be looked at...
An established patient comes into your office with a painful new lesion on the hand. He thinks it may be a wart. You take a focused history of the...