Endorsed Sponsors
by the
Delaware County Medical Society
for member benefits

Employee benefits consulting
Benefits administration
AccessHR.net HRIS web portal
Payroll processing & administration
Human resource services
Divisions of risk management & financial services
Learn more at www.elitegrp.com or contact Gerard Rosato
at (610) 280-4369
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STI Integrated
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A computer system for your practice is more than just software – it’s support!
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or contact Dan Danehy (800) 487-9135 ext. 1202
Members of the
Delaware County Medical Society
receive a 10% discount
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Medical professional liability insurance products offered to
Pennsylvania healthcare providers
Providing strength, service & advocacy for the medical profession for over twenty-five years
PPMSLIC is among the leading providers of professional liability insurance for Pennsylvania physicians
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Our policyholders are our sole focus, and we strive to ensure that they
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For
more information see www.pmslic.com or
contact
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PMSLIC is exclusively endorsed by the Delaware County Medical Society
Do you tend to undercode? You're not
alone
By Robert Kazel,
AMNews
staff. Nov. 22/29, 2004.
A study confirms what many doctors already believe -- they don't
give themselves credit for everything they do. That affects fees
and, perhaps, quality measurement.
Bill Thrift, MD, a family physician in Prescott, Ariz., says his
office frequently undercodes claims after treating patients with
multiple, complex problems. He's just anticipating what insurers
might reject.
"One of the hardest things for us to do is really charge what we're
worth," he said. "We're not aggressive at working the system."
Weary of fighting with insurers, fearful of getting audited by
Medicare, or merely unsure about what they can code for -- for
whatever reason, many physicians habitually undercode.
A recent study has quantified how much family physicians don't put
on their bills. The numbers raise questions not only about
undercoding's effect on a physician's income, but also about its
effect on quality measurement programs that use claims data to
determine how well patients fare, and what sort of cash bonus a
doctor might receive as a result.
The coding study, by researchers at the University of Wisconsin
Medical School, found that family doctors manage an average of 3.05
problems per patient visit. But they record only 2.82 in the chart,
and 1.97 on the bill.
"I have been tending to undercode my visits, and I didn't really
realize it until this project," said Cynthia Haq, MD, a family
doctor in Madison, Wis., who was one of 29 physicians whose charting
and billing methods were scrutinized. "I often undercode ... and
write down one or two [problems] when there might be four or five."
Family physicians manage 3 problems per average patient visit
but claim only 2.
Family physicians tend to accept that they advise patients on a
variety of issues but will be compensated for only some, knowing
insurers will look at some CPT codes but ignore others if they feel
additional payment isn't warranted for the same visit. Physicians
don't have enough time to record every facet of a visit if the
system doesn't reward that kind of thoroughness, Dr. Haq said.
But in some cases additional coding could result in more income,
experts say. The Wisconsin study found family physicians, in
particular, don't often bill when they counsel for mental illness,
substance abuse or tobacco addiction, because they don't think
reimbursement is likely.
Though 29 physicians may seem like a small sample, many say their
experiences are typical. Dr. Thrift, who wasn't part of the study,
said he spends about 30% of his time on matters related to emotional
problems but many payers reimburse family doctors reluctantly or not
at all for anything that looks psychiatric. "We are very good at
[counseling]," he said. "All [family doctors] do it, and all of the
time, and we don't get paid for it."
In other cases, physicians want to shield patients from possible
adverse actions if insurers learn about emotional problems or
addictions, and leave those conditions off the bill or chart or
both, according to the study, which appeared in the
September-October Annals of Family Medicine.
Doctors should record the level of service they provide, despite
their doubts about payment, said John C. Nelson, MD, MPH, president
of the AMA. It is "no wonder physicians are apprehensive about
appropriately reporting complex procedures and services they provide
for fear of health plan retribution, given current health plan
business practices of downcoding, bundling and reassigning physician
CPT codes to reduce or deny physician payment," said Dr. Nelson, a
Salt Lake City ob-gyn.
But if primary care physicians are telling insurers about only a
portion of what they do, quality measurement programs may not work
to their potential, experts said.
Family physicians generally don't bill for counseling on
mental health, substance abuse or smoking.
"Most of the time looking at claims data, you don't know what took
place at the encounter," said Josie Williams, MD, an internist and
gastroenterologist and co-chair of the Physician Consortium for
Performance Improvement, a large group of quality experts
periodically convened by the AMA.
Charles M. Cutler, MD, head of national quality management for Aetna
Inc., said claims data can still be useful for tracking adherence to
certain best practices ranging from child vaccinations to mammogram
rates. He said he'd be " happy to hear about" ideas for better
measurements from family physicians.
But Dr. Cutler, an internist, added: "I don't know one could ever
measure the universe of what a family physician does."
Dr. Thrift, for his part, is trying to survive in that universe,
even if he understands that payers never will know everything he
does for patients. After one recent patient visit, he decided to be
a bit bolder in his billing.
The patient, who has developmental disabilities, talked about her
anxiety and sleep disturbances and the medications she takes for
them. Dr. Thrift checked her blood pressure and explained the
importance of controlling it. But for the bulk of the visit, he
spent time cutting her painful toenails, because he knew the payer
did not cover trips to a podiatrist.
In what he calls a "risk" and a "gamble," Dr. Thrift decided to add
the toenail trimming to the bill using a CPT modifier -- a $20
charge. It was a very tiny but, in his view, a long-overdue step in
the direction of opposing self-downcoding.
"This is the first time I've tried to bill for it, and I've done it
a zillion times before," he said. "Whether they'll pay for it is
something that remains to be seen. Let's see if I can do it."
The Delaware County
Medical Society (DCMS)
is located in Media, PA.
President
Salvatore A. Lofaro, M.D.
Executive Director
David McKeighan
director@delcomedsoc.org
(610) 892-7750
Fax: (610) 892-7752
Address:
600 N. Jackson St, Suite 202
Media, PA 19063
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