Q: We are a critical access hospital (CAH). We provide smoking cessation therapy (CPT codes 99406-99407) in our cardiac rehab department. The documentation is done and signed by a respiratory therapist (RT), and we are currently billing this as a professional charge (on a UB-04 with revenue code 0981). My question is, can we bill this on a UB-04 as a facility charge only and still allow our RT or other ancillary staff to perform it?
A federal judge ruled in favor of the American Hospital Association (AHA) and other industry plaintiffs on September 28, ordering HHS to stop its reimbursement cuts to the 340B Drug Pricing Program for the remainder of the year.
The Office of Inspector General (OIG) recently released an audit report on Medicare integrity risks related to billing for telehealth services during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Although the OIG identified only a small portion of high-risk providers, it acknowledged the need for additional oversight as telehealth continues to grow in popularity.
The 2022 NAHRI Leadership Council Survey Part 2 examines claim edit patterns, pre-billing processes, and top payer trends.
In addition to clinical areas, the last two years of the COVID-19 pandemic also introduced massive disruption to the revenue cycle, skewing billing processes and...
HHS recently released final rules for implementing components of the No Surprises Act. These rules expand upon several provisions of the July 2021 and October 2021 interim final rules regarding the qualified payment amount and the federal independent dispute resolution process.
Q: How do we to handle charges for donor-related services when the donor is an unsuccessful match? Should the charges for services provided to a potential donor who is an unsuccessful match also be included on the transplant recipient claim or should they be adjusted and just included on the cost report?