Aetna Reverses NPP Payment Reduction

 

On January 31st, InK reported Aetna was changing it’s policy on billing for Non-Physician Providers (NPP). As of February 10th Aetna has changed their stand. Please Read!

Aetna’s Feb. 10 reversal  preserves NPPs’ ability to fully bill under a supervising physician’s name and National Provider Identifier (NPI) for services “incidental to” the physician’s diagnosis and treatment of an injury or illness. Services billed incident-to must be conducted in the same office suite where the physician is present and available to intervene if needed. 

Aetna Cuts Payment for NPP-Care

By Alisa Pierce ~ TMA

UPDATE: Please see update to this article, posted 2/13/25

Starting April 1, Aetna will pay physician practices only 85% of the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule’s allowed amounts for services provided by non-physician practitioners (NPPs)

This will be regardless of whether you bill Medicare directly or “incident-to” physician supervision. 

  • Both direct and incident-to claims will still be required to include modifiers SA or SB to indicate what type of NPP rendered the service, such as a nurse practitioner or certified nurse midwife.
  • NPPs will still be required to be employed by supervising physicians and registered with the Texas Medical Board as having delegated prescriptive authority. 

“This is essentially [Aetna] getting rid of incident-to billing,”

Modifier 25 Fact Sheet from Novitas

Modifier 25 Fact Sheet

 

Modifier 25 is defined as a significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management (E/M) service by the same physician or other qualified health care professional on the same day of a procedure or other service.

Physicians of the same specialty in the same group practice are considered the same physician; therefore, they must bill and be paid as though they were a single physician.

Appropriate Use

Use modifier 25 with the appropriate level of E/M service.

  • Modifier 25 indicates on the day of a procedure, the patient’s condition required a significant, separately identifiable E/M service, above and beyond the usual pre- and post-operative care associated with the procedure or service performed.
  • E/M service may occur on the same day as a procedure. Medicare allows payment when the documentation supports modifier 25.
  • A minor surgical procedure performed has a global period of 0-day or 10-day listed on the Medicare physician fee schedule (JH) (JL) and meets the definition of modifier 25.

Global Surgery

Global surgery is defined as all necessary services normally furnished by a surgeon before, during, and after a procedure. Medicare payment for a surgical procedure includes pre-operative, intra-operative, and post-operative services routinely performed by the surgeon or by members of the same group with the same specialty.

Do not use modifier 25 when billing for services performed during a post-operative period if related to the previous surgery. Related follow-up examinations by the same provider during the global period of a previous procedure are included in that procedure’s global surgical package.

  • For an unrelated E/M service during the global period of a previous procedure, you may be able to report an appropriate E/M code with modifier 24 (unrelated evaluation and management service by the same physician during a postoperative period) appended.
  • The E/M is for a new problem not related to the patient’s previous complaint or procedure.
  • Append modifier 57 (decision for surgery), rather than modifier 25, if the E/M service prompts the decision to render a major procedure within 24 hours of the E/M service. Major procedure is defined as one with a 90-day global period.

National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) Procedure-to-procedure (PTP) edits

The NCCI promotes national correct coding methodologies and controls improper coding leading to inappropriate payment. The PTP code pair edits are automated prepayment edits preventing improper payment when reporting certain codes together for Part B-covered services on the same day by the same physician.

When both correct coding and global surgery edits apply to the same claim by the same physician, we’ll first apply the correct coding edits. Then, we’ll apply the global surgery edits to the correctly coded services

E/M visit complexity add-on HCPS code G2211, 

Effective for dates of service on and after January 1, 2025:

HCPCS code G2211 is payable when an associated office and outpatient (O/O) E/M base code (CPT codes 99202-99205 or 99211-99215) is reported with modifier 25 for the same patient by the same provider and a Part B preventive service, immunization administration, or annual wellness visit service identified in attachment 1 in Change Request (CR) 13705 is also present for the same date of service.

For claims not containing one of the identified services above or dates or service prior to January 1, 2025:

  • Claims will deny when HCPCS code G2211 and an associated office and outpatient (O/O) E/M visit (CPT codes 99202-99205 or 99211-99215) is reported with modifier 25 for the same patient by the same provider on the same date of service:
  • Separately identifiable visits occurring on the same day as minor procedures (such as 0 or 10-day global procedures) have resources sufficiently distinct from costs associated with furnishing stand-alone O/O E/M visits to justify different payment.

Inappropriate use

Avoid denials of claims with an appropriate use of modifier 25

  • Do not report HCPCS code G2211 when modifier 25 is reported on an associated E/M visit (CPT codes 99202-99205 and 99211-99215) for claims not containing a Part B preventive service, immunization administration, or annual wellness visit service or dates of service prior to January 1, 2025.
  • Do not use modifier 25 on HCPCS code G2211.
  • Do not use modifier 25 on CPT code 99211
  • Do not use modifier 25 by a physician other than the physician performing the procedure or physician of the same specialty in the same group practice.
  • Do not use modifier 25 when documentation does not support a significant, separately identifiable E/M service.

TMA Webinar Helps Equip Physicians for 2025

Medicare Fee Schedule

With the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS’) 2025 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule set to take effect Jan. 1, the Texas Medical Association is preparing physicians for changes in payment and coding, telemedicine, and quality and value-based care arrangements, among other areas.

Medicare Solidifies Pay Cut

In a final rule that solidifies a nearly 3% Medicare pay cut for physicians in 2025, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) also set the trajectory for physician practices over the next year with a mixed bag of changes related to telemedicine, coding and payment, and the Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS), among others. ~By Phil West

While TMA analyzes what it sees as some isolated, positive changes resulting from CMS’ finalization of the 2025 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule, it is also urging physicians to act now to show their support for House Resolution 10073

TMA Urges Physicians to Show Support for House Resolution 10073

CMS Increased Payment for Influenza Vaccines

On August 1, the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) increased payments to physicians for influenza vaccines and updated which codes physicians should use when billing for the service during the 2024-25 flu season.

Texas Medical Association billing and coding staff caution that to receive payment, physicians also will need to use a national drug code (NDC) associated with the current period.

Follow this link for proper CPT codes and more vaccine information.

Revisions to Medicare Part B Coverage of Pneumococcal Vaccinations Policy

Co-pays Resuming for Certain Services

Effective 10/1/24: Co-pays will Resume for CHIP CoVid19 Services.

During the COVID-19 public health emergency, the Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) waived co-pays for COVID-19 vaccines, testing, and treatment for Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) members. This waiver will end on September 30, 2024

Providers may begin collecting co-pays for COVID-19 vaccines, testing, and treatment rendered to CHIP eligible members for dates of service on or after October 1, 2024.

Superior Co-pays

Providers may not charge co-pays for mental health and substance use disorder outpatient office visits

Co-pays have been permanently removed for mental health and substance use disorder outpatient office visits to comply with federal regulations.

BCBSTX to Require E/M Codes for Consultation Services

Starting Nov. 18, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas (BCBSTX) will no longer pay physicians for outpatient or inpatient consultations when they report those services with Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes 99242 – 99245 and 99252 – 99255. 

Instead, the payer says physicians will need to report consultation services with an appropriate office outpatient or inpatient evaluation and management (E/M) code representing where the visit occurred and its level of complexity.  

According to the health plan, consultation claims reported with CPT codes after Nov. 18 will be denied. 

Updated 12/10/2024, to add BCBS website information

Evaluation and Management Coding – Professional Provider Services

Policy Number: CPCP024

Version 1.0

Enterprise Clinical Payment and Coding Policy Committee Approval Date:

August 7, 2024

Plan Effective Date: November 18, 2024

(Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas Only

Consultation(s) CPT Codes 99242-99245 ,99252-99255 Effective 11/18/2024, the plan will no longer reimburse for office/outpatient consultation codes (CPT codes 99242–99245) and inpatient consultation codes (CPT codes 99252–99255). Consultation services should be reported with an appropriate office/outpatient or inpatient E/M code representing the location where the visit occurred and the level of complexity of the visit performed, such as code ranges 99221-99223, 99304-99306, and 99202-99215.

Have Questions About Capturing Telehealth Visits?

Some HCPCS codes not longer requiring invoice – Avoid rejected claims.