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March 2, 2015

SUMMARY

Anesthesiologists can bill the transitional care management codes if they assume responsibility for coordinating post-operative patient care and meet the codes’ specific requirements.

 

Anesthesiologists’ role in perioperative medicine is rapidly expanding.  It is now sufficiently visible that some surgeons are concerned about turf; see Brian Dunleavy’s article Perioperative Surgical Home Promotes Perioperativists in the February issue of General Surgery News online.

While much of the attention has focused on the services that anesthesiologists might provide in the pre-operative phase of surgical care, some anesthesiologists are providing care after discharge for a period of up to 30 days—and are being paid directly for some of that post-operative care.  Medicare has recognized two transitional care management (TCM) codes (CPT™ codes 99495 and 99496) since January 1, 2013.   Private payers may cover the service, but few, if any, have chosen to do so.

This year, the national unadjusted Medicare payment amounts for services provided in the facility setting are $111.91 (99495) and $161.25 (99496).  For some anesthesiology practices, it makes financial as well as clinical sense to provide these services.

The Two TCM Codes

TCM involves care coordination in the 30 days following a Medicare patient's discharge from an inpatient hospital, skilled nursing facility, community mental health center, or following outpatient hospital observation services or a partial hospitalization.  The two TCM services consist of initial communication with the patient, one face-to-face visit within seven or fourteen days of discharge, and non-face-to-face services that may be performed by the physician or certain qualified nonphysician provider (NPPs) and/or licensed clinical staff under his or her direction.  The codes and their descriptors are:

Requirements for Reporting TCM

The basic elements for each of the two TCM codes are:

 

Other Points to Note

Physicians need to be careful how they report the TCM codes, which have some very specific requirements, as described in this Alert.   Medicare claims data from 2013 show a 36.3% denial rate in 2013 for code 99495 and a 38.5% denial rate for 99496.  To avoid denials, anesthesiologists should make sure to document the following information, at a minimum, in the patient’s medical record:

Anesthesiologists who are expanding their perioperative role and managing patients’ care for the 30 days following discharge (the same window of time as is defined in the perioperative surgical home model) should consider billing for TCM.

With best wishes,

Tony Mira
President and CEO