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August 3, 2009

A number of pain medicine practices have recently found themselves targeted for audits by Medicare contractors. Audit letters from contractors including NGS and WPS have focused on medical necessity issues in connection with nerve blocks, epidural injections and other services administered in private office settings for chronic pain management. This activity serves to remind us all of the importance of documenting medical necessity for interventional pain procedures.

Documenting Medical Necessity

“Medical necessity” is a requirement for any service billed to Medicare and implicitly or explicitly to private payers as well. Prior to reviewing any underlying medical record, questions of medical necessity can arise, at the payer level, based on data analysis. One trigger is significant variation in the number of procedures submitted by comparable providers or in the diagnoses for which the procedure of interest is performed. Rapid growth trends likewise will often attract payer attention. Interventional pain medicine is a dynamic specialty, to say the least. Many new technologies – and CPT™ codes – have appeared over the last decade. These are among the factors responsible for increasing scrutiny of the medical necessity for chronic pain procedures.

Medicare carriers announce their medical necessity criteria through medical policies known as “Local Coverage Determinations.” Most of the MAC contractors and before them, the local carriers, have in place multiple LCDs involving specific pain medicine procedures, by CPT code. Your own MAC contractor’s LCDs are the single most important source of information on how you should document medical necessity.

A freshly revised and comprehensive LCD on pain management was issued by NGS, one of the contractors who has sent audit letters, with an effective date of June 6, 2009. This LCD is only applicable to those providers who are in a jurisdiction governed by NGS but it provides an excellent example. If your contractor doesn’t have a different written policy on what it expects to see in the documentation of medical necessity in your medical records for chronic pain services, you might consider the NGS LCD as guidance on what the other contractors may expect to see in terms of the detail of documentation.

In general, according to the NGS LCD, “the patient's medical record must contain documentation that fully supports the medical necessity for services included within this LCD. (See "Indications and Limitations of Coverage.") This documentation includes, but is not limited to, relevant medical history, physical examination, and results of pertinent diagnostic tests or procedures.” The LCD provides detailed guidance on documentation for specific procedures, for example:

For interlaminar or caudal epidural and/or intrathecal injections including those treating spasticity, transforaminal epidural injections, paravertebral joint/nerve injections and denervation, and sacroiliac joint injections the following lists general requirements:

For epidural injections the following lists specific requirements:

All of these requirements should be documented in the medical record, to support the diagnosis code(s) on the claim form – if you are in a NGS jurisdiction.

An article in the July 2009 issue of Pain Physician, Description of Documentation in the Management of Chronic Spinal Pain, provides additional guidance in the area of documentation. Given the importance of this subject matter, we encourage pain physicians to pay careful attention to documentation and to take appropriate measures to enhance compliance in the area of medical necessity and documentation.

Other Pain Medicine Fraud & Abuse Targets

A July 2009 report on ultrasound F&A issued by the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) within the federal Department of Health and Human Services reminds us of the enforcement interest in the reporting of ultrasound services performed in private office settings. This analysis excluded medical necessity issues, focusing just on threefold geographic variations in utilization and obvious markers of fraud such as the lack of a physician’s order for the ultrasound service and five or more services provided to a single patient in a single day. Although the brief report does not mention pain medicine or any other specialty, it should be considered together with the OIG’s 2008 and 2009 Work Plans. Both Work Plans listed ultrasound guidance for peripheral nerve blocks among the procedures that the OIG would be watching in the year ahead. Practices in Florida, New York and New Jersey should be especially rigorous in their documentation, since those are the states with the highest utilization rates.

In September 2008, the OIG also published a special report on Medicare Payments for Facet Joint Injection Services. The OIG’s analysis of 2006 claims data showed $96 million in improper payments and placed facet joint injections solidly in Medicare auditors’ sight lines.

Healthcare Reform – Contact Your Senators and Congressional Representatives

ABC is very pleased with the response to our postcard campaign: clients and non-clients have requested nearly 30,000 of our pre-printed postcards urging their individual federal legislators, and the White House, to prevent any future “public option” health plan from basing provider payments on Medicare rates. We offered postcard packages, including addresses for signing anesthesiologists’ individual Senators and Congressmen, through the MGMA-Anesthesia Administration Assembly (AAA) online discussion group. If you have not yet asked for a set of postcards, you are welcome to do so by sending a message to info@anesthesiallc.com; please include the 9-digit zip codes for the anesthesiologists who will sign the cards if you want us to provide you with their representatives’ addresses.

If you have already asked for a set, please note that we are going to begin sending packets out this week.

As you know, the House Energy and Commerce Committee finally approved a compromise bill late last Friday evening. This means that all three House Committees have substituted direct negotiations between public plans and providers for fixed payments based on the Medicare Fee Schedule. That vital change, however, is not a done deal. The Congressional Progressive Caucus, for one, has declared “unacceptable” any legislative proposal “that does not provide, at minimum, for a public option with reimbursement rates based on Medicare rates.” As the deal-making continues in Washington, it is important for all anesthesia providers and their allies to continue to make your voices heard. Last Thursday, I faxed my first letter to my own Congressman, John Dingell, who introduced the American Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009 (H.R. 3200). I plan to bring anesthesia specialty concerns to Mr. Dingell’s attention in person while he is in his home district during this month’s Congressional recess. I urge everyone to do the same -- perhaps your representative has scheduled a town hall meeting that you could attend? -- and not let this opportunity pass us by.

As always, we welcome your feedback. If you have a question about this topic or if you have another topic you would like discussed, please let us know.

With best wishes,

Tony Mira
President and CEO