The regulations that will affect Medicare reimbursement for physician practices in 2018 have been released. They include the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Final Rule (MPFS), the hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System Final Rule (OPPS), and the Quality Payment Program Final Rule (QPP).
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Recent Posts
Regulatory Changes Affecting Radiology Reimbursement in 2018 on December 7, 2017
Categories: medicare, medicare reimbursement, MPFS, QPP, OPPS
Update on Billing for y-90 Radioembolization Procedures on November 7, 2017
Click here to read our October 2020
y-90 radioembolization article
Our 2014 article "Interventional Radiology Meets Radiation Oncology – The y-90 Story” focused on the documentation requirements that will assist coders to maximize reimbursement for this complex procedure. Those documentation tips are still valid today. This update reviews the 2017 state-of-the-art in coding for y-90 procedures.
Categories: radiology reimbursement, radiology billing, radioembolization, interventional radiology, nuclear medicine, y-90, radiology
Radiology Leaders Comment on the Realities of the QPP on November 3, 2017
As MACRA heads down the homestretch of its first implementation year, providers across all specialties are assessing the status of their practice and looking for guidance as to what the future holds. Understandably, concern and confusion remain. While most major players involved in healthcare delivery agree with the move to value-based compensation conceptually, the constant evolution of what is now the Quality Payment Program (QPP) has in many ways created more questions than it has answered. Specialty physician practices looking for certainties amidst the complexities should focus on this important factor: value-based payment models, in theory, have bi-partisan support. This is not expected to change despite the continuing ACA debate in Congress. Implementation delays and grace periods may indeed make it into ongoing legislation. However, proactive physician practices are realizing that the wait-and-see era is over. Maximizing reimbursements in the QPP in the years to come requires planning and implementing a compliance program right now.
Categories: MIPS, MACRA, MIPS participation, radiology
Coding and Billing Considerations in Interventional Radiology on October 16, 2017
Read our 2021 IR billing & coding article
A radiology practice that performs interventional procedures will want to be up to date on the use of documentation and coding techniques for Evaluation and Management (E&M) services. These CPT® codes in the 99xxx range are less commonly utilized in radiology practices. Identifying circumstances where E&M services are billable, and then properly documenting and coding for them, will require a collaborative effort between the interventional radiologist (IR) and his or her coding team.
Categories: radiology billing, radiology coding, interventional radiology, radiology
The Coastal Imaging Success Story on September 19, 2017
What does it take to unite three radiology groups and 38 providers into a new entity, secure favorable terms across a complex carrier mix, and serve a diverse patient population at four hospital locations? Working relationships. That’s how Coastal Imaging came to be from the merger of three independent groups. That’s the reason their collective KPIs improved across the board immediately following the transition. And that’s all because Coastal teamed up with a true business partner, not a billing vendor, to empower their financial future...
Exceptions and Exemptions from MIPS Reporting for 2017: What Radiologists Need to Know on August 21, 2017
In the August 4, 2017 edition of its Advocacy in Action eNews the American College of Radiology (ACR) reported on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announcement regarding the manual application process for a significant hardship exception under the Advancing Care Information (ACI) category of MIPS.
Categories: MIPS, MIPS participation, radiology
CMS Issues Its Proposed 2018 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Rule on July 25, 2017
The annual regulatory cycle of review, comment, planning and preparation has begun with the release of the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) Proposed Rule for 2018. In its preliminary review of those sections of the MPFS that will be of specific interest to radiology practices, The American College of Radiology (ACR) includes a statement that “the ACR is pleased with several provisions within the rule.” They highlight the planned implementation of the Appropriate Use Criteria and Clinical Decision Support rules beginning January 1, 2019 and the proposal to leave the technical component of mammography services unchanged rather than lowering it by 50% as previously discussed.
Categories: radiology reimbursement, cms, MPFS, radiology
New Information on the Medicare Rules for Appropriate Use Criteria and Clinical Decision Support on July 24, 2017
New information has been provided by The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) that will supplement our article An Update for Radiologists on Appropriate Use Criteria and Clinical Decision Support. We can now update you from the recent release of the “Proposed Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) for 2018” and the “Proposed Rule for Quality Payment Program Year 2.”
Categories: radiology reimbursement, clinical decision support, radiology, appropriate use criteria
Patients in rehabilitation facilities sometimes need imaging services that cannot be provided within the facility itself. Imaging centers willingly accept these patients but they can inadvertently fall into a collections quagmire if they aren’t aware of the Medicare rules related to skilled nursing facilities.
Categories: radiology reimbursement, radiology, skilled nursing facilities
Best Practices in Radiology Patient Billing on June 19, 2017
Maximizing the patient experience is no longer limited to the achievement of clinical success. It is a critical component of the new, broader partnership between provider and patient – one that now encompasses conversations regarding not only service quality and cost, but also places a greater focus on practice billing processes in line with the higher demands inherent to the new patient consumerism trend.
Categories: radiology reimbursement, radiology billing, patient collections