Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the doctors in the practice are actually aware of this shadiness going on, then shame on them. It's one thing if it actually makes the visit take longer or they have to do extra work. 60 seconds of talking that you would have done anyway is just a scam.
Of course they know. Private equity bosses give doctors quotas.
Anonymous wrote:If the doctors in the practice are actually aware of this shadiness going on, then shame on them. It's one thing if it actually makes the visit take longer or they have to do extra work. 60 seconds of talking that you would have done anyway is just a scam.
Anonymous wrote:It is the most frustrating thing ever. LY they gave my child a mental health questionnaire (I think it was 10 questions) at the annual exam. They answered sometimes about anxiety and since it was not a 100% no, they said it was a mental health visit too and it kicked us into a copay. I think the doctor spent maybe 1-2 minutes asking additional questions about that response. TY when we went I asked my child if they were anxious or feeling they needed to talk to anyone. they said no, I said make sure you select no across the board. I would rather pay someone the copay to spend 30 minutes or more to talk with you then a doctor for 1-2 minutes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a billing thing. The preventive care visit diagnosis code doesn’t include any of these other things that were addressed. So if thyroid or anxiety meds were refilled, or patient was referred to Derm for a skin concern or whatever it was, those have separate diagnosis codes and need to be linked to a separate office visit. Many health care offices have signs in waiting room letting people know that this will happen during a PCV visit. Listen we (health care providers) hate it too. But electronic medical record systems kind of require you to play by insurance company and billing rules.
It never happened to me until last year. It's a money grab.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a billing thing. The preventive care visit diagnosis code doesn’t include any of these other things that were addressed. So if thyroid or anxiety meds were refilled, or patient was referred to Derm for a skin concern or whatever it was, those have separate diagnosis codes and need to be linked to a separate office visit. Many health care offices have signs in waiting room letting people know that this will happen during a PCV visit. Listen we (health care providers) hate it too. But electronic medical record systems kind of require you to play by insurance company and billing rules.
It never happened to me until last year. It's a money grab.
Doctors are getting squeezed too. It's a billing thing. They could have, probably should have, always been doing it. Now the ones who were lax are doing it too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a billing thing. The preventive care visit diagnosis code doesn’t include any of these other things that were addressed. So if thyroid or anxiety meds were refilled, or patient was referred to Derm for a skin concern or whatever it was, those have separate diagnosis codes and need to be linked to a separate office visit. Many health care offices have signs in waiting room letting people know that this will happen during a PCV visit. Listen we (health care providers) hate it too. But electronic medical record systems kind of require you to play by insurance company and billing rules.
It never happened to me until last year. It's a money grab.
Doctors are getting squeezed too. It's a billing thing. They could have, probably should have, always been doing it. Now the ones who were lax are doing it too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a billing thing. The preventive care visit diagnosis code doesn’t include any of these other things that were addressed. So if thyroid or anxiety meds were refilled, or patient was referred to Derm for a skin concern or whatever it was, those have separate diagnosis codes and need to be linked to a separate office visit. Many health care offices have signs in waiting room letting people know that this will happen during a PCV visit. Listen we (health care providers) hate it too. But electronic medical record systems kind of require you to play by insurance company and billing rules.
It never happened to me until last year. It's a money grab.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a billing thing. The preventive care visit diagnosis code doesn’t include any of these other things that were addressed. So if thyroid or anxiety meds were refilled, or patient was referred to Derm for a skin concern or whatever it was, those have separate diagnosis codes and need to be linked to a separate office visit. Many health care offices have signs in waiting room letting people know that this will happen during a PCV visit. Listen we (health care providers) hate it too. But electronic medical record systems kind of require you to play by insurance company and billing rules.