Medical Billing and Coding Training General Surgery Guidelines (Part 2)

In Part 1 of Medical Billing and Coding Training Basic Surgery Guidelines, I focused on insurance coverage, payer rules, and modifier usage. This section will focus on what I zero in on when looking over a surgical operative note.

First of all, I want to be certain the documentation covers all pertinent areas so I approach each note as if I was auditing a patient chart. For the record, this approach can also be used for auditing surgical procedures already coded by another professional.

I begin by verifying the patient name, date of birth, and insurance. Always match the date of surgery on the surgeon’s notes with the hospital medical record. Believe it or not, I run across discrepancies with dates of surgery often. You also want to double check the location of the surgery. Sometimes a procedure will be performed in an outpatient setting and other times at an inpatient location. Hospital pre-registration will indicate the location and if your location does not match the pre-registration, the surgeon’s claim will deny; so date of surgery and location are very important.

Review the operation(s) or procedure(s) performed.

Medical Billing and Coding Training — Using Checklist

Have a check list to work from so you do not miss important information. Below is a list I use as a guide:

• Was the pre-operative and post-operative diagnosis indicated?
• Was the technical procedure described?
• Were there biopsies or specimens removed?
• Was there a description of the findings?
• Were there co-surgeons?
• Was the patient’s condition stated post-operatively?
• Were any operative complications described?
• Was a complaint mentioned?
• Were there any operative scopes used?
• Were specific terms describing the surgery used such as “difficult” or “complicated”?
• Was there general anesthesia or conscious sedation involved?
• Were there extenuating circumstances prolonging the operation?
• How many surgeries were performed during the surgical session?
• Are any of the surgeries bundled into one another, such as the surgical approach and actual surgery?
• How thorough was the operative report in terms of sequencing events and details?
• Are modifiers required?
• Was a history noted?
• Were vitals, an exam, or laboratory tests ordered?
• Were there any added remarks or recommendations regarding the patient or the surgery?
• Was there a decision for immediate surgery indicated (modifier 57 for invasive and 25 for
non-invasive)?
• Does the surgery fall under zero (0) global days such as a non-invasive colonoscopy or a 90 day global package?
• Was this a return to the operating room due to complications from a previous surgery during the post-op?

If you find your CPC credential has offered an opportunity to audit previously coded surgical procedures, you can add these additional queries:

• Is there any evidence of “unbundling?”
• What CPT codes were billed?
• Does the documentation validate the CPT codes used?
• Are there any additional codes or modifiers that should have been billed? If so, which codes?

As you grow more proficient in coding, you will fine-tune these questions based on the particular specialty you are coding. I hope this list helps you successfully begin your surgical coding journey!

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Laureen Jandroep

CPC, COC, CPPM, CPC-I.,Sr. Instructor for CCO.us. Laureen has over 25 years in the healthcare field. She graduated as an Occupational Therapist in 1986 and before long was running a successful therapy practice which did over 1.6 million in billing per year with a less than .06% rejection rate. Once Medicare changed how rehab companies were reimbursed this business was closed and Laureen eventually started a new company dedicated to teaching Medical Billing and Coding. Laureen has taught medical billing and coding since 1999 and currently does so through her comapny Certification Coaching Organization, LLC which does business as CCO.She resides in Florida with her husband of over 20 years Anthony and four children. They are active parents and spend most of their time these days just being parents which they love.

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