Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions with Full Rationale Answers

Practice Exam

Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions and answers with full rationale

Practice Exam

CPC Practice Exam and Study Guide Package

Practice Exam

What makes a good CPC Practice Exam? Questions and Answers with Full Rationale

CPC Exam Review Video

Laureen shows you her proprietary “Bubbling and Highlighting Technique”

Download your Free copy of my "Medical Coding From Home Ebook" at the top right corner of this page

Practice Exam

2018 CPC Practice Exam Answer Key 150 Questions With Full Rationale (HCPCS, ICD-9-CM, ICD-10, CPT Codes) Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions with Full Rationale Answers

Practice Exam

Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions and answers with full rationale

HIPAA Q&A: You’ve got questions. We’ve got answers!

Submit your HIPAA questions to Associate Editor Nicole Votta at [email protected] and we will work with our experts to provide you with the information you need.

Q: My office manager at an outpatient practice revealed to two employees that I’m a recovering alcoholic. I’m a midlevel practitioner and a patient of one of the physicians in the practice. Is this a HIPAA violation?

A: It may be a HIPAA violation because you are a patient of the practice. If the office manager accessed your medical record or learned of your condition during a conversation with your physician, it would be a violation of the HIPAA Privacy Rule. On the other hand, if the office manager disclosed information about your medical condition and it did not relate to treatment at the clinic (say, the information came from a job interview with you or was documented in your personnel file), it would not be a HIPAA violation because the information was available to your office manager acting as the employer. It may still be a violation of state law or other federal law, but it would not be a HIPAA violation.

Editor’s note: Chris Apgar, CISSP, president of Apgar and Associates in Portland, Oregon, answered this question for HCPro’s Briefings on HIPAA newsletter. This information does not constitute legal advice. Consult legal counsel for answers to specific privacy and security questions.

HCPro.com – HIM-HIPAA Insider

Medicare Answers Evaluation and Managment Proposal Concerns

If you’ve read about the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) proposed changes for the  documentation, coding, and reimbursement of outpatient evaluation and management (E/M) service codes 99201-99215, you probably have some questions (If you haven’t read about the changes, do it!). Now, CMS is providing some answers. Following remarks by CMS Administrator Seema Verma, […]
AAPC Knowledge Center

Switching AOs: Kettering Health answers why they changed from Joint Commission to HFAP

 Kettering Health Network (KHN) is a non-profit network of eight hospitals, 10 emergency centers, and over 120 outpatient facilities in southwest Ohio. In 2016, the network reported more than 1 million outpatient visits, nearly 62,000 patient discharges, and about 315,000 emergency visits. KHN used to be accredited primarily by The Joint Commission, before deciding to switch all its facilities to HFAP in 2011. 

HCPro.com – Briefings on Accreditation and Quality

Active forums-where can I find answers? Not pleased with this forum

This seems to be one of the least helpful forums that I’ve ever encountered. Are there any where questions get answered? Perhaps my questions/posts are only something that I experience? I search the posts and so many are just questions with no responses. There is so much experience in this group. I expected more help.

Please advise as to where you are finding help.
Thanks.

Medical Billing and Coding Forum

Congress wants answers from CMS, AOs on hospital patient safety

 If you thought The Joint Commission and other accrediting organizations (AO) were already under the proverbial gun from CMS, get ready—the House Energy and Commerce committee is launching an investigation into hospital patient safety.

HCPro.com – Briefings on Accreditation and Quality

HIPAA Q&A: You’ve got questions. We’ve got answers!

Submit your HIPAA questions to Associate Editor Nicole Votta at [email protected] and we will work with our experts to provide you with the information you need.

Q: Can you self-deny a claim after you’ve already received Part A payment for it?

A: Yes. Even if you have already received payment, it is your responsibility to always ensure the services billed to Medicare were correctly paid and any overpayment refunded. If upon review you believe there is a case that did not meet medical necessity requirements, even though you had already billed it to Medicare and received payment under Part A, it is your responsibility to correct that overpayment. This would happen if the patient is here and nobody flags the stay as possibly not appropriate or medically necessary under Part A while the patient is here and then discharges the patient. The claim would be submitted as usual and paid. Then, subsequently, the utilization review committee may be looking at cases that were one-day stays or meet other criteria they have set up for review, and upon review they determine the case does not meet medical necessity requirements for payment under Part A. Once that determination is made, the hospital would have to refund the Part A payment to Medicare by submitting an adjustment claim on a Type of Bill (TOB) 110. When that processes, and the hospital refunds the patient any copay or deductible that may have been collected, they can then proceed with the inpatient Part B billing. This makes the process more complicated than if the original Part A claim is a no-pay claim (TOB 110), and it takes a little longer to get through, but in the end the result is the same: no Part A payment and instead payment under Part B through billing an inpatient Part B claim.

Editor’s note: Chris Simons, MS, RHIA, HIM director and privacy officer at Maine General Medical Center in Augusta, Maine, answered this question for HCPro’s HIM Briefings newsletter. This information does not constitute legal advice. Consult legal counsel for answers to specific privacy and security questions.

HCPro.com – HIM-HIPAA Insider

HIPAA Q&A: You’ve got questions. We’ve got answers!

Submit your HIPAA questions to Associate Editor Nicole Votta at [email protected] and we will work with our experts to provide you with the information you need.

Q: What is the recommendation for retaining hard copies of medical records once they have been transferred to an EMR system?

A: This varies quite a bit depending on your storage capabilities and state retention laws. I am aware of some organizations that keep these records for 3–6 years (until the statute of limitations has run out), but this is a very conservative approach. I have also seen six months and one month. I would suggest ensuring you have a rigorous scanning quality control process to reassure yourself that you in fact have the scanned documents and they are readable. I would recommend that you keep the hard copies for at least one month after scanning. You might also want to consult legal counsel on this matter.

Editor’s note: Chris Simons, MS, RHIA, HIM director and privacy officer at Maine General Medical Center in Augusta, Maine, answered this question for HCPro’s HIM Briefings newsletter. This information does not constitute legal advice. Consult legal counsel for answers to specific privacy and security questions.

HCPro.com – HIM-HIPAA Insider

MIPS Webinar Answers Many Questions

On April 4, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) hosted a webinar to provide information on the Advancing Care Information (ACI) performance category of the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS). The ACI category is just one component of MIPS. For the 2017 performance year, there is also a Quality category and an Improvement […]
AAPC Knowledge Center