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

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

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CPC Practice Exam and Study Guide Package

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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”

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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

Why Cross-Training Medical Coders Can Get Your In Trouble

Cross training sounds like it should work. A coder is a coder.  Why pay a new coder to work on Orthopedics when you have two OB/GYN coders with extra capacity? The job title is the same, the job itself is the same, the software/system access/workflow are the same.  Yet this thinking can get a practice in to trouble from both a compliance and revenue standpoint.

Like any job, the more you do it the better you should get at it. While this may hold true for a coder consistently seeing work in the same specialty, it doesn’t apply to the ability to code all specialties in general.  How can spending 5 years coding cardiology procedures qualify someone to code neurosurgery cases? It doesn’t; there are too many differences in the codes being selected, the physiology and anatomy involved, and the rules and guidelines issued by the payors claims are submitted to for reimbursement.  Likewise, if a coder is spending too much time touching an abundance of disciplines, they won’t have enough experience or specialized knowledge to be proficient coding any one thing. 

Training a coder in a new specialty isn’t as simple as letting that coder code by trial and error. Proper training requires a thorough understanding of the medical specialty, all types of procedures and associated illnesses and conditions. This should all happen well before that coder is allowed to start coding. Once that coder is ready, they need to be treated as a freshly minted coder and undergo regular audits and reviews. This process takes time and effort from a management standpoint and diverts resources from your coders’ regular specialty. 

All too often coding departments don’t have the time and resources to properly train their coders in the areas of work they regularly perform.  Providing minimal additional training in another specialty is often a fools errand. There are no guarantees that your coder will be able to learn a new specialty and code at an appropriate accuracy level.  Allowing a coder to attempt a new discipline while submitting those claims for reimbursement is a sure fire way to increase denials from payors, lower reimbursement due to undercoding, allow for providers insufficient or incorrect documentation to go unchecked, and possibly open up your organization to compliance exposure.

While cross training on its face may seem like a good idea, the results are often disastrous.  Practices hoping to save money by reallocating unused or underutilized internal coding resources will find themselves harming the stability of their revenue stream, creating additional follow up work after the denial of claim submissions, and, as a result, end up costing more for the practice than having utilized an appropriate specialized resource in the first place.

 

The post Why Cross-Training Medical Coders Can Get Your In Trouble appeared first on The Coding Network.

The Coding Network

Trouble with job search board

:confused: Anyone else have issues when trying to use the job search? I put in the zip code for the area I want to search in and it continues to bring up jobs in states that are no where near me and no where even close to within 50 miles. Anyone else having this same issue or any idea how to fix it so that I can get an accurate job search with jobs in my area? Thanks!

Medical Billing and Coding Forum

Anyone having trouble with Medicare and the new neuropsych codes? 96132 96136 96137..

Billed 96132 (1), 96136 (1), 96137 (3)

Medicare is rejecting my claim stating "Payment is adjusted when performed/billed by a provider of this specialty"
The provider is a PhD, Clinical Psychologist.
I contacted Medicare and the supervisor agreed that this rejection is not accurate. She was unable to put the claim back through and referred me to the AH modifier fact sheet for resolution. This modifier was not required in the past. I resubmitted the claim with the modifier and received the same rejection.

Any input is greatly appreciated!!

Medical Billing and Coding Forum