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Inpatient Admission 4 Weeks Prior to Delivery

We have a patient who was admitted to the hospital for management of her pregnancy, due to loss of a twin in-utero, 4 weeks before she delivered. The provider sent me the inpatient daily visit charges to ‘bill out’, but I am certain this still falls under the Global OB package, as we have seen her for the duration of her pregnancy (so we billed for global delivery code, as well). Am I correct in my thinking that the Inpatient services are not billable to the payer? They are bundled in with the Global OB Package?

Medical Billing and Coding Forum

Transferring Care at 28 Weeks

We have a patient that transferred to our clinic at 28 weeks. When the patient delivered I billed 59426 (7 or more antepartum visits) on one claim with the date of her last office visit and then a separate claim with 59410 (vaginally delivery and post partum care). Is this correct or should the antepartum visits and vaginal delivery been billed on the same claim. Could this patient’s care been billed globally with 59400?

Thanks

Medical Billing and Coding

Medicare’s ICD-10-CM Grace Period ENDS in only 5 weeks…

After Oct. 1st, your currently paid claims can suddenly turn into denials

After the ICD-10-CM transitional grace period, Medicare will no longer pay claims with diagnosis codes that are CLOSE to accurate. And to make it worse, payers haven’t been telling you what’s wrong with the claims you’ve submitted incorrectly, so fixing the problem can seem impossible.

The only way to ensure your diagnosis coding is accurate so your claims continue to get paid is to have a solid handle on the core of ICD-10-CM code selection.

The post Medicare’s ICD-10-CM Grace Period ENDS in only 5 weeks… appeared first on The Coding Network.

The Coding Network

Medicare’s ICD-10-CM Grace Period ENDS in only 5 weeks…

After Oct. 1st, your currently paid claims can suddenly turn into denials

After the ICD-10-CM transitional grace period, Medicare will no longer pay claims with diagnosis codes that are CLOSE to accurate. And to make it worse, payers haven’t been telling you what’s wrong with the claims you’ve submitted incorrectly, so fixing the problem can seem impossible.

The only way to ensure your diagnosis coding is accurate so your claims continue to get paid is to have a solid handle on the core of ICD-10-CM code selection.

The post Medicare’s ICD-10-CM Grace Period ENDS in only 5 weeks… appeared first on The Coding Network.

The Coding Network

Medicare’s ICD-10-CM Grace Period ENDS in only 5 weeks…

After Oct. 1st, your currently paid claims can suddenly turn into denials

After the ICD-10-CM transitional grace period, Medicare will no longer pay claims with diagnosis codes that are CLOSE to accurate. And to make it worse, payers haven’t been telling you what’s wrong with the claims you’ve submitted incorrectly, so fixing the problem can seem impossible.

The only way to ensure your diagnosis coding is accurate so your claims continue to get paid is to have a solid handle on the core of ICD-10-CM code selection.

The post Medicare’s ICD-10-CM Grace Period ENDS in only 5 weeks… appeared first on The Coding Network.

The Coding Network

Medicare’s ICD-10-CM Grace Period ENDS in only 5 weeks…

After Oct. 1st, your currently paid claims can suddenly turn into denials

After the ICD-10-CM transitional grace period, Medicare will no longer pay claims with diagnosis codes that are CLOSE to accurate. And to make it worse, payers haven’t been telling you what’s wrong with the claims you’ve submitted incorrectly, so fixing the problem can seem impossible.

The only way to ensure your diagnosis coding is accurate so your claims continue to get paid is to have a solid handle on the core of ICD-10-CM code selection.

The post Medicare’s ICD-10-CM Grace Period ENDS in only 5 weeks… appeared first on The Coding Network.

The Coding Network