Monday, 29 July 2013

Your Key to Unlocking Biofeedback Reimbursement

Biofeedback may help patients relax, but it often stresses out coders trying to make sure their physicians get reimbursed properly. Take control of your biofeedback reimbursement by following these steps to correct coding.

The key to reimbursement for biofeedback treatment is the work you must do beforehand, because Medicare and commercial payers want to make sure the patient is a good candidate for biofeedback.

Once you prove that the patient is a good candidate, most carriers will reimburse for biofeedback as an alternative to surgery, says Jean Acevedo, LHRM, CPC, president of Acevedo Consulting Inc. in Florida. "In some states, the Medicare carrier looks at biofeedback training as being covered under Medicare as reasonable and necessary for re-education of certain muscle groups, treatment of muscle abnormalities, and incapacitating muscle spasm or weakness," Acevedo says.

"And when it comes to the bladder, at least in Florida, they combine for the treatment of stress urge or persistent post-prostatectomy urinary incontinence," Acevedo adds.

Use CPT 90911 (Biofeedback training, perineal muscles, anorectal or urethral sphincter, including EMG and/or manometry) when the urologist treats urinary incontinence with biofeedback. Some coders use 90901 (Biofeedback training by any modality) to treat urinary incontinence. Do not add 51784 (Electromyography studies [EMG] of anal or urethral sphincter, other than needle, any technique) because 90911 includes electromyography (EMG) and/or manometry.
Make Medical Necessity a Must
You must show medical necessity for biofeedback training on a patient-by-patient basis. CMS gives carriers discretion to determine if biofeedback should be paid as an initial treatment modality.

"The key for the physician," Acevedo says, "is that clearly their documentation for the encounter leading up to the biofeedback therapy must document that more 'conventional' treatments have not been successful."

Have the physician in your office submit detailed notes outlining the medical necessity. For example, diagnosis codes such as 625.6 (Stress incontinence, female) or 788.35 (Post-void dribbling) clearly warrant biofeedback treatment. Double-check your carriers' coverage policies to confirm that the condition could call for biofeedback treatment.

For example, Cigna Medicare's biofeedback local medical review policy for Tennessee stipulates that only the following ICD-9 codes constitute medical necessity and will be reimbursed for biofeedback:
  • 599.82 - Intrinsic (urethral) sphincter deficiency [ISD]
  • 625.6 - Stress incontinence, female
  • 728.2 - Muscular wasting and disuse atrophy ...
  • 787.6 - Incontinence of feces
  • 788.30 - Urinary incontinence, unspecified
  • 788.32 - Stress incontinence, male
  • 788.33 - Mixed incontinence, (male) (female)
  • V48.3 - Mechanical and motor problems with neck and trunk
  • V49.2 - Motor problems with limbs.

    Medicare is more conservative in its reimbursement than most private carriers, so pay attention to the specific diagnosis code used. Even Medicare's

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