- 2025 code changes: What doctors of optometry need to know
- Introducing the new CMS G2211 code
- Coordination of benefits 3 takeaways for optometric billing practices
- Clearing up modifier confusion
- Payor Downcoding: What Is It and What Should You Do About It
- New noteworthy optometry codes
- Modifier -25: How to use it appropriately and avoid costly penalties
- 3 coding questions cracked
- CPT codes deleted in 2023—do you know what codes may be billed to replace them?
- Why Proper Documentation Is Vital
- Common coding questions answered
- How and when to code for social determinants of health
- Most asked coding questions: dilation
- What does COVID-19 PHE ending mean for telemedicine
- 2 points to keep in mind when patients decline dilation
- social determinants of health
- Can a doctor of optometry bill Medicare for a comprehensive eye exam and a procedure on the same day
- The future of audio-only reimbursement
- Coding conundrums solved
- 7 takeaways from the 2023 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Final Rule
- Virtual check-in codes
- What your colleagues are asking about coding
- CMS releases 2023 Medicare PFS proposed rule
- Merit-based Incentive Payment System: What doctors should know
- Ask the coding experts
- Merit-based Incentive Payment System quality measures
- Coding for presbyopia eye drops
- Coding and contact lens safety
- CMS 2022 Medicare PFS decreases conversion factor sets new policy goals
- CMS releases information on Part B claims-based quality measure scoring for 2021
- Updated ICD-10 codes take effect October 1
- If it sounds too good to be true
- New EM codes
- What to do when a coding decision is made incorrectly
- 4 coding changes now in effect
- changes in 2021 to coding and documentation for evaluation and management services.
- AOA HPI provides coding benchmark data
- Appropriate use of modifier 25
- Changes on the horizon for evaluation and management services
- AOA Coding Experts gain AMA CPT appointments
- 2020 PFS changes for optometry
- 2020 updates to the ICD-10 code set
- Medicares virtual check-in codes
- The importance of accurate coding and contact lens safety
- coding for cognitive development test
- Medicare evaluation and management documentation and billing
- Coding and audits
- 5 coding queries cracked
- appropriate diagnosis code reporting
- Diagnostic code changes
- 4 coding conundrums clarified
- Where coding and coverage intersect
- Changes on the horizon for evaluation and management documentation and reimbursement
- Global period data collection and possible future changes
- New ICD-10 codes effective
- July-Aug17_Coding Q&As
- The ICD 10 code development process
- coding experts-billing for post-cataract glasses
- accurate coding for public health
- July Aug 2017 Coding Experts
- September Coding Experts
- CMS data collection on postoperative visits
- 3 solutions to common coding problems
- 3 coding changes doctors need to know
- Coding cases cracked
- New diabetes related diagnosis codes
- Get answers to your coding questions
- New ICD10 codes doctors need to know
- Be aware of changes for 2017 and beyond
- Common coding Qs answered
- Coverage indications limitations and medical necessity
- 4 tips for competing with online retailers
- Coding questions cracked
- Access online coding resource for AOA members
- What is the future of CPT coding
- CMS makes changes in how doctors revalidate Medicare enrollment information
- 5 coding changes and clarifications doctors need to know
- More ICD 10 coding Q&As
- Doctors of optometry could see a rise in labor costs under new federal overtime rule
- 4 tips for growing your practice
- HHS unveils proposed rule for new Quality Payment Program
- Ask the Coding Experts Comparative billing reports raise questions on glaucoma patient treatment and coding
- Ask the Coding Experts Modifier 24 and 25 usage
- ICD-10 coding QandAs October
- Ask the Coding Experts Chronic care management services
- CMS comparative billing reports What you need to know
- Ready resources for the ICD 10 rollout
- Coding Q&As
- Online payment option makes cents
- Modifiers for distinct procedural services
- Get a refresher on your public Open Payments data
- Final countdown Get answers to your ICD-10 coding questions
- AOA clarifies meaningful use rule on electronic order entry
- More ICD 10 coding QandAs
- Vision therapy coding
- Medicare claims and requests for additional documentation
- Coding QnAs May
- Referring ordering and form 8550
- Reporting code 92250
- One-year Medicare payment fix extends ICD-10 deadline
ICD-10 transition: So far, so good
November 3, 2015
Read the AOA Coding Experts’ range of ICD-10 questions.
The contentious ICD-10 transition, often likened to Y2K in more ways than one, hasn't gone off without a hitch. It hasn't caused terrible disruption either.
Four weeks after providers first transitioned to ICD-10 on Oct. 1, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) report claims are processing normally with only minimal holdup. Of the 4.6 million claims submitted daily from Oct. 1-27, 10.1% resulted in denial with only 2% attributed to incomplete or invalid information.
Furthermore, only 0.09% of denied claims resulted from an invalid ICD-10 code, compared to a baseline of 0.17% in end-to-end testing, CMS states. As it takes Medicare claims several days to process and two weeks (by law) before providers receive payment—Medicaid claims can take up to 30 days—the numbers are preliminary and CMS plans to periodically update the data in weeks ahead.
While the vast majority of providers experienced no interruption with claims, the AOA did receive reports from doctors of optometry that Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) were inappropriately denying claims for eye exam codes, even when the reported diagnosis appropriately supported Medicare coverage and payment for the exam.
"The main issue appears to be Medicare carriers and private insurers not having all the ICD-10-CM codes properly programmed into their systems," says Rebecca Wartman, O.D., AOA Third Party Center Executive Committee member and AOA Coding Expert. "Several Medicare carriers omitted important diagnoses from their Local Carrier Determinations for ICD-10-CM. I am beginning to hear reports about very slow payments from private insurers, as well."
The AOA confirmed with the CMS ICD-10 Ombudsman that the agency is aware of the problem nationally, and that the affected claims will be reprocessed. Doctors can check their Medicare claim status through the following channels:
- Interactive Voice Response (IVR): IVR gives providers access to Medicare claims information through a toll-free telephone number. Visit your MAC website for information on the Provider Contact Center and IVR user guide.
- Customer Service Representative: Visit your MAC website for information on the Provider Contact Center only if you are unable to access claims information via IVR.
- MAC portal: Visit your MAC website for portal features and access.
- ASC X12: The ASC X12 Health Care Claim Status Request and Response (276/277) is a pair of electronic transactions you can use to request the status of claims (via the 276) and receive a response (via the 277). Visit your MAC website for more information.
Member questions about the ICD-10 transition
Despite the substantial coding shift that is ICD-10, and the delays associated with MAC and private insurers, doctors, for their part, have made the transition into the new code set relatively smoothly, says Dr. Wartman.
"The 'Ask the Coding Experts' site has received many interesting questions from providers, but generally, providers seem to have a grasp of the basics they need for properly coding ICD-10-CM," Dr. Wartman says.
What are some of the questions members are asking about ICD-10? According AOA's Coding Experts, questions include:
- Q. How do I code Rosacea Conjunctivitis?
- A. The best fit would be L71.8—Other rosacea
- Q. Is there a code for low-tension glaucoma suspect?
- A. The H40.01 series (open angle with borderline findings, low risk) and the H40.02 series (open angle with borderline findings, high risk) are the most appropriate.
- Q. In ICD-9 the diagnosis code for post-cataract glasses was V43.1. What is the appropriate ICD-10 code?
- A. The appropriate ICD-10 code is Z96.1.