What Do E/M Codes Mean?
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Function
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Medical offices use numerical Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes to identify--without use of lengthy descriptions--the exact services given to a patient.
Types
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All E/M codes start with "99" and contain five digits, beginning with 99201 and ending with 99429. Specifically, codes 99201-99205 describe services to first time patients and codes 99211-99215 are for doctor's visits by established patients. Codes 99241-99245 identify office consultations, codes 99354-99360 describe prolonged services and other codes describe preventive medicine care.
Exam Categories
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Results of E/M exams fall in one of four categories: "Problem Focused" describes a health exam limited to the area of chief complaint. An "Expanded Problem Focused" exam focuses on the area of complaint and two to seven other affected areas. A "Detailed" exam describes an extensive review related to the area of complaint in addition to two to seven other body or organ areas. The "Comprehensive" exam indicates a complete review of the affected area plus eight or more organ systems or body areas.
Considerations
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Other factors used to determine which E/M code best suits services provided include the patient's chief complaint, how long symptoms have been present, consideration of a patient's past medical, family and social history and the amount of time taken for the office visit.
Modifiers
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Reduced or altered services receive a billing modifier that lets claim payers know that a change has occurred in a standard service. Use of modifier "25" commonly indicates identification of a separate condition apart from what the initial, same-day office visit addressed. Modifier "21" indicates a longer-than-normal E/M visit. Modifier "50" denotes a bilateral service, "52" a reduction in service, "76" a duplicate procedure performed by the same doctor and "77" indicates a repeat service provided by a different doctor.
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