CMS Opens Door to G0463 Billing for Remote Physician Visits

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The confusion over what code to use when hospital-employed physicians perform virtual visits with patients has reared its head again in the latest FAQ from Medicare (released on July 28).

Based on this latest iteration, the service billed by the hospital seems to be dependent on where the physician is when they conduct the visit. That means the visit is viewed differently by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) if the physician is sitting in their office versus sitting at home. But before I go into the details, allow me to compliment the CMS staff. Throughout this pandemic, CMS has gone to great lengths to finesse the regulations and payment rules to try and help providers of all types, without forcing them to go through the regular rule-change process. For example, phone calls went from “never covered” to “covered with a low payment rate” to “covered and paid at the same rate as an in-person office visit” in two months.

Now, back to these virtual visits. Here is my interpretation of this new guidance. If the physician is in their office – which is a provider-based clinic location – and the patient’s home is designated as a temporary provider-based location of the hospital, then technically both the doctor and the patient are in the clinic, so the charges for the use of the facility get billed as a face-to-face visit. It is not a telehealth visit. That means the hospital can bill their usual facility fee, G0463. But if the doctor is not in their office, and perhaps at home or on the golf course, then it is a telehealth visit, and the hospital can only bill the originating site fee (the Q3014) because only the patient is “in” the clinic.

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Prior to this updated guidance, CMS seemed to be saying that if the patient and doctor were not literally in the same physical location, the hospital could only charge the originating site fee, Q3014. It seems that what CMS has done is analogous to the regulatory changes for phone calls I outlined above. The rules went from no coverage for these visits to allowing an originating site fee, which meant that there was payment parity between independent physicians who bill place of service 11 and employed physicians who bill place of service 19 or 22. Allowing G0463 brings the payment rate back to the pre-COVID level. It seems that CMS staff have again come through with a great solution.

This is confusing, and subject to interpretation. As always, read the source documentation and discuss this with your compliance and legal teams. There is a significant amount of revenue at stake here, since thousands of these virtual visits by employed physicians have occurred since the start of the public health emergency.

And if you can figure out where the physician was when they conducted the visit, you may be able to go back and rebill and get a significantly higher payment.

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Photo courtesy of: RAC Monitor

Originally Published On: RAC Monitor

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