Surgery Center Coding Guidance: Reporting Perioperative Peripheral Nerve Blocks

The following article is written by Rosalind Richmond, chief coding and compliance officer for GENASCIS.


CPT copyright 2010 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. CPT is a registered trademark of the American Medical Association.


Pain relief procedures not specified to deliver primary anesthetic for a surgical procedure are separately reportable.

 

Providers may bill for a regional anesthetic technique as a service separate from the anesthetic if the regional anesthetic technique is performed primarily for postoperative analgesia. Reporting pain management blocks require clear documentation distinguishing between anesthetic and analgesia.

 

Medical necessity for postoperative pain management must be documented by the requesting physician. Normal postoperative pain management including management of intravenous patient controlled analgesia is considered part of the surgical global package.

 

Reporting perioperative nerve blocks is appropriate when the following conditions apply:

  • The anesthesia for the surgical procedure is not dependent on the efficacy of the regional anesthetic technique.
  • Time spent on peri-operative placement of the block must be separated and not included in the reported anesthesia time.

 

Key elements for documenting regional peripheral block procedures

  • Name of block performed
  • Approach used
  • Patient condition
  • Indications for block
  • Patient position
  • Needle design, technique, depth of insertion
  • Local anesthetic used
  • Dose
  • Monitoring/narrative of event/description of motor response
  • Patient vital signs following procedure

 

Documentation requirements

- Requirement to document that regional block is separate from the operative anesthetic: In order to bill for any type of block separate from the anesthetic, the reason for performing the block must be for the provision of postoperative pain management. If a different provider provides the regional block than the provider who provides the surgery (anesthesiologist), a documented request must be noted by the surgeon indicating that the intent of the block is for postoperative pain control. This may be documented as a physician order.

 

- Requirement to document that the regional block is separate from routine postoperative surgical care: An order from the surgeon is required in addition to documentation requesting the regional block that daily analgesia management is planned. This activity must be defined as separate from routine postoperative pain management.

 

Editor's note: For more helpful guidance, view "Coding and Modifier Guidance for Perioperative Peripheral Nerve Blocks."

 

Deficient documentation for pain block procedures occurs when:

The post operative pain block is dictated within the operative report and no separate procedure note for the block is provided.

 

A post operative pain procedure report that does not include "post operative pain management" under indications is incomplete.

 

Statements like "patient was given a femoral block followed by endotracheal anesthesia", are not complete without a physician order (verbal or written) requesting the block for pain management.

 

"Anesthesia type – Regional and general", documentation must be inclusive of a block procedure report, with clear documentation relating to post operative pain control.

 

Diagnostic coding

Coding and sequencing for pain are dependent on the physician documentation in the medical record and application of the Official Coding Guidelines for inpatient care.

 

Postoperative pain can be coded as a secondary diagnosis when the patient develops an "unusual or inordinate amount of postoperative pain" after outpatient surgery. Do not assign a code for the postoperative pain if it is routine or expected after surgery.


Learn more about GENASCIS.


The information provided should be utilized for educational purposes only. Please consult with your billing and coding expert. Facilities are ultimately responsible for verifying the reporting policies of individual commercial and MAC/FI carriers prior to claim submissions.


References

- CPT Assistant, Volume 7, Issue 2, February 1997

- CPT Assistant, Volume 8, Issue 7, July 1998

- ICD-9-CM Official Coding Guidelines

- NHIC Anesthesia Billing Guide (www.medicarehic.com/providers/pubs/Anesthesia%20Billing%20Guide.pdf)

- CCI Policy Manual (www.cms.hhs.gov/nationalcorrectcodinited/01_overview.asp)

 

Read more from GENASCIS:

 

- Is Facility Fee Charge Waived for Medicare When Using Modifier -33

 

- 2011 Musculoskeletal Coding Update

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