J codes
J codes
J codes
A j code is used
If you are billing for a workers compensation patient and no fault patient then it is S0020 and if its medicare it is J7799 and for private insurance you could either use S0020 or J3590. Namrata Narula
yes
CPT code 96372 is reported for "therapeutic, prophylactic, or diagnostic injection; subcutaneous or intramuscular". The medication administered during the injection must also be reported in order for the claim to receive possible reimbursement. The code cannot be reported for injections given without direct physician supervision.
This is a code that providers must report when they use electronic prescription services to send a prescription order to a pharmacy for a patient. This code is billed to Medicare along with the other procedure codes for the encounter. This allows Medicare to track which providers are using electronic prescriptions.
90772 must be filed to Medicare along with the drug code. If you are not filing a drug code when reporting 90772, you can not bill 90772. You would bill 99211 as long as the physician is present for general supervision. If the physician is not present, the patient brought his/her medication to the office, you can not bill for the service. Hope this helps, PCC
Each status modifier reported with an anesthesia code to indicate the patient's condition at the time anesthesia was administered.
I would say yes, if it's an a doctor's office. I always use one at my office. Sometimes it is just 99211 if the patient only sees the nurse for the injection.
http://www.pebs.net/coding_updates Its a code for an injection. This link should explain.
no