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
CPT medicine code 90772 has been deleted. CPT instructs to use code 96372 which is used for a: Therapeutic, prophylactic, or diagnostic injection (specify substance or drug); subcutaneous or intramuscular.
90772 Effective 01/01/2006; "Therapeutic, prophylactic or diagnostic injection (specify substance or drug); subcutaneous or intramuscular," CPT-4 Procedure CodeCPT® is a registered trademark of the American Medical Association
In 2006 the coding procedure for injections was changed and 90772 was made the universal code for all injections. This was again changed in 2009 and 96372 is now the universal code.
This code was deleted. In 2006 the coding procedure for injections was changed and 90772 was made the universal code for all injections. This was again changed in 2009 and 96372 is now the universal code.
I'm not sure, but it seems to be is the number (Code) of Identification (ID) of a diagnostic exam (diagnosis). ID can also mean Integrated Diagnostics or Interfaced Diagnostics, hence it depends on context and where it is placed in the report.
There is no code. It's just replacement or sometimes abbreviated as RC.
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33234
92326
27447
81.47