Many physician offices are confused about the correct way to bill these types of services and the documentation necessary to support billing. They are significantly different and billable in different settings. Incident has existed for many years, whereas shared care is a more recent CMS billing opportunity. Current CMS changes to their shared care policy have added to the confusion.

Reduce the risk for audits. Paybacks and possibly by billing correctly. Findings of incorrect billing on a payer audit can lead to future pre and post-payment reviews, contributing to reimbursement delays. This Webinar will explain the changes for 2024 and identify documentation requirements for shared and incident care.

Learning Objectives

Define shared care services and correct use.
Define “incident to” services and correct use.
Correctly report the applicable place of service codes for both services.
Identify services that may qualify for split shared care.
Identify professionals that may provide under incident to services policy.
Understand the difference in supervision versus incident.
Know the reimbursement implications when billing these services.
Know what to look for when auditing these types of services
Do private payers follow these rules
Areas Covered

Shared care policies
Incident to policies
Supervision policies
Provider eligibility
Recent changes to shared care services
Private payer interpretations of CMS policies
Reimbursement considerations
Background

Shared care and Incidents are specific Medicare billing policies. CMS and the AMA made some significant changes regarding shared care for 2024. Some other payers may follow these rules also.

Who Should Attend

Providers
Coders
Clinic managers
Denial management staff
Accounts payable staff
Auditors

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