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1. It’s unpaid, short answer. Not part of your visit, usually a visit code is just one time based code for everything you provided and maybe a procedure if you did something like ear flushes, wart burning, quick wound fixes, etc. Long answer below. If there’s a billing code for it, I’m not aware of it and frankly I shouldn’t have to use it. For providers, it’s part of their “administrative time” which used to be a full day of catching up. In most hospital or insurance-owned clinics, that admin day is gone. You now do this during your lunch break and anytime you can squeeze a phone call. Fun fact, in the hospital, these peer to peers are at the mercy of the insurance company and only give you 24-48hrs to do it, so the hell to the overworked provider and their schedule, again this is exactly what they want. A overworked provider who doesn’t have the energy to fight. Providers are so overworked, they no longer can you catch up on charts and hence why the patient-provider relationship has eroded and become so cold when you see your provider just typing away instead of focusing on you. 2. Fight. Appeal your denial. Make sure your provider does the same. Follow this: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48126000#48128288
Can’t speak to all providers, but most of us are good people trying to do their best to help people. Few bad actors out there give us a bad name, but every field has good vs bad. It’s not right to make hasty decisions based on legitimately a few bad providers out there because of their greed, corruption, fraud, etc and lump everyone to prove they’re not fraudsters. Your basic primary care physician/NP/PA or surgeon isn’t the problem. It’s the conflict of interests of the health care industry, private equity groups, etc who create these issues, exploit the system and make it a breeding-ground for fraud/etc then complain that it needs to be fixed with more middle men. |