Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#166
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It's unfortunate, that our healthcare system has been highjacked by regulators, insurance companies and lawyers (who bill the same, whether they're in court or sitting on their butts, "thinking").
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"God made me and gave me the right to remain silent, but not the ability." Sen John Kennedy (R-La) " ... and that Norm, is why some folks always feel smarter, when they sign onto TOTV after a few beers" adapted from Cliff Claven, 1/18/90 |
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#167
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I have seen the term "long visit" on EOBs from visits to The Villages Health before (pre Medicare age).
I also had a Medicare insurance question about two years. I had several conversations with my PCPs billing folks, my Supplemental Plan, and Medicare itself. The question was "why did an annual visit (to essentially go over blood work) count towards my Part B deductible and carry a $20 copay? I was under the impression that these "wellness visits" were covered 100%." The only person who was able to answer the question was my PCP. What she told me I found interesting. She stated "if you come in for an annual visit and don't have any issues to discuss then it would be coded as a "wellness" visit and would be covered 100% without impacting my Part B deductible and being charged a copay. If I discuss any issues bothering me (i.e. my knee is getting worse) then it gets coded differently and would count towards my Part B deductible and might have a copay (I have Plan N)". Who knew ... |
#168
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Why? Because the bureaucrats, regulators and lawyers don't know enough about medicine to be qualified to apply a band-aid, so they have to reduce everything to bean counting. This is my main reason for retiring 10 years ago---I always stated that when I was spending more than 50% of my time on paperwork, I was done---and the regulators managed to achieve that goal. |
#169
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If it was there, it was not an official CPT term or criteria----I've already posted those criteria and there is not term "long" As for the rest of it, it is even more complicated than the answer that was given. If your appointment was scheduled as the annual wellness visit: If you then bring up another problem, the proper procedure is for the physician to complete the wellness visit, close the note and start a new note on the problem. The she is supposed to bill for both with the appropriate CPT codes and the "problem" visit may be subject to a copay. If it was booked as a visit for a specific problem: And the physician states "while you're here let's also do your annual wellness visit", that is a violation of the rules and would subject her to paying the wellness visit back Kind of dumb, predicating two different billings on the original reason for scheduling the visit, but those are the dumb rules |
#170
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#171
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Thankfully this issue will be settled by courts of law. |
#172
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#173
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The term "long visit" was used on the EOB from either the Supplemental Plan or Medicare, don't recall which as I gets EOBs from both. Apparently, the term "long visit" is an interpretation for the patient ???? At least one was, by the way, a long visit because I was discussing some treatment options that were complicated (the pre-Medicare visit)
The appointment was for a "wellness" visit. The conversation eventually moved to "this is bothering me, any thoughts?". I find it more of a curiosity than anything as I would hit my Part B deductible anyway and the co-pay is only $20. Thanks for the explanation. Quote:
Last edited by biker1; 08-22-2025 at 09:46 AM. |
#174
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#175
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Last edited by golfing eagles; 08-22-2025 at 12:40 PM. |
#177
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Ok, I'm sorry I wasn't clear. This is not a debate. This is me educating people how the system works and hopefully some of them listen. Their choice. But if they want to know what happens in reality, at least I've shown them. To those with "closed minds", res ipsa loquitur.
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#178
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Last edited by Aces4; 08-22-2025 at 01:00 PM. |
#179
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Now we have a new accusation----"some Drs. or their offices do bill this for charge when it has not occurred in any form." If true, and I very much doubt that it is, that would be an example of outright fraud. So naturally the person who posted that has irrefutable proof of their accusation? Of course they do, ![]() ![]() ![]() |
#180
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