Does One-on-One Only Apply to Traditional Medicare?

March 21, 2022
 / 
Rick Gawenda
 / 

I receive many questions at my in-person seminars and via email that begin something like “I know we can’t have 2 Medicare patients being treated at the same time, but how about 2 patient’s with private insurance”? Or, “I know I need to be one-on-one with Medicare patient’s, but that does not apply to patients with private insurance, right”? Lastly, “I know if I have 2 Medicare patient’s in my facility for one hour during the same time period, I have to split the time between them, but if the 2 patient’s had private insurance, I could bill each for the entire one hour as one-on-one time, correct”?

I think it is finally time to answer the above questions and put a stop to the myth that you can’t have 2 or more Medicare patient’s in your facility at the same time or that it is okay to bill 2 non-Medicare patient’s for 4 time-based units when they were each in your facility during the same one hour time frame being treated by just one physical or occupational therapist, one physical therapist assistant, or one occupational therapy assistant. The answer, or should I say, where the answer comes from, will surprise many of you. The answer does not come from the Medicare program, private insurance carriers, workers compensation programs, auto no-fault insurance carriers or state practice acts and administrative rules. The answer to all of the above questions comes from the American Medical Association (AMA).

Surprised? I bet you are! How is it that the AMA is the one that provides the answer to the above questions? It is because the AMA is the organization that creates and maintains the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes that providers use to submit claims to insurance carriers, workers compensation carriers and auto carriers to be paid for services rendered to their clients. The federal government, Medicare program, and insurance carriers do not create and define the CPT codes; rather, they use the CPT codes as created by the AMA to pay us for our services. So since insurance carriers, workers compensation carriers and auto carriers, not just the Medicare program, use the CPT codes developed and defined by the AMA to pay us for our services, the definition of “direct (one-on-one) patient contact” as defined by the AMA in some of the CPT codes apply to the insurance carriers, workers compensation programs and auto carriers as well, not just the Medicare program.

In addition, in 2000, the CPT code set was designated by the Department of Health and Human Services as the national coding standard for physician and other health care professional services and procedures under the Health insurance Portability and Accountability Act. This means that organizations that submit claims or other health information electronically must use the current years CPT codes.

Lets begin by looking at the “Constant Attendance” modality codes. Prior to listing the constant attendance modalities, the AMA states

The content here is for members only log in here or sign up.

I hope this article has cleared up the misconceptions and myths surrounding one-on-one therapy with traditional Medicare patients and Non-Medicare patients. Thank you for being a Gold Member!

All material posted on our website is intellectual property of Gawenda Seminars & Consulting, Inc. and can’t be used, reproduced, or posted as your own material without prior written approval of Gawenda Seminars & Consulting, Inc.

This article is not intended to and does not serve as legal advice or as consultative services, but is for general information purposes only.


All material posted on our website is the intellectual property of Gawenda Seminars & Consulting, Inc. and can’t be used, reproduced, or posted as your own material without the prior written approval of Gawenda Seminars & Consulting, Inc.

This article is not intended to and does not serve as legal advice or as consultative services, but is for general information purposes only.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

  1. Thank you for the article. How do so many outpatient clinics see 2 and 3 patients an hour and get reimbursed? For example Cora sees and bills for multiple patients in 1 hour and not as described in your article.

    1. Just because they are reimbursed for the units they billed does not mean they billed correctly and thus, paid correctly.

  2. How do outpatient clinics such as Cora or many other private practice outpatient clinics see 2 plus pts per hour and bill 4 units each on each pt?