Tag Archives: CHIPA

Psych Secrets

This post is about doing billing for the psychiatrist or psychologist in your life. It’s going to be a long one, guys.

The new CPT codes for mental health services for 2013 are going to have to be a whole post themselves. If you absolutely, positively need an easy explanation before I can get the post up, please remember, you can call or email. The diagnosis that are categorized as mental health conditions range from between ICD9 code 290-319 (ICD10 F01-F99) and if you are not a psych or a therapist and you bill any of these dx primary, you might end up with a denial, so please be careful.

The most important part of the process is the insurance verification. I know that a lot of health plans show the mental health benefits online. Unfortunately, the information they give you online is incomplete, so you are going to be making some calls. The number for the mental health information line is on the back of the card. Also called behavioral health, the people at this number will become your new best friends. Well, at least until you have to call about a claim. Here is where you learn some new terminology. Below is a list of the questions to ask when you’re on the phone with eligibility.

1. Does this plan require authorization?
2. Do the claims carve out?
3. Are there different benefits for parity and non-parity?

A plan carves out when the financial responsibility for mental health services changes from the health plan to another company. For example, Health Net carves out the mental health to CHIPA quite often. So you would send your psychotherapy claim to CHIPA rather than Health Net. You would get your authorization from CHIPA as well. Parity diagnosis are the “serious” ones. I wish I could give you a better definition. Parity dx include most of the chemical imbalances and a few others. Here is the full list, edited for ICD10:

1. Anorexia – 307.1 (ICD10 F50.00 through F50.02)
2. Bipolar Disorder – 296.40 through 296.80 (ICD10 F30.0 through F31.9)
3. Bullimia – 307.51 (ICD10 F50.2)
4. Major Depression – 296.20 through 296.36 (ICD10 F32.0 through F33.9)
5. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder 300.3 (ICD10 F42)
6. Schizoaffective Disorder – 295.70 through 295.75 (ICD10 F25.0 through F25.9)
7. Schizophrenia – 295.00 through 295.65 (ICD10 F20.0 through F24)

When I was first learning psych billing, I printed this list and taped it to my wall. One of the most useful tools I had.   You also need to know whether you are calling for inpatient or outpatient benefits and substance abuse or mental health. Please remember, all of this information, it is most efficient to get from one phone call. In our office we actually have an insurance verification form that we fill out when we get benefits for new patients. You can use our insurance verification form or you can make your own, but taking a few moments to write down this information saves you from having to call back multiple times. 

Once you have this information, sending the claim out is pretty straightforward. However, if your doctor is contracted with Medicare or Medi-Cal, please give me a call or shoot me an email. There is a LONG explanation regarding getting paid by those companies and it won’t translate well into blog form.

There have been a lot of changes in the psych billing world in the past few years, and it is quite possible that any number of things could have slipped through the cracks in your office. If you still have a lot of money sitting on your AR and your reimbursements aren’t as high as you think they should be,  we can come in and take a look for you, we do that for free. If everything looks fine, we give you a high-five and a few of our cards to pass out to your colleagues. If you do need help, you can hire us to fix it, or we’ll tell you how to fix it yourself. Email me at newgenerationbilling@gmail.com.

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Filed under Authorizations, Billing, CPT, Doctor's Office, Health Care, ICD9, Medi-Cal, Medical Billing, Medicare, Psych