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Resource Ambulatory

Benefits of Ambulatory Surgery Centers​

Often times patients prefer ASCs over hospitals, and physicians, whether they have ownership in the ASC or not, prefer to perform surgeries in these locations. Reasons for this include:
  1. Convenient for the patient
  2. Inpatient care is not needed
  3. Flexibility and convenience of surgery scheduling
  4. Costs are lower
  5. High level of physician autonomy
  6. Top of the line supplies and technology
Insurance and government agencies also benefit from ASCs. This is due to the reimbursement rates for ambulatory surgery centers being much lower than that of a hospital. It has been estimated that ASCs save Medicare and its beneficiaries approximately $2.6 billion a year.

Ambulatory medical billing and coding differ quite a bit from other inpatient billing and coding. This is because the health services are provided through hospitals or ambulatory surgical centers (ASC) at an outside location, making the service and outpatient service.







Coding for Ambulatory Surgery Centers is a specialty unto itself. It is a facility service, but Medicare requrires ASC’s to send their bills to the professional fee (Part B) payers, but using the facility fee (Part A) claim form. There is a whole different set of regulations and bundling edits to use for ASCs. Many ASCs use the same codes as the surgeons, but that can be a revenue “kiss of death” and create compliance exposure for every shareholder-or-partner in the ASC. The rules of the game are different for ASCs than for surgeons or for hospitals; at times ASCs must follow the rules for doctors, and at other times they must adhere to the hospital’s rules. A simple modifier used incorrectly can deliver a “fatal blow” to an otherwise clean claim for thousands of dollars

AAPC has this specialty exam available:



For Medicare patients, you cannot perform just any procedure in the ASC setting. Medicare has an “approved” list of procedures for the ASC that CMS has determined not to pose a significant safety risk, and that is not expected to require an overnight stay following the surgical procedure. Medicare publishes this list of covered procedures annually. Updates are published quarterly, or as necessary.

The list of approved procedures is based on the criteria:​

  • They are NOT emergent or life-threatening (for example, a heart transplant or reattachment of a severed limb).
  • They cannot be performed safely in a physician’s office.
  • They can be elective.
  • They can be urgent.
  • Procedures also do not involve major blood vessels or result in major blood loss, and cannot involve prolonged invasion of a body cavity.

Ambulatory Surgical Centers (ASC) Center​

Spotlight

Important Links​

Coding and Billing

CMS Manuals & Transmittals

Policies/Regulations

Enrollment & Participation


 
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