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Effective Date: 06/23/2010 |
Title: Outpatient Therapy for Mental Health & Substance Use Disorder
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Revision Date: 01/01/2021
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Document: BI273:00
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CPT Code(s): 90791, 90792, 90832, 90833, 90834, 90836-90840, 90845-90847, 90849, 90853, 90865, 90875, 90876, 90880, 90887
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Public Statement
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Effective Date:
a)
This policy will apply to
all services performed on or after the above revision date which will become the
new effective date.
b)
For all services referred
to in this policy that were performed before the revision date, contact customer
service for the rules that would apply.
1)
Mental health and
substance use (MH/SU) therapy services must be prescribed by a physician.
Services provided in the office requires development of a treatment plan by the
treating healthcare provider as normal practice. QualChoice may choose to review
the treatment plan to evaluate the medical necessity of the services.
2)
MH/SU therapy does not
require a prior authorization. Initial therapy should be started after a
physician evaluation and with physician orders. After initial 15 visits,
subsequent therapy visits can only be performed with an individualized written
treatment plan signed by a psychiatrist, psychiatric APRN or (if neither of
these is available) a primary care physician. QualChoice may review medical
records at any time. Initial therapy started without a physician order, or
subsequent therapy performed after initial 15 visits by a practice without an
individualized written treatment plan signed by a psychiatrist, psychiatric APRN
or (if neither of these is available) a primary care physician or the services
not meeting medical necessity criteria as described in the Medical Policy
Statement section, will be denied retrospectively.
3)
Psychological testing is
addressed in BI174.
4)
Neuropsychological
testing is addressed in BI005.
5)
Inpatient, partial
hospitalization, intensive outpatient, and residential therapies are not
considered in this BI.
6)
Group/family therapy is
only covered for certain plans; please review your plan documents to determine
if you have this coverage.
7)
See also BI431 for
guidance on billing for these services.
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Medical Statement
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Outpatient Behavioral
Therapy:
A.
Initial
therapy or therapy after mental health admission require a physician order and
is considered medically necessary:
i)
If a
treatment plan demonstrates the continued care is for treatment of crisis
leading to symptoms amenable to therapy per applicable MCG Care Guideline®.
All treatment plans must be available for review by Care Management if
requested.
ii)
Updated
treatment plans must demonstrate the following to be considered medically
necessary:
a)
Documented
improvement during previous sessions; and
b)
Capacity
for continued significant improvement; and
c)
There has
been full co-operation by the member with treatment.
B.
Therapy
after Inpatient discharge from detoxification is considered medically necessary
when after initial visit:
i)
A treatment
plan demonstrates member has completed the first 7 steps of recovery with a
sponsor. The initial treatment plan must be available for review by Care
Management if requested.
a)
Updated
treatment plans must demonstrate the following to be considered medically
necessary: Documented improvement during previous sessions; and
b)
Capacity
for continued significant improvement; and
c)
There has
been full co-operation with treatment.
ii) Outpatient
psychiatric diagnostic evaluations are covered once per provider, every 12
months. More frequent evaluations per provider within 12 months require
pre-authorization.
Codes Used In
This BI:
90791 |
Psychiatric diagnostic evaluation |
90792 |
Psychiatric diagnostic evaluation w/medical services |
90832 |
Psychotherapy, 30 mn w/patient |
90833 |
Psychotherapy, 30 mn w/patient when performed w/ an E&M svc |
90834 |
Psychotherapy, 45 mn w/patient |
90836 |
Psychotherapy, 45 mn w/patient when performed w/ an E&M svc |
90837 |
Psychotherapy, 60 mn w/patient |
90838 |
Psychotherapy, 60 mn w/patient when performed w/ an E&M svc |
90839 |
Psychotherapy for crisis, 1st 60 mins |
90840 |
Psychotherapy for crisis, each addl 30 mins |
90845 |
Psychoanalysis |
90846 |
Family psychotherapy w/out the patient present, 50 mn |
90847 |
Family psychotherapy w/the patient present, 50 mn |
90849 |
Multiple family group psychotherapy |
90853 |
Group
psychotherapy |
90865 |
Narcosynthesis for psychiatric diagnostic and therapeutic purposes |
90875 |
Individual
psychophysiological therapy incorporating biofeedback training by any
modality (face-to-face with the patient), w/psychotherapy; 30 mn |
90876 |
Individual
psychophysiological therapy incorporating biofeedback training by any
modality (face-to-face with the patient), w/psychotherapy; 45 mn |
90880 |
Hypnotherapy |
90887 |
Interpretation/explanation of psychiatric results |
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Limits
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1)
Services which are not
considered medically necessary, and are not eligible for coverage under mental
health or medical benefits, include but are not limited to:
1)
Career counseling
2)
Pre-adoption counseling
3)
Sex therapy
4)
Classical long term
psychoanalysis
5)
Family therapy or family
counseling as relational treatment
6)
Individual
psychohysiotherapy with biofeedback (CPT 90875-90876)
7)
2)
Services provided by
non-licensed providers, such as pastoral counselors, are not covered.
3)
Narcosynthesis (e.g.,
Amytal interview) is considered experimental/investigational.
4)
Group/family therapy are
generally not covered except for:
1)
Autism coverage.
See BI184.
2)
Metallic small group and
individual plans: 90853 is covered.
5)
Interpretation or
explanation of results to family, is considered incidental to psychiatric
treatment and is not separately payable.
6)
A provider visit solely
with the member’s family (except for the legal guardian) is not covered.
7)
MH/SU therapy does not
require a prior authorization. Initial therapy should be started after a
physician evaluation and with physician orders. After initial 15 visits,
subsequent therapy visits can only be perfomed withan individualized written
treatment plan signed by a psychiatrist psychiatric APRN or (if neither of these
is available) a primary care physician. QualChoice may review medical records at
any time. Initial therapy started without a physician order, or subsequent
therapy performed after initial 15 visits by a practice without an
individualized written treatment plan by a psychiatrist, psychiatric APRN or (if
neither of these is available) a primary care physician or the services not
meeting medical necessity criteria as described in the Medical Policy Statement
section, will be denied retrospectively.
8)
See BI184 for Autism
coverage.
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Background
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Outpatient mental health
or substance abuse therapy treatment consists of a prescribed program to relieve
symptoms, improve function and prevent further impairment for individuals
disabled or impaired by chronic or acute mental health or substance abuse
problems. Treatment may include cognitive behavior therapy, gestalt therapy,
interpersonal psychotherapy, behavior therapy, or other modalities, depending on
patient characteristics and therapist training.
As with any other
therapy, mental health therapies need to be supported by a valid diagnosis, an
evidence-based treatment plan, periodic re-evaluation of whether or not the
treatment is achieving desired outcomes and adjustments in the treatment plan
based on efficacy of the interventions. Historically, many mental health
therapies have been provided without a valid diagnosis, without a formal
treatment plan and without any monitoring of efficacy. Rather than mental health
therapies continuing to be provided in isolation—without any coordination,
collaboration or oversight—there is an increasing emphasis on the need to
integrate mental health therapies with medical services. An integrated model is
more likely to optimize outcomes by promoting appropriate use of evidence-based
interventions. A team approach that treats the whole person is highly desirable
and can only be realized with coordination, collaboration and oversight.
A
concern with requiring psychiatrist oversight or monitoring of mental health
therapies is that there are not enough psychiatrists in practice to meet the
demand—particularly in smaller or rural communities. In some cases, psychiatrist
oversight can be provided through the use of telemedicine. If no direct
psychiatric evaluation or telemedicine psychiatric evaluation is available, a
psychiatric APRN (with a collaborative practice agreement with a psychiatrist)
can fulfill this role. If neither a psychiatrist nor a psychiatric APRN is
available, a primary care physician would be acceptable. The practical reality,
for decades, has been that primary care physicians make most of the mental
health diagnoses and prescribe most of the medicines for these diagnoses. When
there are documented gaps in access to psychiatric services (as with any other
specialty service), it’s reasonable, when possible, for primary care physicians
to help fill in those gaps.
Mental health parity is
often used to promote equivalent coverage for both mental health and medical
therapies. We do a tremendous disservice to patients if we pretend mental health
disorders are less important than medical disorders and therefore not as worthy
of coverage. For any given patient, a mental health disorder may have a greater
impact on his/her quality of life than medical diagnoses. In many cases outcomes
with medical diagnoses are compromised due to not addressing mental health
disorders. However, the two-edged sword of mental health parity is that
equivalent coverage also means equivalent accountability and oversight. Without
accountability and oversight of mental health therapies (valid diagnosis, an
evidence-based treatment plan and periodic re-evaluation) there is no mental
health parity.
Medically necessary
therapy services must be restorative or for the purpose of designing and
teaching maintenance program to assist the patient in coping with their
psychological problems. The services must also relate to a written treatment
plan and be of a level of complexity that requires the judgment, knowledge and
skills of a licensed therapist to perform the services. The frequency and
duration of the therapy services must be reasonable, the services must be
considered appropriate and needed for the treatment of the disabling or
impairing condition, and services must not be palliative or Habilitative in
nature.
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Reference
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1)
National
Mental health information center; Evidence-Based Practices: Shaping Mental
Health Services toward Recovery located at:
http://mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/cmhs/CommunitySupport/toolkits/illness/goi/scale.asp.
2)
New York
State, Office of Mental Health; Mental Health Clinic Standards of Care for
Adults- Interpretive Guidelines. Located at :
http://www.omh.state.ny.us/omhweb/clinic_restructuring/appendix1.html
3)
Los
Angeles County Commission on HIV, Standards of Care, mental
health/psychotherapy. Located at:
http://hivcommission-la.info/cms1_044407.pdf
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Application to Products
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This policy applies to all health plans and
products administered by QualChoice, both those insured by QualChoice and those
that are self-funded by the sponsoring employer, unless there is indication in
this policy otherwise or a stated exclusion in your medical plan booklet.
Consult the individual plan sponsor Summary Plan Description (SPD) for
self-insured plans or the specific Evidence of Coverage (EOC) or Certificate of
Coverage (COC) for those plans or products insured by QualChoice. In the event
of a discrepancy between this policy and a self-insured customer’s SPD or the
specific QualChoice EOC or COC, the SPD, EOC, or COC, as applicable, will
prevail. State and federal mandates will be followed as they apply.
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Changes: QualChoice reserves the right to alter, amend, change or supplement benefit interpretations as needed.
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