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Effective Date: 03/01/2012 |
Title: Physical & Occupational Therapy Services
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Revision Date: 06/01/2018
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Document: BI307:00
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CPT Code(s): 97001-97546, S8948
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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)
Physical
and occupational therapy services (rehabilitative services to restore a loss of
function) are covered only if the services are ordered (prescribed) by a
physician or chiropractor and provided by a licensed physical therapist,
licensed physical therapy assistant supervised by a licensed physical therapist,
licensed occupational therapist, or licensed occupational therapy assistant
supervised by a licensed occupational therapist. If services are provided by a
physical therapy assistant or occupational therapy assistant, they must be
billed by the supervising physical therapist or occupational therapist.
2)
Physical
and occupational therapy rehabilitative services (to restore a loss of function)
require a plan of care signed by the therapist and physician.
3)
Most plans
limit the number of physical therapy visits that will be covered in a calendar
year. See your plan documents for limits.
4)
Physical
and occupational therapy services for habilitative purposes (for congenital
disabilities or developmental delays) are only covered by certain plans—see your
coverage documents and BI 398
5)
Work
conditioning, work hardening programs and group therapies are not covered.
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Medical Statement
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1)
Physical
and occupational therapy services are covered only when provided by a provider
licensed to provide those particular services.
2)
Physical
and occupational therapy services require that a plan of care be in place. The
plan of care must meet these specific guidelines:
a)
Established
prior to treatment
b)
Dated when
dictated and/or written
c)
Includes
the type, amount, frequency and duration of the therapy services to be provided
d)
Indicates
the diagnosis and anticipated goals
e)
Signed by
the ordering physician and by the physician or therapist who developed the plan
of care.
3)
Initial
evaluation is allowed once per course of treatment:
a)
97161 –
97163 — Physical Therapy Evaluation
b)
97165 –
97167 — Occupational Therapy Evaluation
4)
Re–evaluation is allowed every twelve visits, or if there is a significant
change in the patient’s status, such as a significant new symptom. Reevaluation
other than at the 12 visit interval should be supported with clinical
documentation of a significant change in status.
a)
97164 —
Physical Therapy Re–evaluation
b)
97168 —
Occupational Therapy Re–evaluation
5)
97010 –
Application of hot/cold packs is considered to be a part of the provision of
other therapy services and will not be separately reimbursed.
6)
S8948 –
Application of low level laser is considered experimental and investigational
and is not covered.
7)
Continuation of therapy past twelve visits requires reevaluation by the treating
physician with renewal of the therapy prescription. Such continuation may be
subject to review for medical necessity.
8)
97032 –
97535 – Timed physical therapy codes require documentation of the actual time
spent by the therapist in each procedure, as well as the total actual time spent
by the therapist with that individual patient.
a)
Time with
an individual patient need not be undivided, but it is expected that the only
time billed will be time the therapist spent in one-on-one contact with that
patient.
b)
QualChoice
follows CMS guidelines for documentation of therapist time:
i)
8 – 22
minutes equals one 15 minute unit
ii)
23 – 37
minutes equals two units…and so on.
iii)
The number
of units billed for the entire visit may not exceed that which would be
calculated for the total time spent with the patient. In other words, 60 minutes
of total therapist time is four units, even if that therapist spent 12 minutes
performing each of 5 different activities.
9)
97545 –
97546 – Work conditioning and work hardening are not covered.
10)
97039,
97139 (unlisted modalities/procedures) and 97150 (group therapy) are not
covered.
Codes
Used In This BI:
97001 |
PT
Evaluation (code deleted 1/1/17) |
97002 |
PT
Re-evaluation (code deleted 1/1/17) |
97003 |
OT
Evaluation (code deleted 1/1/17) |
97004 |
OT
Re-evaluation (code deleted 1/1/17) |
97010 |
Hot
or Cold Packs Therapy |
97012 |
Mechanical Traction Therapy |
97014 |
Electric Stimulation Therapy |
97016 |
Vasopneumatic Device Therapy |
97018 |
Paraffin Bath Therapy |
97022 |
Whirlpool Therapy |
97024 |
Diathermy |
97032 |
Electrical Stimulation |
97033 |
Electric Current Therapy |
97034 |
Contrast Bath Therapy |
97035 |
Ultrasound Therapy |
97036 |
Hydrotherapy (Hubbard Tank) |
97039 |
Unlisted modality |
97110 |
Therapeutic Exercises |
97112 |
Neuromuscular Re-education |
97113 |
Aquatic Therapy/Exercises |
97116 |
Gait
Training Therapy |
97124 |
Massage Therapy |
97139 |
Unlisted therapeutic procedure |
97140 |
Manual Therapy |
97150 |
Therapeutic procedure, group |
97161 |
PT
Evaluation: low complexity (new code 1/1/17) |
97162 |
PT
Evaluation: moderate complexity (new code 1/1/17) |
97163 |
PT
Evaluation: high complexity (new code 1/1/17) |
97164 |
Re-Evaluation of PT established plan of care (new code 1/1/17) |
97165 |
OT
Evaluation: low complexity (new code 1/1/17) |
97166 |
OT
Evaluation: moderate complexity (new code 1/1/17) |
97167 |
OT
Evaluation: high complexity (new code 1/1/17) |
97168 |
Re-Evaluation of OT established plan of care (new code 1/1/17) |
97530 |
Therapeutic Activities |
97532 |
Cognitive Skills Development |
97535 |
Self-Care Mgmt. Training |
97545 |
Work
Hardening |
97546 |
Work
Hardening Add-on |
S8948 |
Application of Low Level Laser |
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Limits
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·
Continued
therapy will not be approved for patients who are not showing objective
functional improvement.
·
Unlisted
therapies/procedures and group therapies are not covered.
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Background
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Physical or occupational
therapy treatment consists of a prescribed program to relieve symptoms, improve
function and prevent further disability for individuals disabled by chronic or
acute disease or injury. Treatment may include various forms of heat and cold,
electrical stimulation, therapeutic exercises, ambulation training and training
in functional activities. Progressive therapeutic exercise is the most
effective form of therapy for most treatable causes of disability.
Medically necessary
therapy services must be restorative or for the purpose of designing and
teaching maintenance program for the patient to carry out at home. 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 physical therapist,
occupational therapist, medical doctor, doctor of osteopathy, or doctor of
chiropractic to perform and/or supervise the services. The amount, frequency and
duration of the therapy services must be reasonable, the services must be
considered appropriate and needed for the treatment of the disabling condition,
and services must not be palliative or in nature.
Below is a description
and medical necessity criteria for different treatment modalities and
therapeutic procedures.
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Hot/Cold Packs
(97010) – Hot packs increase blood flow, relieve pain and increase movement;
cold packs decrease blood flow to an area to reduce pain and swelling
immediately after an injury. Because application of hot or cold packs does
not require special training or supervision, use of these modalities is
considered included in other therapy services and will not be separately
reimbursed.
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Traction (97012) – Manual or mechanical pull
on extremities or spine to relieve spasm and pain – supervised. This
modality, when provided by physicians or physical therapists, is typically
used in conjunction with therapeutic procedures, not as an isolated
treatment. For cervical radiculopathy, treatment beyond one month can
usually be accomplished by self-administered mechanical traction in the
home.
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Electrical
Stimulation (97014, 97032) – Application of an electrical current to the
skin via surface electrodes; this can either be supervised (not requiring
one-to-one contact by the provider) or constant attendance (requiring
one-to-one contact by the provider). Electrical stimulation can be used
either as a pain relief modality (TENS) or to stimulate muscle contraction.
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Vasopneumatic Device
(97016) – Pressure application by special equipment to reduce swelling -
supervised. See BI227.
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Paraffin Bath (97018)
– Also known as hot wax treatment, this involves supervised application of
heat (via hot wax) to an extremity to relieve pain and facilitate movement.
This is considered medically necessary for pain relief in chronic joint
problems of the wrists, hands or feet. One or two visits are usually
sufficient to educate the individual in home use and to evaluate
effectiveness.
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Diathermy (e.g.,
microwave) (97024) – Deep, dry heat with high frequency current or
microwave to relieve pain and increase movement - supervised. The objective
of diathermy is to cause vasodilatation and relieve pain from muscle spasm.
Diathermy using deep dry heat with high frequency achieves a greater rise in
deep tissue temperature than dose microwave. Considered medically necessary
as a heat modality for painful musculoskeletal conditions.
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Iontophoresis (97033)
– Electric current used to transfer certain medications (usually steroids)
transcutaneously into body tissues. May be considered medically necessary in
patients with sub-acute or chronic inflammation of a joint or tendon, when
used in conjunction with a therapeutic program including stretching and
exercise.
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Contrast Baths
(97034) – Blood vessel stimulation with alternate hot and cold baths -
constant attendance is needed. This modality may be considered medically
necessary to treat extremities affected by reflex sympathetic dystrophy,
acute edema resulting from trauma, or synovitis/tenosynovitis. It is
generally used as an adjunct to a therapeutic procedure, preferably
therapeutic exercise.
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Ultrasounds (97035) –
Deep heat by high frequency sound waves to relieve pain, improve healing -
constant attendance. This modality is considered medically necessary to
treat arthritis, inflammation of per articular structures, and sub-acute
inflammation after injury.
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Therapeutic Exercises
(97110) – Instructing a person in exercises and directly supervising the
exercises. Purpose is to restore and/or maintain muscle strength and
flexibility including range of motion, stretching and postural drainage.
Therapeutic exercise is performed with a patient either actively,
active-assisted, or passively (e.g., treadmill, isokinetic exercise lumbar
stabilization, stretching, strengthening). Therapeutic exercise is
considered medically necessary for loss or restriction of joint motion,
strength, functional capacity or mobility which has resulted from disease or
injury. Therapeutic exercise is the core therapeutic activity for
restoration of function. Note: Exercising done subsequently by the
member without a physician or therapist present and supervising would not be
covered, nor would a period of unsupervised ‘warm-up’ exercise.
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Neuromuscular
Re–education (97112) – This therapeutic procedure is provided to improve
balance, coordination, kinesthetic sense, posture, and proprioception to a
person who has had muscle paralysis or other significant neurological
injury. Goal is to develop conscious control of individual muscles and
awareness of position of extremities. The procedure may be considered
medically necessary for impairments which affect the body`s neuromuscular
system (e.g., poor static or dynamic sitting/standing balance, loss of gross
and fine motor coordination, hypo/hyper tonicity) that may result from
disease or injury such as severe trauma to the nervous system, cerebral
vascular accident, or systemic neurological disease. This treatment is only
appropriate for patients whose function is expected to improve with
treatment.
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Aquatic
Therapy/Hydrotherapy/Hubbard Tank (97036, 97113) – Hubbard tank involves a
full-body immersion tank for treating severely burned, debilitated and/or
neurologically impaired individuals. Pool therapy (aquatic therapy,
hydrotherapy) is provided individually, in a pool, to severely debilitated
or neurologically impaired individuals. (The term is not intended to refer
to relatively normal individuals who exercise, swim laps or relax in a hot
tub or Jacuzzi.) Develops and/or maintains muscle strength including range
of motion by eliminating forces of gravity through total body immersion
(except for head) - requires constant attention. It is not considered
medically necessary to provide more than one type of hydrotherapy on the
same day (e.g., whirlpool, Hubbard tank, hydrotherapy).
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Gait Training (97116)
– Teaching individuals with severe neurological or musculoskeletal disorders
to ambulate in the face of their handicap or to ambulate with an assistive
device. Gait training is considered medically necessary for training
individuals whose walking abilities have been impaired by neurological,
muscular or skeletal abnormalities or trauma. Gait training is not
considered medically necessary when the individual`s walking ability is not
expected to improve. Provider supervision of ongoing walk-strengthening
exercise for feeble or unstable patients is not considered medically
necessary. Gait training is not considered medically necessary for
relatively normal individuals with minor or transient abnormalities of gait
who do not require an assistive device; these minor or transient gait
abnormalities may be remedied by simple instructions to the individual.
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Massage Therapy
(97124) – Massage involves manual techniques that include applying fixed or
movable pressure, holding and/or causing movement of or to the body, using
primarily the hands. These techniques affect the musculoskeletal,
circulatory-lymphatic, nervous, and other systems of the body with the
intent of improving a person`s well-being or health. The most widely used
forms of massage therapy include Swedish massage, deep-tissue massage,
sports massage, neuromuscular massage, and manual lymph drainage. Massage
therapy is not a covered benefit under most plans.
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Manual Therapy
Techniques (97140) – Soft tissue mobilization through manipulation. Skilled
manual techniques (active and/or passive) are applied to soft tissue to
effect changes in the soft tissues, articular structures, neural or vascular
systems. Examples are myofascial release, manual traction, manual lymphatic
drainage, and facilitation of fluid exchange, restoration of movement in
acutely edematous muscles, or stretching of shortened connective tissue.
This procedure is considered medically necessary for treatment of restricted
motion of soft tissues in involved extremities, neck, and trunk.
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Therapeutic
activities (97530) – This procedure involves using functional activities
(e.g., bending, lifting, carrying, reaching, pushing, pulling, stooping,
catching and overhead activities) to restore functional performance in a
progressive manner. The activities are usually directed at a loss or
restriction of mobility, strength, balance or coordination. They require the
professional skills of a provider and are designed to address a specific
functional need of the member. This intervention may be appropriate after a
patient has completed exercises focused on strengthening and range of motion
but need to be progressed to more function-based activities. These dynamic
activities must be part of an active treatment plan and directed at a
specific outcome. These are considered medically necessary only for
restorative purposes, and are not covered for purposes of improving
recreational or work performance.
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Cognitive skills
development (97532) – This procedure is considered medically necessary for
persons with acquired cognitive defects resulting from head trauma, or acute
neurologic events including cerebrovascular accidents. It is not appropriate
for persons with chronic progressive brain conditions with any potential for
restoration. Occupational/speech therapists or clinical psychologists with
specific training in these skills are typically the providers. This
procedure should be aimed at improving or restoring specific functions which
were impaired by an identified illness or injury. The goals of therapy,
expected outcomes and expected duration of therapy should be specified.
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Activities of Daily
Living (ADL) Training (97535) – Training of severely impaired
individuals in essential activities of daily living, including bathing;
feeding; preparing meals; toileting; walking; making bed; and transferring
from bed to chair, wheelchair or walker. This procedure is considered
medically necessary to enable the member to perform essential activities of
daily living related to the patient`s health and hygiene, within or outside
the home, with minimal or no assistance from others. This procedure is
considered medically necessary only when it requires the professional skills
of a provider, is designed to address specific needs of the member, and must
be part of an active treatment plan directed at a specific outcome. The
member must have the capacity to learn from instructions.
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Work
hardening/conditioning (97545 – 97546) – Services designed to assist an
injured worker return to his/her job of injury through exercises that
emulate or substantially reproduce work activities. These services are
properly considered part of the workers’ compensation system and are not
covered under QualChoice plans.
The medical necessity of
neuromuscular reeducation, therapeutic exercises, and/or therapeutic activities,
performed on the same day, must be documented in the medical record. The record
should reflect the requirement for each of these different techniques, the
specific ways in which each technique was utilized, the amount of time spend in
each, and the separate goal for each.
Only one heat modality
would be considered medically necessary during the same treatment session. An
exception to this is ultrasound (a deep heat), which may be considered medically
necessary with one superficial heat modality but is not considered medically
necessary with other deep heat modalities.
Physical and occupational
therapy should be provided in accordance with an ongoing, written plan of care
developed by the physician or by the therapist in collaboration with the
physician. The purpose of the written plan of care is to assist in determining
medical necessity and should include the following:
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The diagnosis along
with the date of onset or exacerbation of the disorder/diagnosis;
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A reasonable estimate
of when the goals will be reached;
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Long-term and
short-term goals that are specific, quantitative and objective;
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Physical therapy
evaluation;
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The frequency and
duration of treatment;
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The specific
treatment techniques and/or exercises to be used in treatment;
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A signature of the
patient’s attending physician and physical therapist.
The plan of care
should be ongoing, (i.e., updated as the patient`s condition changes). Physical
and occupational therapy services are considered medically necessary only if
there is a reasonable expectation that therapy will achieve measurable
improvement in the patient`s condition in a reasonable and predictable period of
time. The patient should be reevaluated regularly, and there should be
documentation of progress made toward the goals of physical therapy. The
treatment goals and subsequent documentation of treatment results should
specifically demonstrate that therapy services are contributing to such
improvement.
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Application to Products
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This policy applies to all health plans 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) for those plans insured by QualChoice. In the event of a discrepancy between this policy and a self-insured customer’s SPD or the specific QualChoice EOC, the SPD or EOC, 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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