Do massage therapists need more medical codes for describing and billing their services?
Melinna Giannini thinks so. That’s why she and a group of nine have spent the last five
years compiling more than 4,000 codes to be used by all complementary and alternative
medicine (CAM) providers, including massage therapists, bodyworkers and somatic therapists.
Giannini, president and founder of Alternative Link, started her privately funded
company to help fill a void she felt existed in medical coding for CAM therapies. It
was both her insurance background and her personal experience with alternative health
that convinced her CAM providers needed better tools for insurance reimbursement.
"Melinna quickly understood reimbursement was being hampered because providers could
not communicate services to payers in a standard way," said Connie Koshewa, director
of research at Alternative Link. "The CAM payment issue was even worse because the laws
governing treatment were different in each state." In addition, Giannini’s prior
experience dealing with the medical community helped open her eyes. After years of
looking to the allopathic community for help diagnosing a long-term illness, she finally
visited a holistically trained medical doctor. Within minutes, she had a diagnosis and
a treatment plan; within months, she had her health restored. But all the while, her
frustration was heightened.
"My insurance would pay the $15,000 in medical bills for inclusive diagnostic tests,"
said Giannini. "But they wouldn’t pay the $500 for the diagnosis and treatment that
worked. That was my motivation." Giannini said she was given back control of her own
health, something she believes everyone should be privileged to do.
Alternative Link's principals believe the timing is perfect for the new codes because of
the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996 which demands
standard communication between providers and payers by 2002. "Part of the bill is calling
for standard code sets," said Koshewa. Another part of the regulation is that
practitioners are required to accurately describe what they do. "Without proper codes,
insurance carriers won’t reimburse," said Koshewa, "and there’s up to a $10,000 fine
for improperly reporting services."
To create the new handbook of codes, scheduled to come under scrutiny by the Department
of Health and Human Services within the next few months, Giannini's group contacted
associations, national resources and certified schools around the country. Their
guidelines for including provider types to the codes were consistent:
- there must be licensure for the modality/service/therapy in at least one state;
- there must be mechanism for national certification or accreditation; and
- there must be a means for securing malpractice insurance for the licensed practitioner.
Giannini knows there will be some who disagree with the need for more codes. She also
knows it will serve others well. For instance, chiropractors who are supplied only
four codes under the American Medical Association's Certified Procedural Terminology
(CPT) codes, will have access to hundreds of physical modality codes, including 28
specific chiropractic services under the Alternative Link program. Many have supported
her efforts for CAM coding, including the American Nurses Association. She says it's
just good sense. "Look at what's happened over the last 20 years. Although
chiropractors are licensed in all states and are paid by insurance carriers, there is
still no viable outcome information to promote wider use of their services. If you do
not support having these codes become standard, you'll have the AMA controlling your
medicine and the payment for your services," she said.
Giannini said the concept and need for codes is nothing new, especially in the world
of e-commerce. "You can’t buy a sweater out of a catalog without a code," she said.
"Codes are business tools, they're not anything magic." She went on to explain that
until there are means to measure and standardize the way we talk about therapies,
insurance companies won't cover CAM services. "They can't measure the exposure," she
said.
While some traditional medical groups have opposed for Alternative Links' efforts,
Giannini said the government has been very fair and understands that CAM practitioners
may not be well-served by the current coding.
Giannini would like complementary care practitioners to speak up and let the government
understand payment problems associated with current coding. "If you would like payers
to reimburse you for what you actually do, it's time to lobby for this code set." To
view directions for submitting comments on CAM codes to the Department of Health and
Human Services, visit
www.alternativelink.com/hipaa.