Medical Necessity in MEDITECH
By ClaimTrust and CSC
Validate Medical Necessity in MEDITECH
FCG/CSC has created a custom interface to provide MEDITECH Magic hospitals with the ability to perform real-time patient medical necessity checks.
The integration of MEDITECH HIS systems and ClaimTrust’s InSight Medical Necessity product significantly improves validation of services—ensuring Advance Beneficiary Notice (ABN) compliance and achieving significant reduction in Medicare medical necessity denials at the exact time they are requested, in many cases with the patient present. Utilizing front-end medical necessity software allows you to determine if the diagnosis supports the medical necessity of the procedure ordered in real-time. Flagging services with medical necessity issues before the services are rendered ensures accuracy of coding and enables education of medical necessity of services with the ordering physicians, as well as compliance with ABN guidelines.
Medical Necessity 101
Medical Necessity is a term that deals with Medicare’s legal authority to determine whether a requested patient medical service will be covered on an individual basis.
In the late 90’s, the Office of Inspector General and the Health Care Financing Administration (now called the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services or CMS) began investigating how to reduce inappropriate payments to Medicare providers. Under the authority of the Social Security Act, Medicare defines medical necessity as “reasonable and necessary for diagnosis or treatment of illness or injury or to improve the functioning of a malformed body member.” If a claim does not meet medical necessity, the claim is ineligible for reimbursement.
Medical necessity is determined by matching CPT/HCPC procedure codes with the ICD-9-CM codes associated with diagnosis provided by the ordering physician. Services are evaluated for the appropriateness of the service for the specific diagnosis as well as frequency, age and gender.
Local Coverage Determinations and National Coverage Decisions
CMS provides coverage guidelines and policies through National Coverage Decisions (NCDs) and Medicare contractors provide regional guidelines through Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs).
CMS establishes NCDs to specify the circumstances under which Medicare covers specific medical items, services treatments, procedures or technology. Contractors develop LCDs in the absence of national policies.
Medicare LCDs are not universal. They are developed for services only within the Medicare contractor’s jurisdiction, and they are based on the review of medical literature and the understanding of the local practice of the area. Contractors publish LCDs to provide guidance to the public and medical community within a specified geographic area, and to specify under what clinical circumstance a service is covered and correctly coded.
Because NCDs apply to all states, the NCD for Massachusetts is the same identical NCD for Texas or California. An NCD is not geographically bound, and NCDs apply to providers from all Medicare contractors. NCDs are developed and maintained by CMS.
In the case where the LCD could be interpreted differently from an NCD, the NCDs always take priority over LCDs. Although LCDs and NCDs are frequently updated, Medicare assumes that the provider has knowledge of the policies.
Validating Medical Necessity
Inside the LCDs (and laboratory NCDs) are lists of diagnosis codes (ICD-9 codes) and the corresponding procedural codes (CPT4 codes) describing what is covered and what is not covered. Having an automatically updated dictionary of these “code pairs” is the key to medical necessity management in MEDITECH. The overwhelming majority of medical necessity denials are caused by ICD-9 codes that don’t match procedural codes CPT codes. “Bolt-on” software provides a quick and easy way to validate from inside of MEDITECH.
Provider Responsibility
Not validating Medical Necessity on the front-end brings unnecessary risk on your facility’s total earnings. Not only will the hospital not be paid for the item or service rendered, but your facility will be more exposed to post-payment audits and potential compliance issues with ABNs.
By using up-front monitoring of all Medical necessity policies issued by CMS and Medicare contractor(s), both for Part A and Part B, providers can ensure compliance with medical necessity and avoid costly delays caused by claim suspensions, which negate the contractor’s responsibility for prompt payment within 14 days (clean claims only) and post-pay audits.
Maintenance of Medical Necessity Dictionaries
ClaimTrust maintains LCDs for every contractor, including Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs) and Part B Carriers. The LCDs contain not only CPT to ICD-9 verification, but also include frequency, gender and age criteria.
ClaimTrust closely monitors contractor web-sites on a weekly basis and subscribes to all contractor newsletters/bulletins in an effort to keep each and every LCD up-to-date. Since MEDITECH interface clients access the system directly, there is no delay in viewing those updates as they are made.
Direct access to current policies through ClaimTrust’s InSight Medical Necessity product allows Providers the opportunity to validate services and issue Advance Beneficiary Notices (ABNs) before providing services that do not meet ‘medical necessity’ guidelines.
The custom MEDITECH interface developed by CSC and ClaimTrust enables providers to improve Medicare compliance, increase cash flow, and avoid medical necessity denials.
The HIS interface automatically prompts end-users to qualify the patients ICD9 and/or CPT4 codes. It is important to note that no patient information is actually submitted through the interface but results of the medical necessity verification will be stored and specific patient information will be indexed with the ABN reports (for rejections) to serve as possible future audit trail compliance. All submissions are real-time and are securely protected through security layers including VPN technology, point-to-point data connections and facility specific firewalls and security platforms. In most cases the verification status is returned within seconds.
Benefits of Real-Time HIS Interface
- You choose the entry points of medical necessity submission that best utilize a real-time interface (i.e. Order Entry, Scheduling, and/or Registration).
- You can mandate Medicare verification procedures before the patient actually has the procedures scheduled within the HIS system itself, because the interface operates in real-time.
- Patients can receive ABN notification during scheduling and/or registration process.
- Any charges for services or procedures are automatically loaded out of the hospital’s chargemaster and printed onto their ABNs.
- End-users benefit from utilizing only one workstation to accomplish two different tasks therefore eliminating the need to submit requests from a different session, workstation or possibly even a different location.
- Audit trail stored on provider HIS system for future compliance audit verifications.Defining core policies and procedures which should be in place in each location to comply with payor rules and prevent Medicare RAC denials.
The primary authority for all coverage provisions and subsequent policies is the Social Security Act (the Act). Contractors use Medicare policies in the form of regulations, NCDs, coverage provisions in interpretive manuals, and LCDs to apply the provisions of the Act.

MEDITECH Interface Flowchart
