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Quick Reference

  • Code definition: CPT 96361 reports each additional hour of IV hydration infusion beyond the initial hour covered by 96360. It covers prepackaged fluid and electrolyte solutions (normal saline, lactated Ringer's, D5W) administered to restore or maintain fluid balance; it does not cover drug infusions.
  • Add-on code; cannot stand alone: 96361 must always appear on the same claim as a primary infusion code. Submitting it without 96360 or another qualifying primary code results in automatic rejection.
  • Time-based unit rule: Report one unit per additional hour. A fraction exceeding 30 minutes beyond a completed additional hour counts as one full unit; 30 minutes or less does not qualify [1].
  • MUE = 8: CMS limits claims to 8 units of 96361 per date of service without additional documentation, capping reportable hydration at approximately 9 total hours [1].
  • Documentation must-have: Exact start and stop times in nursing or infusion notes. Missing clock times are the single leading cause of claim denial for this code.
  • Top confusion point: Do not report 96361 for hydration running concurrently with a therapeutic drug infusion. Concurrent hydration is incidental to the drug infusion and is not separately payable during overlapping time periods [1].
  • Facility setting restriction: Per AMA CPT guidelines, 96360 and 96361 are not reported by the physician in the facility setting. Non-facility professional billing and outpatient hospital OPPS facility billing are the appropriate contexts.

When to Use This Code

96361 applies when IV hydration extends beyond the initial 60-minute period captured by 96360. Clinical scenarios generating 96361 units are the same as those supporting 96360: dehydration from vomiting, diarrhea, or poor oral intake; hyperemesis gravidarum; inability to tolerate fluids orally; pre- or post-operative fluid support; and heat-related illness requiring extended fluid replacement.

Infusate scope: 96361 is restricted to prepackaged fluid and electrolyte solutions. Normal saline, lactated Ringer's, D5W, and combinations with standard electrolyte additives (e.g., 30 mEq KCl per liter for maintenance potassium) qualify. Any encounter involving a therapeutic drug shifts to the 96365 or 96366 family regardless of whether a hydration bag is also running.

Time-based unit calculation: The initial 96360 covers the first 31 to 60 minutes of hydration. After the first hour mark, each subsequent 60-minute block generates one unit of 96361. A remaining fraction exceeding 30 minutes at the end of any additional hour period generates one additional unit; fractions of 30 minutes or less generate no unit.

Worked example: A patient receives IV hydration from 9:00 AM to 12:20 PM (3 hours 20 minutes total):

Time Block Duration Code
9:00 AM to 10:00 AM 60 min (initial hour) 96360
10:00 AM to 11:00 AM 60 min 96361 × 1
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM 60 min 96361 × 2
12:00 PM to 12:20 PM 20 min (does not exceed 30 min) Not reportable

Correct billing: 96360 + 96361 × 2.

After midnight rule: For infusions crossing midnight, use the date the service began and report total continuous time. Hydration from 11:00 PM to 2:00 AM is billed as 96360 once and 96361 twice on the start date [1].

Place of service: Appropriate settings include the physician office (POS 11), hospital outpatient department (POS 22), and emergency department (POS 23). Home infusion uses a separate code set.


Code Differentiation Table

Code Description When to Use Instead
96361 IV infusion, hydration; each additional hour Each hour of hydration beyond the initial 96360 period (fluid and electrolyte solutions only)
96360 IV infusion, hydration; initial, 31 min to 1 hour The first 31 to 60 minutes of any hydration encounter; required parent code
96365 IV infusion, therapy/prophylaxis/diagnosis; initial, up to 1 hour Initial hour when a therapeutic drug (antibiotic, antiemetic, iron) is infused
96366 IV infusion, therapy/prophylaxis/diagnosis; each additional hour Additional hours of a therapeutic drug infusion; the drug-infusion analog of 96361
96367 IV infusion, sequential infusion of a new drug, up to 1 hour A different drug infuses sequentially after the primary infusion completes
96368 IV infusion, concurrent infusion A different drug infuses simultaneously via the same access; packaged under OPPS and not separately payable in the facility setting

The critical differentiator is what is in the bag. Prepackaged fluid or electrolyte solution administered for fluid and electrolyte replacement belongs to the hydration family. Any drug in the infusate shifts the encounter to the therapeutic infusion family, regardless of concurrent hydration.

flowchart TD
    A[IV infusion ordered] --> B{Infusate contains a drug?}
    B -- Yes --> C[Use 96365 or 96366 family]
    B -- No --> D{Total infusion time at least 31 min?}
    D -- No --> E[No infusion code reportable]
    D -- Yes --> F[Report 96360 for initial hour]
    F --> G{Time beyond first hour?}
    G -- No --> H[96360 only]
    G -- Yes --> I{Additional time exceeds 30 min?}
    I -- No --> H
    I -- Yes --> J[Add 96361 per qualifying additional hour]

Billing & Modifier Rules

Unit calculation: One unit of 96361 equals one additional hour of hydration beyond the initial hour. For each 60-minute block after the first hour, report one unit. A partial additional hour exceeding 30 minutes rounds up to one unit; 30 minutes or less rounds to zero. Formula: take total infusion minutes, subtract 60, divide by 60. The whole number result is the base unit count; if the remainder exceeds 30 minutes, add one unit [1].

Modifier 59: The most frequently used modifier with 96361, appearing on 78.24% of claims. Apply when 96361 is billed alongside other infusion codes and NCCI editing would otherwise bundle the hydration service. Documentation must support a distinct, sequential (not concurrent) infusion service. The X-modifiers (XU, XS, XE) are preferred when they more precisely describe the distinction; XU (unusual non-overlapping service) appears on 13.26% of 96361 claims [2].

Modifier 25: Applied to the E/M code, not to 96361, when a significant, separately identifiable office or outpatient E/M service is billed on the same date as the infusion. A different diagnosis is not required for the same-day E/M [1].

Add-on code with primary infusion codes beyond 96360: CPT guidelines explicitly authorize 96361 to identify hydration administered as a secondary or subsequent service in association with chemotherapy infusion 96413 through the same IV access. The hydration must meet the minimum 31-minute threshold and must not overlap in time with the chemotherapy infusion [1].

MUE = 8: Claims for more than 8 units of 96361 per date of service are denied without supporting documentation of medical necessity for that duration. Eight additional units represents approximately 9 total hours of hydration [1].

OPPS payment: Under the Outpatient Prospective Payment System, 96361 carries APC Status Indicator "Not Discounted when Multiple," meaning each reportable unit receives full APC payment [3]. Concurrent infusion code 96368, by contrast, is packaged and not separately payable.

Concurrent bundling: Hydration running simultaneously with a therapeutic drug infusion (96365 family) is not separately payable for the overlapping time period. NCCI edits and AMA guidelines classify concurrent hydration as incidental to drug delivery [2]. Only sequential or separate-session hydration is separately reportable.


Documentation Essentials

Start and stop times: The single most critical documentation element. Nursing infusion notes must record exact clock times for infusion start and end. "Approximately 2 hours" or "morning infusion" is insufficient for time-based code validation and will result in denial on audit. The number of 96361 units billed must be arithmetically derivable from the documented times.

Physician order: A dated, signed order specifying fluid type, rate in mL/hr, and volume or duration must be present in the record [1]. Claims without a documented physician order are denied and carry elevated audit risk under OIG scrutiny [4].

Medical necessity: The chart must document the clinical basis for IV hydration: objective findings (vital signs, physical exam findings such as dry mucous membranes or skin turgor changes, relevant labs), the reason oral hydration was not sufficient or feasible, and the patient's response during treatment. A notation of "dehydration" without clinical detail is insufficient for Medicare medical necessity review.

Fluid documentation: Record the specific fluid type, volume infused, rate of administration, and any electrolyte additives. This establishes the infusate as a hydration agent rather than a therapeutic drug, which is essential to defending 96360/96361 versus 96365/96366 in audit.

Supervision: In non-facility settings, direct physician or qualified health care professional supervision is required; the supervising provider must be immediately available on the premises during infusion. The record should reflect any physician assessments or interventions during the infusion period.

Audit red flags specific to 96361:

  • Units billed without corresponding clock-time documentation
  • 96361 submitted without 96360 on the same claim
  • 96361 units claimed for hydration that overlapped a therapeutic drug infusion
  • Hydration documented as "keep open" or "to keep vein open" during another infusion (these are explicitly not separately reportable per CPT guidelines)
  • A partial additional hour of 30 minutes or less billed as a full unit

Medicare, Commercial & Medicaid Payer Rules

Medicare:

No national coverage determination (NCD) exists for IV hydration. Coverage is governed by CMS Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 12, §30.5 and applicable MAC local coverage determinations [1]. Medicare expects documentation that oral hydration was not clinically feasible or sufficient given the patient's presentation. Absence of this clinical rationale is grounds for medical necessity denial.

96361 carries different RVU values in facility versus non-facility settings. The non-facility rate is higher to account for supplies and nursing overhead borne by the physician practice. In the facility setting, the technical component is captured by the hospital through OPPS; the physician does not separately bill 96360 or 96361 in that context [5].

BETOS classification P6C (Minor procedures, other) applies under the Medicare physician fee schedule.

Commercial payers:

Commercial payers generally follow CMS infusion code selection guidelines but may impose stricter prior authorization requirements or medical necessity thresholds for extended hydration. Some payers require documentation that oral hydration was attempted and failed before approving IV hydration claims at all. For claims with multiple units of 96361 (indicating prolonged infusion), verify payer-specific policies and ensure the clinical record explicitly documents the reason for the extended duration.

OPPS facility billing:

Under OPPS, 96361 is paid per unit without multiple-procedure discounting (APC Status Indicator: Not Discounted when Multiple) [3]. This makes accurate unit counting particularly important for outpatient hospital billing, as each reportable unit directly affects facility payment.


Common Denials & Prevention

Missing start/stop times

The most frequent denial reason for time-based infusion codes. Payers cannot validate units billed without documented clock times, and auditors flag infusion claims lacking this element as administratively deficient.

Prevention: Build a workflow requiring nursing staff to document start and stop times at the point of care, not retrospectively. Perform a pre-billing audit of infusion records to confirm clock times are present and arithmetically support the units claimed.

96361 submitted without 96360

Add-on codes are invalid when submitted without a qualifying parent code. Claims systems reject these lines automatically.

Prevention: Configure claim edit rules that flag 96361 on any claim not also containing 96360 or another documented primary infusion service. Investigate the root cause: if the initial hour did not meet the 31-minute minimum, 96360 itself is not reportable and 96361 cannot follow.

Incorrect unit count due to ≤30-minute fractions billed as full units

Counting any remaining infusion time as a full additional unit overstates the claim and constitutes a pattern CMS and MACs have identified in infusion billing audits [4].

Prevention: Calculate units from documented times before submission. Apply the formula: (total minutes minus 60) divided by 60; the whole number is the base 96361 count. Add one unit only if the remainder exceeds 30 minutes.

Concurrent hydration billed alongside therapeutic drug infusion

Reporting 96360/96361 for hydration overlapping in time with a 96365-family drug infusion is a leading unbundling error and a recurring OIG audit focus for infusion services [4].

Prevention: Review infusion records to determine whether hydration and drug infusion were concurrent or sequential. If concurrent, report only drug infusion codes. If sequential (hydration began after the drug infusion concluded), both services may be reported provided each meets its applicable time threshold.

Medical necessity insufficiently documented

Infusion administered with no clinical assessment in the record (or only a patient request for IV fluids without objective clinical findings) results in medical necessity denial.

Prevention: Ensure every IV hydration encounter includes: the clinical indication, objective supporting findings, and documentation that IV administration was medically necessary rather than a patient preference. Appeal rights exist for medical necessity denials; submitting the full clinical record with supporting coding references can overturn these when documentation is adequate.


Coding Scenarios

Scenario: A patient presents to an internal medicine office with acute gastroenteritis. Clinical notes document dry mucous membranes, orthostatic hypotension, and inability to tolerate oral fluids for 24 hours. The physician orders 1 L normal saline IV. Nursing documents start at 9:00 AM, stop at 10:45 AM (1 hour 45 minutes).

Correct coding: 96360 + 96361 × 1; E86.0 (Dehydration)

Why: The initial 60 minutes is covered by 96360. The remaining 45 minutes exceeds the 30-minute threshold, generating one unit of 96361. Had the infusion stopped at 10:30 AM (30 minutes of additional time), 96361 would not be reportable; fractions of exactly 30 minutes do not qualify.


Scenario: A hospital outpatient infusion center patient with hyperemesis gravidarum receives 2 liters of IV hydration from 1:00 PM to 4:20 PM (3 hours 20 minutes). The hospital is billing this through OPPS.

Correct coding: 96360 + 96361 × 2 on the facility claim; the treating physician does not separately bill these codes in the facility setting.

Why: Initial hour = 96360. Hours 2 and 3 = 96361 × 2. The remaining 20 minutes after the third hour does not exceed 30 minutes and generates no additional unit. Under OPPS, each unit of 96361 is paid without multiple-procedure discounting.


Scenario: A patient receives IV cefazolin 1 g over 30 minutes (10:00 to 10:30 AM) with 1 L normal saline running concurrently in the same IV line.

Correct coding: 96365 × 1 only; do not add 96360 or 96361.

Why: The normal saline runs concurrently with the antibiotic. Per AMA CPT guidelines, hydration codes are not used when IV fluid is administered concurrently with a therapeutic drug infusion. The NS is incidental to drug delivery and is not separately reportable during the overlapping period.


Scenario: A patient in a physician office receives 1 L normal saline from 9:00 to 10:10 AM (70 minutes), after which a nurse administers ondansetron 4 mg by IV push at 10:10 AM.

Correct coding: 96360 + 96374; appropriate diagnosis codes for dehydration and nausea

Why: The services are sequential, not concurrent. The 70-minute hydration (meeting the 31-minute minimum) is reported with 96360. The additional 10 minutes beyond the initial hour does not exceed 30 minutes, so 96361 is not reportable. The IV push of ondansetron is a separately reportable therapeutic injection coded with 96374.


Related Codes

  • 96360 — IV infusion, hydration; initial, 31 min to 1 hour; required parent code for 96361
  • 96365 — IV infusion, therapy/prophylaxis/diagnosis; initial, up to 1 hour; use when a drug is infused rather than plain hydration
  • 96366 — IV infusion, therapy/prophylaxis/diagnosis; each additional hour; drug-infusion equivalent of 96361
  • 96367 — Additional sequential infusion, new drug or substance, up to 1 hour; use when a different drug follows the primary infusion sequentially
  • 96368 — Concurrent infusion; use when a different drug infuses simultaneously; packaged under OPPS and not separately payable in the facility setting
  • 96374 — IV push, single or initial therapeutic drug; use when a drug is administered as a push (15 minutes or less) rather than an infusion
  • 96413 — Chemotherapy administration, IV infusion technique, up to 1 hour; 96361 may be reported to identify secondary hydration administered in association with this code through the same IV access

Sources

  1. Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 12, §30.5 Drug Administration Services — CMS — Billing rules for infusion services including hydration codes and time documentation requirements
  2. National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) Policy Manual for Medicare Services, Chapter 11 — CMS — NCCI bundling rules and modifier guidance for infusion codes
  3. CY 2025 Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System Final Rule — CMS / Federal Register — OPPS APC status indicators and payment policy for 2025
  4. HHS OIG Work Plan, Infusion Therapy — HHS OIG — Compliance audit focus areas for IV infusion billing
  5. CY 2025 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Final Rule — CMS / Federal Register — RVU values and facility versus non-facility payment differentials for 2025

Related Codes

Official Description

Intravenous infusion, hydration; each additional hour (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)

© Copyright 2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

Common Language Description

An intravenous infusion for hydration involves the administration of fluids directly into a patient's bloodstream through a vein, typically located in the arm. This procedure is essential for restoring fluid balance and providing necessary electrolytes, particularly in cases of dehydration or when a patient is unable to consume adequate fluids orally. The process begins with the placement of an intravenous (IV) line, which allows for the continuous delivery of fluids. During the infusion, a physician supervises the procedure, ensuring that the patient is monitored closely for any potential complications that may arise. This supervision includes periodic assessments of the patient's condition and thorough documentation of their response to the treatment. For billing purposes, the initial hydration infusion is coded with CPT® Code 96360, which covers the first 31 minutes to 1 hour of hydration. Subsequently, CPT® Code 96361 is used to account for each additional hour of hydration provided beyond the initial hour.

© Copyright 2026 Coding Ahead. All rights reserved.

1. Indications

Intravenous infusion for hydration is indicated in various clinical scenarios where a patient requires fluid replacement or supplementation. The following conditions may warrant this procedure:

  • Dehydration Patients experiencing dehydration due to excessive fluid loss, such as from vomiting, diarrhea, or excessive sweating, may require intravenous hydration to restore fluid balance.
  • Inability to Ingest Fluids Individuals who are unable to take fluids orally due to medical conditions, surgical recovery, or other factors may need IV hydration to ensure adequate fluid intake.
  • Electrolyte Imbalance Patients with imbalances in electrolytes, which can occur due to various medical conditions, may benefit from intravenous fluids that contain necessary electrolytes to restore normal levels.

2. Procedure

The procedure for intravenous infusion for hydration involves several key steps to ensure safe and effective administration of fluids. The following outlines the procedural steps:

  • Step 1: Patient Preparation The patient is prepared for the procedure by assessing their medical history and current condition. This includes checking for any allergies, previous reactions to IV fluids, and determining the appropriate type and volume of fluid needed for hydration.
  • Step 2: IV Line Placement A healthcare professional will select an appropriate vein, typically in the arm, and clean the area with an antiseptic solution. A sterile IV catheter is then inserted into the vein to establish access for fluid administration.
  • Step 3: Fluid Administration Once the IV line is secured, the prescribed hydration fluid is connected to the IV catheter. The fluid is administered at a controlled rate, which may be adjusted based on the patient's response and clinical needs.
  • Step 4: Monitoring Throughout the infusion, the physician or nursing staff will monitor the patient closely for any signs of complications, such as allergic reactions, fluid overload, or changes in vital signs. Periodic assessments are conducted to evaluate the patient's hydration status and overall response to the treatment.
  • Step 5: Documentation Accurate documentation of the procedure is essential. This includes recording the type and volume of fluid administered, the duration of the infusion, the patient's response, and any observations made during the procedure.

3. Post-Procedure

After the intravenous infusion for hydration is completed, the healthcare provider will continue to monitor the patient for any delayed reactions or complications. The IV line may be removed once the infusion is finished, and the site will be assessed for any signs of irritation or infection. Patients may be advised on follow-up care, including signs of dehydration to watch for and recommendations for oral fluid intake. Documentation of the procedure and the patient's response is finalized to ensure accurate medical records and billing.

Short Descr HYDRATE IV INFUSION ADD-ON
Medium Descr IV INFUSION HYDRATION EACH ADDITIONAL HOUR
Long Descr Intravenous infusion, hydration; each additional hour (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
Status Code Active Code
Global Days ZZZ - Code Related to Another Service
PC/TC Indicator (26, TC) 5 - Incident To Code
Multiple Procedures (51) 0 - No payment adjustment rules for multiple procedures apply.
Bilateral Surgery (50) 0 - 150% payment adjustment for bilateral procedures does NOT apply.
Physician Supervisions 09 - Concept does not apply.
Assistant Surgeon (80, 82) 0 - Payment restriction for assistants at surgery applies to this procedure...
Co-Surgeons (62) 0 - Co-surgeons not permitted for this procedure.
Team Surgery (66) 0 - Team surgeons not permitted for this procedure.
Diagnostic Imaging Family 99 - Concept Does Not Apply
APC Status Indicator Procedure or Service, Not Discounted when Multiple
Berenson-Eggers TOS (BETOS) P6C - Minor procedures - other (Medicare fee schedule)
MUE 8
CCS Clinical Classification 231 - Other therapeutic procedures

This is an add-on code that must be used in conjunction with one of these primary codes.

96360 MPFS Status: Active Code APC S CPT Assistant Article Intravenous infusion, hydration; initial, 31 minutes to 1 hour
96365 MPFS Status: Active Code APC S CPT Assistant Article Intravenous infusion, for therapy, prophylaxis, or diagnosis (specify substance or drug); initial, up to 1 hour
96374 MPFS Status: Active Code APC S CPT Assistant Article Therapeutic, prophylactic, or diagnostic injection (specify substance or drug); intravenous push, single or initial substance/drug
96409 MPFS Status: Active Code APC S Physician Quality Reporting PUB 100 CPT Assistant Article Chemotherapy administration; intravenous, push technique, single or initial substance/drug
96413 MPFS Status: Active Code APC S Physician Quality Reporting PUB 100 CPT Assistant Article Chemotherapy administration, intravenous infusion technique; up to 1 hour, single or initial substance/drug
59 Distinct procedural service: under certain circumstances, it may be necessary to indicate that a procedure or service was distinct or independent from other non-e/m services performed on the same day. modifier 59 is used to identify procedures/services, other than e/m services, that are not normally reported together, but are appropriate under the circumstances. documentation must support a different session, different procedure or surgery, different site or organ system, separate incision/excision, separate lesion, or separate injury (or area of injury in extensive injuries) not ordinarily encountered or performed on the same day by the same individual. however, when another already established modifier is appropriate it should be used rather than modifier 59. only if no more descriptive modifier is available, and the use of modifier 59 best explains the circumstances, should modifier 59 be used. note: modifier 59 should not be appended to an e/m service. to report a separate and distinct e/m service with a non-e/m service performed on the same date, see modifier 25.
XU Unusual non-overlapping service, the use of a service that is distinct because it does not overlap usual components of the main service
Q1 Routine clinical service provided in a clinical research study that is in an approved clinical research study
XS Separate structure, a service that is distinct because it was performed on a separate organ/structure
GW Service not related to the hospice patient's terminal condition
X2 Continuous/focused services: for reporting services by clinicians whose expertise is needed for the ongoing management of a chronic disease or a condition that needs to be managed and followed with no planned endpoint to the relationship; reporting clinician service examples include but are not limited to: a rheumatologist taking care of the patient's rheumatoid arthritis longitudinally but not providing general primary care services
JZ Zero drug amount discarded/not administered to any patient
GA Waiver of liability statement issued as required by payer policy, individual case
XE Separate encounter, a service that is distinct because it occurred during a separate encounter
Q6 Service furnished under a fee-for-time compensation arrangement by a substitute physician or by a substitute physical therapist furnishing outpatient physical therapy services in a health professional shortage area, a medically underserved area, or a rural area
PD Diagnostic or related non diagnostic item or service provided in a wholly owned or operated entity to a patient who is admitted as an inpatient within 3 days
Q0 Investigational clinical service provided in a clinical research study that is in an approved clinical research study
CR Catastrophe/disaster related
GV Attending physician not employed or paid under arrangement by the patient's hospice provider
GY Item or service statutorily excluded, does not meet the definition of any medicare benefit or, for non-medicare insurers, is not a contract benefit
25 Significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management service by the same physician or other qualified health care professional on the same day of the procedure or other service: it may be necessary to indicate that on the day a procedure or service identified by a cpt code was performed, the patient's condition required a significant, separately identifiable e/m service above and beyond the other service provided or beyond the usual preoperative and postoperative care associated with the procedure that was performed. a significant, separately identifiable e/m service is defined or substantiated by documentation that satisfies the relevant criteria for the respective e/m service to be reported (see evaluation and management services guidelines for instructions on determining level of e/m service). the e/m service may be prompted by the symptom or condition for which the procedure and/or service was provided. as such, different diagnoses are not required for reporting of the e/m services on the same date. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 25 to the appropriate level of e/m service. note: this modifier is not used to report an e/m service that resulted in a decision to perform surgery. see modifier 57 for significant, separately identifiable non-e/m services, see modifier 59.
26 Professional component: certain procedures are a combination of a physician or other qualified health care professional component and a technical component. when the physician or other qualified health care professional component is reported separately, the service may be identified by adding modifier 26 to the usual procedure number.
58 Staged or related procedure or service by the same physician or other qualified health care professional during the postoperative period: it may be necessary to indicate that the performance of a procedure or service during the postoperative period was: (a) planned or anticipated (staged); (b) more extensive than the original procedure; or (c) for therapy following a surgical procedure. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 58 to the staged or related procedure. note: for treatment of a problem that requires a return to the operating/procedure room (eg, unanticipated clinical condition), see modifier 78.
76 Repeat procedure or service by same physician or other qualified health care professional: it may be necessary to indicate that a procedure or service was repeated by the same physician or other qualified health care professional subsequent to the original procedure or service. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 76 to the repeated procedure or service. note: this modifier should not be appended to an e/m service.
79 Unrelated procedure or service by the same physician or other qualified health care professional during the postoperative period: the individual may need to indicate that the performance of a procedure or service during the postoperative period was unrelated to the original procedure. this circumstance may be reported by using modifier 79. (for repeat procedures on the same day, see modifier 76.)
AQ Physician providing a service in an unlisted health professional shortage area (hpsa)
CC Procedure code change (use 'cc' when the procedure code submitted was changed either for administrative reasons or because an incorrect code was filed)
CS Cost-sharing waived for specified covid-19 testing-related services that result in and order for or administration of a covid-19 test and/or used for cost-sharing waived preventive services furnished via telehealth in rural health clinics and federally qualified health centers during the covid-19 public health emergency
GZ Item or service expected to be denied as not reasonable and necessary
JW Drug amount discarded/not administered to any patient
KX Requirements specified in the medical policy have been met
LT Left side (used to identify procedures performed on the left side of the body)
Q5 Service furnished under a reciprocal billing arrangement by a substitute physician or by a substitute physical therapist furnishing outpatient physical therapy services in a health professional shortage area, a medically underserved area, or a rural area
QW Clia waived test
RT Right side (used to identify procedures performed on the right side of the body)
SA Nurse practitioner rendering service in collaboration with a physician
SC Medically necessary service or supply
X1 Continuous/broad services: for reporting services by clinicians, who provide the principal care for a patient, with no planned endpoint of the relationship; services in this category represent comprehensive care, dealing with the entire scope of patient problems, either directly or in a care coordination role; reporting clinician service examples include, but are not limited to: primary care, and clinicians providing comprehensive care to patients in addition to specialty care
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2011-01-01 Changed Short description changed.
2009-01-01 Added -
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