Psychiatrists/ Prescribers: Please Take My CPT Poll
Dinah, ClinkShrink, & Roy produce Shrink Rap: a blog by Psychiatrists for Psychiatrists. A place to talk; no one has to listen. All patient vignettes are confabulated; the psychiatrists, however, are mostly real. --Topics include psychotherapy, humor, depression, bipolar, anxiety, schizophrenia, medications, ethics, psychopharmacology, forensic and correctional psychiatry, psychology, mental health, chocolate, and emotional support ducks. Don't ask. (It's not Shrink Wrap.)
The APA put out a statement in response to the NRA's recommendation to put armed guards in every school. Quoting from the statement:
“Only four to five percent of violent crimes are committed by people with mental illness,” said the APA’s president, Dilip Jeste, M.D. “About one quarter of all Americans have a mental disorder in any given year, and only a very small percentage of them will ever commit violent crimes,” he added.So Dinah sent me an email asking this question:
"So if 1/4 of all people have a mental illness in any given year, and 56% of people have a lifetime incidence, then why are only 4-5% of violent crimes committed by people with mental illnesses? It might seem that we'd all want to be mentally ill so we wouldn't be violent."My answer to that is:
| (per million) | ||
| MI alone | 79 | 314,996,054 x .25 |
| MI + ASPD + SA | 5.9 | 314,996,054 x .25 x .15 x .1 |
| ASPD + SA alone | 4.7 | 314,996,054 x .15 x .1 |
Please, please, I must beg your forgiveness before posting this. Sometimes, I just wish the world made sense, and it doesn't. I should get over it.
I will be one of the two experts, tweeting from @HopkinsMedicine.
(note, I corrected a zillion typos and added a little)
The way mental health clinicians code their
services for insurers is changing on January 1st. A minor thing, a
really boring & tedious thing, but I decided I'd learn about it to
write about it (oh, I have, but instead of writing, I call it Ranting) and make YouTube how-to videos on how to do
the new coding.
Only the new
coding takes something that was simple and
self-explanatory and makes it really complicated -- it requires
courses, manuals with more layers of
charts and graphs and algorithms then you want to imagine, and it's all
done in a way that has nothing to do with how psychiatry is actually
practiced (it's about asking questions to get enough bullet points on
your template). I'm seriously considering resigning from the APA over
this-- they wanted and supported these changes that make something so
simple into a pain, and could potentially be yet one more
distraction from taking good care of patients. There are now 21 ways to
code a psychotherapy session. However, if you want to learn about the
new coding, I'm pleased to report that after hours of technologic hell
involving PowerPoint, iPhoto, GarageBand, and iMovie, I now have 4
videos on YouTube about CPT codes for psychiatrists. Thanks to Clink
for emailing me a brief how-to list, but in the end I did it all by
myself!
It's not looking like the insurance companies have
changed their coding for next month, and many people don't know how to
do the new coding, so if you're a patient waiting reimbursement, you
might want to make sure your therapist/shrink knows to code the new
codes (which might not work) and you might want to stay on top of the
insurance company. And if you're a mental health professional who gets
reimbursed by insurance, you may want to make other plans for that
mortgage.
I will tell you that Roy is all in favor of the changes
and thinks it's going to lead to much better reimbursements for
psychiatry now that we'll be billing like the real docs do.
If you watch these, coffee first. They are really boring. And I think they are only of interest to psychiatrists.
Please do write in the comment section if you find other errors, I will correct them.
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