Locum Tenens, Fee for Time and Reciprocal Billing are options for the billing of services when a substitute provider sees patients. The definition of these three types of services is important when a provider is not able or chooses, like for a vacation, to be gone from the practice. What type of provider (physician, nurse practitioner, physician assistant, or other) can utilize which of the concepts of billing is important to understand in compliant billing.
Locum tenens is Latin word that means “to hold the place.” There was confusion because the concept of Locum Tenens as a substitute physician was also a concept of how to bill for the services. Medicare made a change and the billing concept’s name was changed to “fee for time compensation”. This name did not help lower the confusion. The facts of billing for a substitute physician didn’t change: Reciprocal Billing has definitions that can include physical therapists.
The webinar by industry expert Jill M. young will go into the details of who can use locum tenens or fee-for-time arrangements and reciprocal billing. How long they can last, how to bill for the services, what documentation is needed and other details of this unique arrangement that Medicare allows providers to utilize.
Medicare provides the most comprehensive guidance on billing for substitute providers. This session will use the Medicare Claims Processing Manual as the foundation to explain the key rules governing substitute provider billing. Building on this base, we will also explore how other major payers interpret and apply these rules, offering a broader understanding of the billing landscape for substitute services across various insurance providers.
Coders, Billers, Administrators, Physicians