-
Calculate your risk, and a guide to mastering hernia repair
I found this calculator on the American College of Surgeons page. It’s interesting. I also found another interesting page when looking for an APC code. 49650 is “Laparoscopy, surgical; repair initial inguinal hernia”. We can pretend that we are surgeons.
According to the calculator, even though I was in excellent shape with low body fat at the time of my surgery, I was “overweight”. My surgery risk was below average.
http://riskcalculator.facs.org/RiskCalculator/
https://www.aapc.com/blog/23842-mastering-hernia-repair-and-mesh-placement/
This passage, below, shows where mesh removal falls in the scheme of the “payers”. These would be the insurance companies. Apparently there is no “mesh removal” code, and mesh removal can’t be claimed as a foreign body removal. Looks like it gets a catch-all, non-specific, code. Maybe we should be lobbying the insurance companies to create a specific mesh removal code so that the correlation will be more clear, showing up in their databases. Even if the specific cause is not known the ratio of implantations to removals might be telling and worthy of action.
“Finally, a surgeon might remove previously implanted mesh without a recurrent hernia repair, such as when the patient has erosion of the skin over the mesh or pain related to the implant. In these cases, you can report the mesh removal separately. Payers do not consider mesh removal a proper foreign body removal. Therefore, you must use an unlisted procedure code, such as 49999, to report the service. Be sure to include a full operative report with your claim that describes exactly what the surgeon did and why it was necessary, and you should suggest a value for the procedure.”
Log in to reply.