Fee-for-Time Compensation Arrangements and Reciprocal Billing - JE Part B - Noridian (2024)

The term "locum tenens," which has historically been used in the CMS Internet Only manual to mean fee-for-time compensation arrangements, is being discontinued because the title of section 16006 of the 21st Century Cures Act uses "locum tenens arrangements" to refer to both fee-for-time compensation arrangement compensation arrangements and reciprocal billing arrangements."

Access the below information from this page.

  • Fee-for-Time Compensations Arrangements
  • Reciprocal Billing Arrangements
  • Outpatient Physical Therapist
  • Related Latest Updates Articles
  • Resources

Fee-for-Time Compensation Arrangement Fee-For-Time Compensation Arrangements (formerly referred to as Locum Tenens)

It is a longstanding practice for a physician to retain a substitute physician to take over his/her professional practice when the physician is absent for reasons such as illness, pregnancy, vacation, or continuing medical education, and for such physician (the regular physician) to bill and receive payment for the substitute physician's services as though he/she performed them.

The substitute physician often has no practice of his/her own and may move from area to area as needed.

Paid on a fee for time arrangement compensation basis with the substitute physician having the status of an independent contractor, rather than of an employee, of the regular physician.

Services of non-physician practitioners (e.g., CRNAs, NPs and PAs) may not be billed under fee-for-time compensation arrangements or reciprocal billing reassignment exceptions.

These provisions apply only to physicians. (With one exception physical therapist in a health professional shortage area (HPSA), a medically underserved area (MUA), or in a rural area see section below)

A regular physician is defined in this case as MDs or DOs (A regular physician may include a physician specialist such as a cardiologist, oncologist, urologist, hospitalist).

The regular physician may submit a claim under the fee for time compensation arrangement using his/her own NPI and, if assignment is taken, receive payment for covered visit services if the following conditions are met:

  • Regular physician is unavailable to provide visit/services
  • Medicare patient has arranged or seeks to receive visit/services from regular physician
  • Regular physician pays fee-for-time compensation arrangement physician for his/her services on a per diem or similar fee-for-time basis
  • Substitute physician does not provide visit/services to patients over a continuous period of longer than 60 days
  • Regular physician identifies services as substitute physician services with modifier Q6 (services furnished by a fee-for-time compensation arrangement physician). Until further notice, regular physician must keep on file a record of each service along with substitute physician's NPI. Record should be available to Medicare on request. It is not necessary to provide this information on claim form

Exception to the 60-day limitation for locum tenens billing:

  • Section 116 of Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007 extended exception to the 60-day limit on substitute physician billing for physicians being called to active duty in Armed Forces for services furnished from 01/01/08-06/30/08. Section 116 of Public Law 110-173 extended accommodation of physicians ordered to active duty in Armed Forces, enacted by Public Law 110-54, by striking 'January 1, 2008,' and inserting 'July 1, 2008'.
  • Essentially, both legislative acts allow a physician being called to active duty to bill for services furnished by a substitute physician for longer than the 60-day limitation

If postoperative services are furnished by the substitute physician, the services cannot be billed with modifier Q6 since the regular physician is paid a global fee.

  • If services are provided by a substitute physician over a continuous period of longer than 60 days, regular physician must bill first 60 days with modifier Q6
  • Substitute physician must bill for remainder of services in his/her own name
  • Regular physician may not bill and receive direct payment for services over the 60-day period
  • A new period of covered visits can begin after regular physician has returned to work

For a medical group billing under the fee-for-time compensation arrangement, it is assumed that the substitute physician is paid by the regular physician.

  • Term 'regular physician' includes a physician who has left group and for whom group has hired fee for time compensation physician as a replacement
  • A physician who has left a group, and for whom group has engaged a fee for time compensation physician as a temporary replacement, may still be considered a member of group until a permanent replacement is obtained

In addition, the medical group physician for whom the substitution services are furnished must be identified by his/her NPI in Item 24j on the CMS-1500 claim form or electronic equivalent. The group must retain a copy of each service provided by the substitute physician, along with the substitute physician's NPI number. This record must be made available to Medicare upon request. It is not necessary to provide this information on the claim form.

Physicians should be aware that use of modifier Q6 by the regular physician (or medical group, where applicable) certifies that the covered visit services furnished by the substitute physician are identified in the record of the regular physician which is available for inspection, and are services that the regular physician (or group) is entitled to submit. A physician or other person who falsely certifies any of the above requirements may be subject to possible civil and criminal penalties for fraud.

Reciprocal Billing Arrangements

On an occasional reciprocal basis, a patient's regular physician will arrange for a substitute physician to provide visit/services, including emergency visits or related services. Under a reciprocal billing arrangement, the patient's regular physician may submit a claim to Medicare Part B using his/her own NPI and, if assignment is accepted, receive payment if the following conditions are met:

  • Regular physician is unavailable to provide visit/services
  • Medicare patient has arranged or seeks to receive visit/services from regular physician
  • Substitute physician does not provide visit/services to patients over a continuous period of longer than 60 days
  • Regular physician identifies services as substitute physician services by using modifier Q5 (services furnished by a substitute physician under a reciprocal billing arrangement)
  • Until further notice, regular physician must keep on file a record of each service provided by substitute physician along with substitute physician's NPI. Record should be available to Medicare on request. It is not necessary to provide this information on claim form

If postoperative services are furnished by the substitute physician, the services cannot be billed with modifier Q5 since the regular physician is paid a global fee. They need not be identified on the claim as substitution services. A physician may have reciprocal arrangements with more than one physician. The arrangements need not be in writing.

  • If services are provided by a substitute physician over a continuous period of longer than 60 days, the regular physician must bill the first 60 days with modifier Q5 (services furnished by a substitute physician under a reciprocal billing arrangement)
  • Substitute physician must bill the remainder of services in his/her own name
  • Regular physician may not bill and receive payment for services over the 60-day period
  • A new period of covered visit/services can begin after regular physician has returned to work

The term 'covered visit service' includes not only a service ordinarily defined as a covered physician visit, but also any other covered items and services furnished by the substitute physician or by others as 'incident to' services. Items and services furnished by the staff of the substitute physician covered as 'incident to' his services if billed by him, are still covered if billed by the regular physician. Items and services furnished by the staff of the regular physician covered as 'incident to' his services if furnished under his supervision are still covered if furnished under the supervision of the substitute physician.

A continuous period of covered visit services begins on the first day the substitute physician provides covered visit services to Medicare Part B patients of the regular physician. The period ends with the last day on which the substitute physician provides these services before the regular physician returns to work. This period continues without interruption on days when no covered visit services are provided to patients on behalf of the regular physician or when furnished by some other substitute physician on behalf of the regular physician. A new period of covered visit services can begin after the regular physician has returned to work.

Example: The regular physician goes on vacation on June 30, 2013, and returns to work on September 4, 2013. A substitute physician provides services to Medicare patients of the regular physician on July 2, 2013 and at various times thereafter, including August 30 and September 2, 2013. The continuous period of covered visit services begins on July 2 and runs through September 2, a period of 63 days. Since the September 2 services are furnished after the expiration of 60 days of the period, the regular physician is not entitled to bill and receive direct payment for them. The regular physician may, however, bill and receive payment for the services that the substitute physician provides on his behalf in the period July 2 through August 30, 2013.

The requirements for submission of claims under the reciprocal billing arrangements are the same for both assigned and non-assigned claims. These requirements do not apply to the substitute arrangements among physicians in the same medical group when claims are submitted in the name of the group. In this case, the group physician who performs the service must be identified.

For a medical group to submit claims for the covered visit services of a substitute physician, who is not a member of the group, the group must enter the modifier Q5 after the procedure code. In addition, the medical group physician for whom the substitution services are furnished must be identified by his/her PIN in Item 24k on the CMS-1500 claim form or electronic equivalent.

Physicians should be aware that use of modifier Q5 by the regular physician (or the medical group, where applicable) certifies that covered visit services were furnished by the substitute physician identified in a record of the regular physician, which is available for inspection, and are services for which the regular physician (or group) is entitled to submit. A physician or other person who falsely certifies any of the above requirements may be subject to possible civil and criminal penalties for fraud.

Outpatient Physical Therapist

The Implement section 16006 of the 21st Century Cures Act, allows outpatient physical therapy services furnished by physical therapists in a health professional shortage area (HPSA), a medically underserved area (MUA), or in a rural area to be billed under reciprocal billing and fee-for-time compensation arrangements in the same manner as physician's bill effective no later than June 13, 2017. Complete information is located on the link on the Outpatient therapy page.

Resources

Fee-for-Time Compensation Arrangements and Reciprocal Billing - JE Part B - Noridian (2024)

FAQs

What is a reciprocal billing arrangement with Medicare? ›

A reciprocal billing arrangement is typically an agreement among physicians that one will cover the others practice when the physician is absent. Reciprocal billing arrangements are usually informal, and Medicare does not require them to be in writing.

What is the difference between locum tenens and reciprocal billing? ›

Locum tenens occurs when the substitute physician covers for the regular physician during absences not to exceed a period of 90 continuous days. Reciprocal billing occurs when substitute physicians cover the regular physicians during absences and/or on an on-call basis not to exceed a period of 14 continuous days.

What is the Q5 modifier for physical therapy? ›

The PT “uses a modifier [Q5 or Q6] to indicate that the services were provided by a locum tenens PT.”

What is the Q6 modifier for Medicare? ›

The Q6 modifier is a procedure code modifier used on medical claims for the billing of services for a locum tenens physician. It is intended to be used when a physician is away for an extended period of time and arranges for a locum tenens or substitute physician to provide services to their patients in their place.

What is an example of a reciprocal arrangement? ›

Examples of reciprocal arrangement

Our objective must be global disarmament, and this must be a reciprocal arrangement. Mutual assistance is a reciprocal arrangement in which part of the burden of dealing with each other's tax evasion problems is shared.

What is a reciprocity arrangement? ›

A reciprocal agreement is an arrangement between two or more states that allows residents of one state to work in another state without having to pay state income taxes to both. Under these agreements, employees only pay income taxes and file a tax return in their home state (i.e., the state where they live).

What is the highest paid locum tenens specialty? ›

How much do loc*ms doctors make (on average, by hour) by specialization?
  • Anesthesiology: $292/hour.
  • Cardiology: $272/hour.
  • Emergency medicine: $258/hour.
  • Family medicine: $140/hour.
  • Gastroenterology: $367/hour.
  • Hospitalist: $175/hour.
  • Hospitalist, internal medicine: $180/hour.
  • Internal medicine: $173/hour.

How long can you bill for locum tenens? ›

Physicians may retain substitute physicians to take over their professional practices when they are absent for reasons such as illness, pregnancy, vacation or continuing medical education. It is not appropriate to bill Fee-For-Service Time Compensation for longer than 60 days.

What is the modifier for locum billing? ›

How Do You Code For a Locum Tenens Physician? There are two critical steps associated with using the Q6 modifier, in order to properly note that another physician is filling in for the regular physician: Add the Q6 modifier in box 24 D after the CPT/HCPCS code. Note the regular physician's NPI number in box 24 J.

What is the 8 minute rule? ›

Put simply, to receive payment from Medicare for a time-based (or constant attendance) CPT code, a therapist must provide direct treatment for at least eight minutes.

Is PT modifier only for Medicare? ›

For Medicare patients, add PT modifier to the code to indicate that this procedure began as a screening test. For patients with commercial insurance, add modifier -33.

Is modifier 59 a pricing modifier? ›

Like modifier 51, modifier 59 also has payment implications. Modifier 51 impacts the payment amount, and modifier 59 affects whether the service will be paid at all. Modifier 59 is typically used to override National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) Edits. NCCI edits include a status indicator of 0, 1, or 9.

What is the 58 modifier for Medicare? ›

Modifier 58 is defined as a staged or related procedure performed during the postoperative period of the first procedure by the same physician. A new postoperative period begins when the staged procedure is billed.

What is the Q8 modifier? ›

HCPCS Modifier Q8 is used to report two class B findings as they pertain to routine foot care. Guidelines and Instructions. Routine foot care is not a covered Medicare benefit.

What is the 26 modifier used for? ›

Modifier 26 is appended to billed codes to indicate that only the professional component of a service/procedure has been provided. It is generally billed by a physician.

What is a reciprocal insurance arrangement? ›

Reciprocal insurance exchanges are a form of insurance organization in which individuals and businesses exchange insurance contracts and spread the risks associated with those contracts among themselves. Policyholders of a reciprocal insurance exchange are referred to as subscribers.

What is a reciprocal bill? ›

Reciprocal Billing states that individuals who are not present (either travelling or changing their residence) within their province or territory of residence at the time of needing a specific medically necessary service or procedure are to be either covered or reimbursed in full of the monetary costs by their ...

How do you bill Medicare when it is a secondary payer? ›

When Medicare is the secondary payer, submit the claim first to the primary insurer. The primary insurer must process the claim in accordance with the coverage provisions of its contract.

Can you treat two Medicare patients at the same time? ›

Myth 8: You can never double-book Medicare patients.

The facts: Medicare has no rules or regulations as to how therapists schedule their Medicare patients. CMS does require, however, that therapists bill the correct number of time-based units for the amount of time spent one-on-one with that patient.

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