Resources

Telehealth for Pediatrics

Learn about the Chapter’s Committee on Telehealth and view our telehealth resources.

Resources

Telehealth for Pediatrics

Telehealth for Pediatrics

Learn about the Chapter’s Committee on Telehealth and view our telehealth resources.

A mom helping her baby walk upright.
A mom helping her baby walk upright.

Welcome to the Georgia AAP Committee on Telehealth Resource Hub

Welcome to the Georgia AAP Committee on Telehealth Resource Hub

The Chapter’s Committee on Telehealth seeks to advocate for and provide resources to support telehealth services for Georgia’s children and their families. To that end we wish to receive your questions, comments, and concerns with regards to the access and delivery of telehealth services. Any questions with regards to delivering of or reimbursement for telehealth services will be shared with the Committee members for response. Please allow 72 hours for a reply. Also please be sure to review previous posts of telehealth FAQs as your question may have already been posed to the committee for a response. Lastly, please be sure to review our resource section for additional information.

Telehealth FAQs

Telehealth FAQs

Yes, during COVID, many states have waived the requirement and are allowing telehealth if you have a valid license in at least one state. Click here for more.

Yes, restrictions have been lifted during the public health emergency.

In other words, consent is presumed unless withdrawn by active notification by patient to the office. Verbal consent is acceptable during the public health emergency.

Please review our telehealth 201 webinar recording, which covers the apps and resources to assist you with this question.

Catch-22!! The intent of the rule appears to note that you are offering telehealth as an option, but not the only way to access care. The patient cannot be forced to do a telehealth visit. A service that needs to be patient initiated is telephone care (99441-99443) and online digital E/M service (e.g. portal).

Telemedicine which can be reported with 99212-99215 does not have to be patient initiated.

Yes, written once per year but verbal with each encounter. Must verify that they understand this counts as an encounter to which copays and deductibles will apply.

No. If there was an in-person visit 7 days before or within 24 hours after for the same type of problem you cannot bill for the telehealth visit.

To establish clear symptoms for flu diagnosis, you need to do a visit of some sort. This seems like pushing low quality care at some point. We need to be careful that this does not swing the other way. Telemedicine should not be low quality care. Why do we want to make it that way? Telemedicine is what you make it. If you see the child and you have concerns, end the visit and have them come into the office or refer them to the appropriate place if you are closed.

Babies discharged from the NICU or NN with g-tubes, NG tubes, feeding issues, etc. may be prescribed a baby scale for home use at discharge.

The earliest expiration dates are May 31st, some are June 30th and Medicaid has not put an expiration date yet. Most will track the length of the federal Public Health Emergency, which is to end in July, unless extended.

You can bill for either the telehealth visit or the in person visit if they come in that same day.

Recommend basing visits on MDM, not time. ADHD visits with problems with sleep, allergies etc., become a 99214. Document at least 5 systems in your physical exam. One item from each system counts as that system being addressed. However, remember that only 2 of 3 are needed for established patients and therefore, the exam may not need to be counted. If you can get a detailed history and MDM of moderate complexity, you may report a 99214.

For GA Medicaid FFS & CMOs the answer is yes. For commercial insurance, the answer is no. Audio only should be 99441-99443 based on total time. (Phone codes require total time only not start and stop times).

Yes, one of the requirements for any telehealth visit is to document a start and stop time regardless of medical decision making (MDM). You can use the following template to prompt you to document correctly (cut and paste to your EMR)

Telehealth Visit HPI

VERBAL Consent to conduct the visit via telehealth was obtained.

Name of person(s) on phone:
Role/Relation: parent(s)
Start time:
End time:
Total time*:

*If using time to determine level of service do not forget to include a time statement [>50% of (insert total time) minute visit was spent in face to face discussion about [condition]…)

COVID-19 Screening: patient/parent reports no travel or known exposure to COVID-19 in the past 7 days, no fever, no SOB, no cough, no nausea, or vomiting

If you spend 30 minutes or more, you may look to the non-direct prolonged services codes (99358-99359).

Time: often face to face can be relatively quick if try to keep eye contact during telemed visit and visit. After visit, it takes time to document in EHR.

Can you add this to visit time when billing?

No. However, as of Jan 1, 2021 the time codes for E/M visits changes and plans may have adopted the more relaxed definitions already. Be sure to get the change of policy in writing. Click here for more.

It is not the documentation time to bill for, it is the chart review and lab and report review before placing the telemedicine communication. Is there a code for preparation for the telemed contact? If you spend 30 minutes or more, you may look to the non-direct prolonged services codes (99358-99359).

Yes – same as face to face, report the E/M code that supports the level of care or time. You may even use prolonged services (99354-99355).

Non-HIPAA compliant technology is temporarily allowed during the public health emergency. However, you must document that you informed the patient it may not be secure and obtained their consent to use that platform.

Yes, during COVID, many states have waived the requirement and are allowing telehealth if you have a valid license in at least one state. Click here for more.

Yes, restrictions have been lifted during the public health emergency.

In other words, consent is presumed unless withdrawn by active notification by patient to the office. Verbal consent is acceptable during the public health emergency.

Please review our telehealth 201 webinar recording, which covers the apps and resources to assist you with this question.

Catch-22!! The intent of the rule appears to note that you are offering telehealth as an option, but not the only way to access care. The patient cannot be forced to do a telehealth visit. A service that needs to be patient initiated is telephone care (99441-99443) and online digital E/M service (e.g. portal).

Telemedicine which can be reported with 99212-99215 does not have to be patient initiated.

Yes, written once per year but verbal with each encounter. Must verify that they understand this counts as an encounter to which copays and deductibles will apply.

No. If there was an in-person visit 7 days before or within 24 hours after for the same type of problem you cannot bill for the telehealth visit.

To establish clear symptoms for flu diagnosis, you need to do a visit of some sort. This seems like pushing low quality care at some point. We need to be careful that this does not swing the other way. Telemedicine should not be low quality care. Why do we want to make it that way? Telemedicine is what you make it. If you see the child and you have concerns, end the visit and have them come into the office or refer them to the appropriate place if you are closed.

Babies discharged from the NICU or NN with g-tubes, NG tubes, feeding issues, etc. may be prescribed a baby scale for home use at discharge.

The earliest expiration dates are May 31st, some are June 30th and Medicaid has not put an expiration date yet. Most will track the length of the federal Public Health Emergency, which is to end in July, unless extended.

You can bill for either the telehealth visit or the in person visit if they come in that same day.

Recommend basing visits on MDM, not time. ADHD visits with problems with sleep, allergies etc., become a 99214. Document at least 5 systems in your physical exam. One item from each system counts as that system being addressed. However, remember that only 2 of 3 are needed for established patients and therefore, the exam may not need to be counted. If you can get a detailed history and MDM of moderate complexity, you may report a 99214.

For GA Medicaid FFS & CMOs the answer is yes. For commercial insurance, the answer is no. Audio only should be 99441-99443 based on total time. (Phone codes require total time only not start and stop times).

Yes, one of the requirements for any telehealth visit is to document a start and stop time regardless of medical decision making (MDM). You can use the following template to prompt you to document correctly (cut and paste to your EMR)

Telehealth Visit HPI

VERBAL Consent to conduct the visit via telehealth was obtained.

Name of person(s) on phone:
Role/Relation: parent(s)
Start time:
End time:
Total time*:

*If using time to determine level of service do not forget to include a time statement [>50% of (insert total time) minute visit was spent in face to face discussion about [condition]…)

COVID-19 Screening: patient/parent reports no travel or known exposure to COVID-19 in the past 7 days, no fever, no SOB, no cough, no nausea, or vomiting

If you spend 30 minutes or more, you may look to the non-direct prolonged services codes (99358-99359).

Time: often face to face can be relatively quick if try to keep eye contact during telemed visit and visit. After visit, it takes time to document in EHR.

Can you add this to visit time when billing?

No. However, as of Jan 1, 2021 the time codes for E/M visits changes and plans may have adopted the more relaxed definitions already. Be sure to get the change of policy in writing. Click here for more.

It is not the documentation time to bill for, it is the chart review and lab and report review before placing the telemedicine communication. Is there a code for preparation for the telemed contact? If you spend 30 minutes or more, you may look to the non-direct prolonged services codes (99358-99359).

Yes – same as face to face, report the E/M code that supports the level of care or time. You may even use prolonged services (99354-99355).

Non-HIPAA compliant technology is temporarily allowed during the public health emergency. However, you must document that you informed the patient it may not be secure and obtained their consent to use that platform.

Submit your telehealth-related comment, question, or concern: