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1. The Facts About Professional Component Services
- Such services are actual medical services provided by physicians specifically trained
in pathology.
- The services involve the use of medical judgment.
- Pathologists devote significant time and effort to these services and they contribute
directly to the diagnosis, care, and treatment of individual patients.
- Pathologists have professional responsibility and legal accountability for such
services.
- Certification standards including those promulgated under/by the Clinical
Laboratory Improvement Amendments, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Health care Organizations, and the College of American Pathologists require the
performance of professional component services.
- Such services are separate and distinct from the hospital's technical component of
clinical laboratory services which include equipment, facility, non-pathologist
personnel, and other overhead costs.
2. Professional Organizations Support Professional Component Billing
- Professional component billing is specifically endorsed by the College of
American Pathologists.
- Professional component billing is specifically supported by the American
Pathology Foundation.
- The American Medical Association has endorsed professional component billing.
- Many state and local pathology associations and societies have formally adopted
resolutions supporting the propriety of professional component billing.
3. The CPT Manual Supports Billing for Professional Component Services
- The May 1999 edition of the CPT Assistant, which is produced by the American
Medical Association, specifically references professional component billing for
clinical laboratory services as appropriate, utilizing the 26 Modifier.
4. Applicable Case Law Supports the Propriety of Professional Component
Billing
- Federal case law (including federal case law within the Circuit applicable to Illinois),
as well as Illinois state court case law; clearly support the propriety of professional
component billing.
- This case law has precedential value in Illinois as opposed to the recent Florida
decision of Central States, Southeast and Southwest, Inc. vs. The Florida Society
of Pathologists.
- The Florida decision is not binding in Illinois and is only legally binding in a few
counties in Florida.
- The Florida decision does not stand for the proposition that professional component
billing is improper, but only that pathologists must have an express contractual
agreement with patients. This position is inconsistent with the above referenced
federal and Illinois state court cases.
- The Florida decision did not decide the issue of whether a payor is obligated under
its contracts to pay for professional component services.
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