Current Procedural Terminology
The Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) code set is maintained by the American Medical Association through the CPT Editorial Panel[1]. The CPT code set accurately describes medical, surgical, and diagnostic services and is designed to communicate uniform information about medical services and procedures among physicians, coders, patients, accreditation organizations, and payers for administrative, financial, and analytical purposes. The current version is the CPT 2010.
There are three types of CPT codes:
- Category I CPT Code(s)
- Category II CPT Code(s) – Performance Measurement
- Category III CPT Code(s) – Emerging Technology
CPT is currently identified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) [2] as Level 1 of the Health Care Procedure Coding System.
Contents
Copyright
CPT is a registered trademark of the American Medical Association. The AMA holds copyright which prevents free use and distribution of codes.[3]
Although the CPT system is mandated by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and HIPAA, and the data for it appear in the Federal Register, the American Medical Association (AMA) maintains that their copyright of the CPT allows them to charge a license fee to anyone who wishes to associate Relative Value Unit (RVU) values with CPT codes. The AMA receives approximately $70 million annually from these fees, making them reluctant to allow the free distribution of tools and data that might help physicians calculate, record, or submit their fees accurately and fairly.[citation needed]
Limited CPT Search Offered by the AMA
The AMA offers a personal, non-commercial search of the Current Procedural Terminology, Fourth Edition ("CPT") manual on its website:
https://catalog.ama-assn.org/Catalog/cpt/cpt_search.jsp
Unfortunately, this tool limits not only the number of codes anyone can look up, but it does not provide helpful information (such as the component values of each code or the ability to use an individual fee multiplier) or provide the results in a manner that can be easily adopted to a spreadsheet for analysis, etc. For providers or patients to fairly assess medical charges, they must pay the AMA a license fee.
References
See also
External links
- Official site by the AMA* Description of the three sections from the AMA
- History from the AMA
- Q&A from the American Academy of Family Physicians
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