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The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the Service-Connected Classification Question

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The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the Service-Connected Classification Question. A condition is only service connected if it has been rated as an adjudicated service connected disability through the Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA). OBJECTIVES. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the Service-Connected Classification Question
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Page 1: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the

Service-Connected Classification

Question

Page 2: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

A condition is only service connected if it has been rated as an adjudicated service connected disability through the Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA).

Page 3: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

OBJECTIVES

This presentation will provide staff with information that will aid in correctly designating a visit as service connected (SC) or non service connected (NSC).

Page 4: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

The encounter form or computer screen will display:

Visit Related To:

Service Connected Condition

Combat Vet (Combat Related)

Agent Orange Exposure

Ionizing Radiation Exposure

Environmental Contaminants

MST

Head and/or Neck Cancer

Is treatment for a service connected condition? It is the responsibility of the provider to mark the encounter based on their clinical judgment and eligibility information as: * service connected or *non service connected

Yes No

Page 5: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Why the SC/NSC determination is so important? Monitored by:

– Congress– Office of Management and Budget (OMB)– Top VHA Officials– Third Party Payers– Veterans (patients)

VHA requires this data for:• Utilization studies• Research• Budgeting• Business Office operations

Page 6: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

BILLING REQUIREMENT

Title 38 legislation requires VHA to bill for care provided for a condition that is not service connected or a special authority.

Bills are processed for non service connected care, which includes adjunct and secondary conditions.

Page 7: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

What is a service-connected condition? “Service-connected” refers to a VBA decision that a

veteran’s illness or injury was incurred in or aggravated by military service.

VBA establishes the degree of disability for each service connected condition.

A veteran may have more than one adjudicated service connected condition.

If the primary rated condition worsens over time, encourage patient to have VBA complete a reassessment of rated disabilities.

Page 8: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

What does the SC % rating represent?

The percentage ratings represent as far as can practically be determined

– The average impairment in earning capacity resulting from such diseases and

– Injuries and/or their residual conditions in civil occupations.

Page 9: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Other Encounter Classifications

If applicable the provider should also indicate if the encounter is for care due to (special authorities):

– Agent Orange exposure– Ionizing Radiation exposure– Environmental Contaminants– Military Sexual Trauma– Head and/or Neck Cancer– Combat Service– SHAD (Shipboard Hazard and Defense)

Page 10: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Service-Connected billing

Treatment provided for service connected conditions or special authorities is not billable

Exception– Workers compensation or tort feasor claims for

injury of service-connected disability (Notify your facility revenue office when you encounter a patient with a work related injury/condition.)

Reference: M-1, Part I Chapter 15, section 15.02 b (5).  VA can bill: "Veterans for service-connected disabilities when it is medically determined that re-injury or aggravation of the service-connected disability is due to a compensable occupational injury or disease or the negligence or other legal wrong of a third person.” 

Page 11: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

IMPORTANT

“Service connected” does not mean that all treatment a veteran receives is considered to be service connected

The treating clinician is responsible for the determination based on accurate service connected information within the patient record, not just from what the patient states, for each patient encounter and/or medication prescription.

Page 12: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Where to find information about the veteran’s service connection Electronic Encounter Form Consolidated Health Record Computerized Patient Record System Patient Interview Appointment List Patient Inquiry Appointment Management Rating Decision Registration and eligibility staff

Page 13: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

VBA Rating Codes for Service connected Conditions Vague Codes

– What Do They Mean??– Where do I find more information?

The best source to clarify the patient’s rated condition is the individual rating decision for the patient.– For general information about ratings,

codes, and percentages visit the VBA website: http://vbaw.vba.va.gov/bl/21/publicat/regs/Part4/toc.htm

Page 14: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

How to make a SC/NSC determination

The clinician documents all identified conditions and treatment given during an encounter. (These may be different than what the veteran was scheduled).

Mark the encounter form with the appropriate diagnostic and procedure codes. Remember: the clinical documentation MUST support your choices.

Page 15: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

How to make a SC/NSC determination

Determine if the condition for which the veteran is treated is specifically for any service connected condition(s)

If it is, mark the encounter as service connected.

If it is not, mark the encounter as Non service connected.

Page 16: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Medications

Medications for conditions adjunct/secondary (associated with) or aggravated by the service connected rated conditions are billable.

This includes drugs that may prevent co-morbid disease progression and/or treat secondary or adjunct conditions.

If the medication is for an adjunct/secondary condition, mark the prescription as Non service connected.

If the medication is for an adjudicated service connected condition or special , mark the prescription as service connected.

Page 17: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Adjunct Conditions

Remember If the treatment provided was for a condition

which you consider to be adjunct/secondary (associated with) or aggravated by the service-connected condition(s), you MUST answer NO to the service connected classification question!

Page 18: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. Do veterans receive free care at the VA Medical Center?

A. Not all veterans.

– Most veterans have a Medication co-pay

– Certain priority patients by law through income-based determinations (Means Test) must make co-payments

Page 19: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. If I don’t mark the encounter as service-connected, will the veteran be eligible for the service?

A. Yes. Public Law 104-262, The Veterans Health Care Eligibility Reform Act of 1996, created a medical benefits package which is available to all enrolled veterans.

Page 20: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. If a patient is 100% service connected for a specific condition, are all their encounters service connected?

A. No. The percentage (%) of service connection pertains only to the rated condition. If the encounter was for a non service connected condition, it would not be considered a service connected encounter.

If a patient is 0% or 100%, they are still rated for that specific condition.

Page 21: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. Are encounters marked as AO, EC, MST, CV etc…(special authorities) billable?

A. No* If check-out under special authorities, such as

Title 38 USC 1710(e), the encounters do not trigger 1st party charges nor the Integrated Billing package.

Page 22: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. Must the veteran’s private insurance company be billed for conditions that are adjunct or secondary to the service-connected condition?

A. Yes. Current interpretation of the law:

– Adjunct condition associated with or aggravating a disease or condition which is service connected

– Secondary condition has been caused or is the result of a service connected condition

Adjunct and secondary conditions are not service connected per interpretation of the law and should be billed to the insurance carrier

Page 23: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Frequently Asked Questions

If a veteran is treated for both a service connected and non service connected condition at the same visit, should the provider, mark the encounter as service-connected?

A. Yes. If the primary diagnosis is service connected, the visit is marked service connected. If the primary diagnosis is not service connected and treatment was provided for a secondary diagnosis that is service connected (excluding mention of stable chronic conditions and routine medication refills), the visit is marked service connected.

Page 24: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

Do You Have Other Questions about the SC/NSC Determination Process?

Contact your local Revenue Office for assistance.

Page 25: The Clinician’s Guide to Answering the  Service-Connected  Classification  Question

The End


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