AMCI Mini - How to Calculate Anesthesia Time and Payments?
FULLSTÄNDIGT TRANSKRIPT
this is an AMCI mini by Mrs J in
partnership with
aapc our question for today how to
calculate the anesthesia time well I'm
going to show
you well when you're calculating the
anesthesia time you have to know some
guidelines and these guidelines you can
find on page 54 of your
2016 um CPT
manual the first is the time begins when
the anesthesiologist begins to prepare
the patient and for more
clarification that is when that patient
is in the o or
some some place that's that's comparable
so they have to be in the o or in a
comparable place and your key word is
anesthesiologist so the anesthesiologist
or nurse anesthetist begins to prepare
the patient and this time ends when the
patient is handed over and out of the
care of the anesthesiologist so when
they're handed over to recovery the
recovery nurse that's a good
indicator here's another um um this is
every 15 minutes equals one unit of time
that's another guideline that you have
to follow every 15 minutes equals one
unit of time here is a um image of the
time reporting guideline for when
anesthesia time begins and ends so it
there it is and it's on your page 54 if
you're looking at the
2016 CPT so
remember okay let's begin with a
scenario a pre-anesthesia assessment was
performed and signed at 10:21
a.m. anesthesia start time is reported
as 12:26 p.m. and the surgery began at
12:37 p.m. the surgery finished at 1512
p.m. and the patient was turned over to
Pac you at
1526 p.m. which is reported as the
anesthesia time and what is the
anesthesia time reported okay I did not
come up with this question but it sounds
like they're asking what is the
anesthesia time so let's take a quick
peek let's look at the
scenario no I don't want to look at the
scenario I want to ref reference my
guideline so let me look at this
guideline the guideline is time begins
when the anesthesiologist begins to
prepare the patient and ends when the
patient is handed over and out of the
care of the
anesthesiologist all right that's pretty
direct so let's go ahead and see when
the anesthesia time began um it says
that a pre-anesthesia assessment was
performed at 10:21 well that's good
information however we can assume a lot
but the the biggest thing that we can
assume or know is that it doesn't tell
us if the
anesthesiologist did anything so anyone
could have done it so therefore 10:21 is
not our start time but the scenario
tells you anesthesia start time is
reported is at
12:26 so the scenario is telling us the
start time that is indeed our start time
12:26 so a has a start time of
1021 and D has a start time of
1237 so both are
eliminated now we need to know the end
time again the end time is when the
patient is handed over and out of the
care of the
anesthesiologist all right the surgery
finish time is
1512 that's not what we're looking for
we're not looking for the the surgery
time we're looking for when the patient
is turned over or handed over and the
patient was turned over to pack you at
1526 indeed
1526 is our anesthesia end time so B is
correct the begin time is 12:26 and the
end time is
1526 okay so let's so that was pretty
simple so let's look at a scenario where
we have have to calculate the
anesthesia time unit all right so that's
what most people want to know how do you
calculate the time units well we're
going to look at this scenario and we're
going to change a few things and not
make it so neat okay I'm going to show
you how to calculate time using my
circle quadrants no I did not come up
with this I think I learned this maybe
20 years ago when I was working working
as a payer for a um
large
payer okay let's
go okay here it's
and if we know that anesthesia time took
3 hours and 27 minutes and we've got to
figure out the number of
units I say use
this
circled quadrant visual yes go ahead and
draw a circle and put a plus in the
middle because each
quadrant 1 2 3 4 equals 15 minutes and
if you have if you count them up that's
going to equal 60 and therefore this is
going to represent 1 hour and also each
quadrant equals one unit so if we know
that 3 hours and 27 minutes is our time
let's go ahead and shade in we know 3
hours this is 1 hour that's 2 hours and
this is three hours oh that's a cute
little visual so let's go ahead and
shade them in because we have to know
exactly the number
of units so everything that we're
shading in each each quadrant equals
one anesthesia time unit
all right so we know we got three hours
so let me
quickly oh never been a good drawer but
I'm doing my best as long as it has red
in
it we count
it so we're going to count our three in
a
second there's our three hours one two
three so what we have to do is count the
units within those three hours there's
four one 2 3 four there's another four
five 6 7 8 and here's another four 1
excuse me 9 10 11 12 so at least that's
12 units but don't forget we got to
calculate the quadrants for 27 minutes
and how you do it we know this is
15 and we know this is a maximum of
30 all right so 27 Falls right in here
so so we know we have 12 here 13
14 14 units of time so anesthesia time
if it was 3 hours and 27 minutes it is
it equals to 14 units of anesthesia
time and don't forget each quadrant
equals 15 15 minutes 15 um 15 minutes of
time equals 1 unit let's try it
again okay anesthesia time took 2 hours
and 33 minutes we know because we've got
2 hours that we need at least two
circled quadrants and we also have 33
minutes and we know we need an
additional one so I'm just going to put
my three quadrants out circled quad to
say that okay and I know each quadrant
equals 15 minutes and that equals one
unit of time so the
first we got to figure out the two hours
let's go ahead and shade in two
hours that's one let's shade in the
second
hour that's two now the third one is
we've got to shade in the 15 minutes
remember we've got 33 minutes to shade
in and then we're going to shade the
next quadrant that's up to 30 minutes so
now we're moving on into this next
quadrant for those three extra
minutes okay so this is not an hour so
ignore that so let's count our units 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 there you go it's
11 time
units okay let's take a look at
something else I want to look at it from
a different
perspective let's say the scenario just
gives you the minutes some people have a
little difficulty converting and that's
the reason why calculators manual
calculators are permitted on the CPC
exam um let's say they give you only the
minutes
what you have to do is simply divide it
by 60 and if you divide your anesthesia
time minutes by
60 let's say your anesthesia time is 120
Minutes you divide it by 60 that equals
2 hours and that equals 8 units so I
would do my circle quadrants in for you
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