Multiple-Procedure Claim Reductions? episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 1, 2025 · 4 MIN

Multiple-Procedure Claim Reductions?

from Dynamic Chiropractic · host Dynamic Chiropractic

The article sheds light on a crucial aspect of healthcare reimbursement: the Multiple-Procedure Payment Reduction (MPPR), also known as a multi-therapy discount. This protocol, primarily initiated by Medicare (CMS) and adopted by many commercial insurers, including the VA, UnitedHealthcare, and Optum Health, impacts providers performing multiple procedures during a single patient encounter. The rationale behind MPPR is that when several services are delivered simultaneously, there's an overlap in pre- and post-procedure work, such as patient greeting, room preparation, or general counseling, which would otherwise lead to duplicative reimbursement.Under MPPR, only the highest-valued procedure is paid at full price. Subsequent services face a reduction of 50% of their "practice expense (PE)" component, which covers operational costs like rent, equipment, and non-physician staff, but not the physician's work or malpractice expenses. As PE constitutes about 44% of a code's total value, the overall reduction on affected services is typically a smaller, yet impactful, 7-20% of the total, often $3-$10 per service. While completely avoiding these reductions isn't feasible, practices can mitigate their impact by ensuring staff understand MPPR, listing the highest-value procedure first (based on RVU), being aware of diverse payer rules, and knowing which CPT codes, like E/M or CMT services, are exempt.

The article sheds light on a crucial aspect of healthcare reimbursement: the Multiple-Procedure Payment Reduction (MPPR), also known as a multi-therapy discount. This protocol, primarily initiated by Medicare (CMS) and adopted by many commercial insurers, including the VA, UnitedHealthcare, and Optum Health, impacts providers performing multiple procedures during a single patient encounter. The rationale behind MPPR is that when several services are delivered simultaneously, there's an overlap in pre- and post-procedure work, such as patient greeting, room preparation, or general counseling, which would otherwise lead to duplicative reimbursement.Under MPPR, only the highest-valued procedure is paid at full price. Subsequent services face a reduction of 50% of their "practice expense (PE)" component, which covers operational costs like rent, equipment, and non-physician staff, but not the physician's work or malpractice expenses. As PE constitutes about 44% of a code's total value, the overall reduction on affected services is typically a smaller, yet impactful, 7-20% of the total, often $3-$10 per service. While completely avoiding these reductions isn't feasible, practices can mitigate their impact by ensuring staff understand MPPR, listing the highest-value procedure first (based on RVU), being aware of diverse payer rules, and knowing which CPT codes, like E/M or CMT services, are exempt.

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Multiple-Procedure Claim Reductions?

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This episode was published on August 1, 2025.

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The article sheds light on a crucial aspect of healthcare reimbursement: the Multiple-Procedure Payment Reduction (MPPR), also known as a multi-therapy discount. This protocol, primarily initiated by Medicare (CMS) and adopted by many commercial...

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