About 116,000 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Anatomical Modifiers - Novitas Solutions

    Anatomical modifiers include coronary artery, eye lid, finger, side of body, and toe. Bilateral indicator of 1 must be reported with 1 unit of service and modifier 50. The 50 modifier identifies …

  2. Anatomic Modifiers | Priority Health

    Jun 23, 2025 · For services that require more than four modifiers, report modifier 99 in the first modifier position. The other specific anatomical location modifiers should be listed in item 19 …

  3. A GA modifier is attached to the colonoscopy code, which alerts Medicare that it is expected to be denied as not reasonable and necessary and that the patient was informed.

  4. Medical Coding Anatomical Modifiers | Coding Clarified

    Jan 7, 2025 · In medical coding, anatomical modifiers are tools used to specify the exact location where a medical procedure or service was performed.

  5. Anatomical modifiers | FCSO Medicare

    Procedures performed during separate patient encounters, at separate anatomic sites, or on separate specimens, may require a modifier be reported. Avoid claim denials or appeals due …

  6. Modifiers - JE Part B - Noridian

    Feb 3, 2025 · Modifiers can be two digit numbers, two character modifiers, or alpha-numeric indicators. Modifiers provide additional information to payers to make sure your provider gets …

  7. UnitedHealthcare requires specific surgical procedure codes in the range of 10000-69999 assigned a bilateral indicator of “1” on the National Physician Fee Schedule to be billed with an …

  8. Aug 12, 2025 · Providers must align rendered and reported services by appending applicable anatomical modifier(s) to procedures involving fingers, toes, eyes, coronary arteries, and …

  9. Anatomical modifiers – modifiers that designate the area or part of the body on which the procedure is performed on different sites. This includes bilateral designation (right or left side …

  10. Modifiers - Complete Listing - Novitas Solutions

    Note: It is up to the provider to determine if a modifier applies, and then choose the most appropriate modifier based on medical documentation. The definition of each modifier can be …