eAssist January Newsletter

Page 1

Jan/Feb 2022

INSURANCE SOLUTIONS

NEWSLETTER CBCT Coding, Dental and Medical Billing, and Strategies for Profitability

Cone Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT) technology provides doctors with highly accurate images of the oral structures (anatomical positions of the teeth, soft tissue, and bones), allowing improved diagnosis and treatment planning. Cone Beam CT scanning technology with 2D or 3D renderings enables the doctor to “see” critical anatomic structures for implant placement, oral surgery, orthodontic, periodontal, endodontic, and TMJ procedures.

IN THIS ISSUE 1 CBCT Coding, Dental

and Medical Billing, and Strategies for Profitability

7 Focus on a New CDT Code 8 CDT Code Set May Receive Significant Revamp

9 The No Surprises Act and Dental Practice

11 Penny Reed Now CEO of Practice Booster®

11 Discounted Fee

Schedule Scenario

12 The Great PPO Question 15 Practice Booster Q&A

ISN_Jan-Feb-2022.indd 1

CBCT is a relatively new 3D imaging technology adopted by practices that provides a method to evaluate the anatomical positions of teeth and the makeup of the bone in a 3D image. An imaging unit (similar in size to a panorex machine) has an arm that revolves around the patient’s head in about 20 seconds. The CT acquires the axial, coronal, and sagittal data. The patient is exposed to radiation as the data is collected. An actual image is not produced. The data is captured and is stored, collated, and compiled into a 2D or 3D data pack. This data may be retrieved, assimilated, and viewed at a later time.

CBCT Guidelines for Dentistry The patient is exposed to radiation during any radiographic procedure. A CBCT should be performed only when necessary to provide clinical information that cannot be obtained using other imaging modalities. The FDA’s Initiative to Reduce Unnecessary Radiation Exposure from Medical Imaging states imaging professionals are advised to follow the principles of justification and optimization to protect their patients. Radiation doses from dental CBCTs are usually lower than other types of CT evaluations. However, dental CBCTs typically deliver more radiation than other conventional digital dental imaging modalities. Doctors must justify each radiographic examination on an individual needs’ basis, and the patient benefit of each exposure must outweigh the risks. The American Dental Association (ADA) outlines guidelines related to the use of CBCT by dental professionals in “The Use of Cone-Beam Computed Tomography in Dentistry: An Advisory Statement from the American Dental Association Council on Scientific Affairs,” as published in the August 2019 edition of The Journal of the American Dental Association (JADA).

1/17/22 10:32 AM


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