In response to your letter on 3/14/regarding Ms*** complaints regarding her we and billing at Greenwood Pain Management, we offer the following:Patient states she was referred to Greenwood Pain Management for a "consult" on 8124/by her family physician and felt like x-rays and a
urine sample was "a lot".Clinic: Her PCP, John *** MD, stated on his referral form; "External referral to evaluatedevelop & implement Tx plan of care for "chronic pain"Dr*** referral was reviewed then DrDoraswamy performed an exam, ordered x-rays to assess a diagnosis and then recommended a plan of treatmentIt is our clinic protocol to examine the patient, order necessary x-rays and a urine screen on their initial visitPatient: discusses a bill from Quicktox lab that was out of her network.Clinic: The patient signed the Quicktox test requisition form and received a copy of said formAs a courtesy to patients we check insurance for eligibility and benefitsUltimately the patient is responsible for their own insuranceWe do not perform eligibility and benefits for the confirmation lab, The patient could have checked with Quicktox or declined the urine screen until she verified if the lab was in her network.Our charges for the drug screen were $Her Insurance allowed $which wasapplied to her deductible, so the insurance did not pay our clinicThe remainder of the $was written offThe patient received $credit toward her deductible and she is responsible for paying that amount to our clinicIt will not be written oft.The treatment plan for the patient included injectionsWhile patients are in treatment they may receive narcotic pain medications which require initial and periodic urine drug screenThe patient signed a "Controlled Substance (narcotic) Agreement" and specifically initialed the line agreeing to urine screeningFurthermore, The Indiana Medical Licensing Board adopted Senate Enrolled Act which states in part:"At any time the physician determines that it is medically necessary, whether at the outset of the treatment plan, or any time thereafter, a prescribing physician shall perform or order a drug monitoring test that must include a confirmatory test using a method selective enough to differentiate individual drugs within a drug class."It is our position that we acted in accordance with her primary care physician's referral/requestIn addition, we followed our clinic protocol which is consistent with DEA guidelines and the Indiana Medical Licensing BoardFinally, we followed the decision tendered by Cigna in regard to the patient's chargesIf there are further questions, we would be happy to respondSincerely,
Mark ** ***
Greenwood Pain Management
In response to your letter on 3/14/regarding Ms*** complaints regarding her we and billing at Greenwood Pain Management, we offer the following:Patient states she was referred to Greenwood Pain Management for a "consult" on 8124/by her family physician and felt like x-rays and a
urine sample was "a lot".Clinic: Her PCP, John *** MD, stated on his referral form; "External referral to evaluatedevelop & implement Tx plan of care for "chronic pain"Dr*** referral was reviewed then DrDoraswamy performed an exam, ordered x-rays to assess a diagnosis and then recommended a plan of treatmentIt is our clinic protocol to examine the patient, order necessary x-rays and a urine screen on their initial visitPatient: discusses a bill from Quicktox lab that was out of her network.Clinic: The patient signed the Quicktox test requisition form and received a copy of said formAs a courtesy to patients we check insurance for eligibility and benefitsUltimately the patient is responsible for their own insuranceWe do not perform eligibility and benefits for the confirmation lab, The patient could have checked with Quicktox or declined the urine screen until she verified if the lab was in her network.Our charges for the drug screen were $Her Insurance allowed $which wasapplied to her deductible, so the insurance did not pay our clinicThe remainder of the $was written offThe patient received $credit toward her deductible and she is responsible for paying that amount to our clinicIt will not be written oft.The treatment plan for the patient included injectionsWhile patients are in treatment they may receive narcotic pain medications which require initial and periodic urine drug screenThe patient signed a "Controlled Substance (narcotic) Agreement" and specifically initialed the line agreeing to urine screeningFurthermore, The Indiana Medical Licensing Board adopted Senate Enrolled Act which states in part:"At any time the physician determines that it is medically necessary, whether at the outset of the treatment plan, or any time thereafter, a prescribing physician shall perform or order a drug monitoring test that must include a confirmatory test using a method selective enough to differentiate individual drugs within a drug class."It is our position that we acted in accordance with her primary care physician's referral/requestIn addition, we followed our clinic protocol which is consistent with DEA guidelines and the Indiana Medical Licensing BoardFinally, we followed the decision tendered by Cigna in regard to the patient's chargesIf there are further questions, we would be happy to respondSincerely,
Mark ** ***
Greenwood Pain Management