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The parking lot visit: how it works

FPM Editors
March 25, 2020

Samuel L. Church, MD, MPH, and Jessica Grooms, CMA, care for a patient in the parking lot of Synergy Health in Hiawassee, Georgia.

In an effort to minimize patient and staff exposure to infectious pathogens (COVID-19, influenza, etc.), many offices are redefining the waiting, triage, and exam rooms. Some clinics are conducting parts or the entirety of the patient encounter in the parking lot — either in a tent or in the patient's car.

These visits begin with a brief patient evaluation by triage staff, including the collection of vitals and even flu and strep swabs. Physicians and qualified health care professionals (QHPs) then complete the visits through decision algorithms and face-to-face encounters in the parking lot or the exam room, depending on the initial evaluation.

While parking lot visits are most commonly used for patients with fever or infectious symptoms as a way of keeping them isolated from healthy patients, even some healthy patients are requesting follow-up visits in the parking lot, hoping to minimize their exposure as part of social distancing efforts. Some patients are even requesting to have their routine lab draws collected in the parking lot. Interesting times indeed.

Certainly the parking lot format can disrupt the patient flow everyone is accustomed to, and there are limitations if patients need certain examinations or procedures, but patients and clinicians seem generally pleased with these encounters in our clinic.

Because there is some inherent loss of privacy with the parking lot visit, staff should take steps to minimize exposure of protected health information (PHI). Creative solutions include schedule spacing, distancing vehicles, and even having the encounter in a drive-through tent.

Payment

These encounters are subject to the same coding and billing requirements as if they were conducted in the exam room. If the patient does not see a physician or QHP, E/M codes are limited to 99211, along with whatever point-of-care testing is conducted.

There may be new expenses related to these visits including tents, personal protective equipment (PPE), and additional staffing. At this point, there is no mechanism to capture these costs, although it is recommended to keep track of them. Keep in mind that some cases may create additional visit complexity or time, which can be captured through E/M visit levels. In addition, there may be opportunities for businesses and individuals to recover some or all disaster/emergency related losses through state and federal programs.

— Samuel L. Church, MD, MPH, CPC, CRC, FAAFP
Northeast Georgia Medical Center Family Medicine Residency, Core Faculty
AAFP Advisor, AMA CPT Editorial Panel

Posted on Mar 25, 2020 by FPM Editors

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