Codes G0019 and G0022 for community health integration services
Providing and billing for these services can be complicated. Here's everything you need to know.
In 2024, the CMS finalized new codes to pay providers for community health integration (CHI) services. These services provide additional support to patients who have unmet social determinants of health (SDOH) needs that significantly limit the treating physician’s ability to diagnose or treat the patient.
Understanding CHI billing
CHI services include items such as:
Person-centered planning
Health system navigation assistance
Facilitating access to community-based resources
Practitioner, home- and community-based care coordination
Patient self-advocacy promotion
CMS code descriptors for G0019 and G0022
G0019 is used to indicate CHI services performed by certified or trained auxiliary personnel, including a community health worker, under the direction of a physician or other practitioner. These services include 60 minutes per calendar month spent on the following activities to address SDOH need(s), significantly limiting the ability to diagnose or treat problem(s) identified in an initiating visit:
- Performing a person-centered assessment to better understand the individualized context of the intersection between the SDOH need(s) and the problem(s) addressed in the initiating visit
- Facilitating patient-driven goal-setting and establishing an action plan
- Providing tailored support to the patient to accomplish the practitioner’s treatment plan, as needed
- Coordinating care with health care practitioners, home- and community-based care service providers
- Coordinating receipt of needed services from health care practitioners, providers and facilities as well as home- and community-based service providers, social service providers and caregivers (if applicable)
- Communicating with practitioners, home- and community-based service providers, hospitals and skilled nursing facilities (or other health care facilities) regarding the patient’s psychosocial strengths and needs, functional deficits, goals, preferences and desired outcomes, including cultural and linguistic factors
- Coordinating care transitions between and among health care practitioners and settings, including transitions involving referral to other clinicians; follow-up after an emergency department visit; or follow-up after discharges from hospitals, skilled nursing facilities or other health care facilities
- Facilitating access to community-based social services (e.g., housing, utilities, transportation, food assistance) to address the SDOH need(s)
- Supporting health education—helping the patient contextualize health education provided by the patient’s treatment team with the patient’s individual needs, goals and preferences, in the context of SDOH need(s) and educating the patient on how to best participate in medical decision-making
- Building patient self-advocacy skills, so the patient can interact with members of the health care team and related community-based services addressing the SDOH need(s), in ways more likely to promote personalized and effective diagnosis or treatment
- Supporting health care access/health system navigation
- Helping the patient access health care, including identifying appropriate practitioners or providers for clinical care and helping secure appointments with them
- Facilitating behavioral change as necessary for meeting diagnosis and treatment goals, including promoting patient motivation to participate in care and reach person-centered diagnosis or treatment goals
- Facilitating and providing social and emotional support to help the patient cope with the problem(s) addressed in the initiating visit, the SDOH need(s) and adjust daily routines to better meet diagnosis and treatment goals
- Leveraging lived experience when applicable to provide support, mentorship or inspiration to meet treatment goals
G0022 is used to indicate each additional 30 minutes of CHI services provided in a calendar month, list separately in addition to G0019.
Requirements for CHI services
Patients must have an initiating visit before receiving CHI services. During this visit, the physician identifies unmet SDOH needs and establishes a treatment plan. CHI initiating visits include:
Evaluation and management (E/M) visits, including the E/M provided as part of transitional care management
Annual wellness visits (when performed by a practitioner who will bill for CHI services)
Psychiatric diagnostic evaluation
Health Behavior Assessment and Intervention (HBAI) services
Initiating visits do not include:
Low-level visits (e.g., 99211) performed by clinical staff
Inpatient and observation visits, emergency department visits and skilled nursing facility visits
Auxiliary staff may provide subsequent CHI service. CMS expects these services will be performed using a combination of in-person and virtual (via audio and video or two-way audio).
Training requirements for CHI service providers
CHI services are provided incident-to the professional services of a physician or other billing practitioner under general supervision. Auxiliary personnel may be employed by the practice or contracted through an external organization, including through community-based organizations.
Auxiliary staff must meet all incident-to requirements and any state requirements. In states without applicable requirements, auxiliary staff must be certified and trained in the following competencies:
Patient and family communication
Interpersonal and relationship-building skills
Patient and family capacity building
Service coordination and systems navigation
Patient advocacy, facilitation, individual and community assessment
Professionalism and ethical conduct
Development of an appropriate knowledge base, including local community-based services
CHI services questions and answers
Is beneficiary consent required for CHI services?
Yes. Consent may be verbal or written but must be documented in the medical record. Consent should include explaining to the patient that cost-sharing will apply and that CHI services may only be billed by one physician or practitioner per month. Consent only needs to be obtained once unless the treating physician changes.
Are CHI services subject to deductible and coinsurance?
Yes. CHI services are subject to deductible and coinsurance. Some supplemental insurance plans may cover the patient’s cost-sharing.
What are the documentation requirements for CHI services?
In addition to patient consent, documentation should include the unmet social needs the CHI services are addressing, including the treatment plan. CMS encourages practices to document “Z codes” when applicable. Documentation must include the amount of time spent with the patient and the nature of the activities, including how they relate to the treatment plan. Auxiliary staff do not need to enter information directly into the patient’s medical record. Documentation may be entered by other staff as long as the physician reviews and verifies it.
How are CHI services billed?
CHI services are billed monthly and reported by the physician or practitioner providing the initiating visit. Only one physician or practitioner may bill CHI services per month.
Do private payers cover CHI services?
Most Medicare Advantage plans cover CHI services. For commercial plans, coverage varies by payer. Check with your provider relations representatives for additional information regarding their policies. Verify the patient’s benefits before providing CHI services.
How are CHI services different from other care management services (e.g., chronic care management [CCM])?
CHI services are like services such as CCM in that they provide additional, tailored support to patients. CCM services are primarily focused on clinical aspects of care and are limited to patients with two or more chronic conditions. CHI services are intended to address unmet social needs that limit the physician’s ability to diagnose or treat the patient. There are no limitations in the types of patients eligible for CHI services.
Can CHI services and other care management services (e.g., CCM) be billed concurrently?
Yes. As long as the requirements for both services are met, CHI and other care management services may be reported in the same month. Time and effort for both services must be unique. Do not count the same time and work more than once.
How are CHI and principal illness navigation (PIN) services different?
CHI and PIN services are very similar. A key difference in the services is that CHI services are focused on addressing patients’ unmet social needs. PIN services are focused on helping patients with a serious high-risk condition navigate the health care system and guiding them through their course of care. Patients receiving PIN services may also have unmet social needs, but it is not a requirement.