Word to the Wise: the KX Modifier
- By David Kopf
- Feb 01, 2012
One element of HME claims that providers must be particularly attentive
to is the KX modifier. While the modifier is applied to many DME claims,
many providers could be using it indiscriminately to the worst, or at the least
applying it without full consideration of what it entails. Moreover, it could represent
a considerable audit threat.
“I have a funny anecdote I like to share about the KX modifier,” says Wayne
van Halem, CFE, AHFI, president of The van Halem Group LLC, a firm that helps
providers respond to and appeal audits. “We do compliance assessments where we
come into an organization and assess how they’re doing operationally compliancewise.
We went into the billing operations of a client, and sat there while I watched
a biller submit a claim and I noticed that the claim had the KX modifier on it, and I
asked her why she put the modifier on the claim, and she looked at me like I was a
complete idiot, as though to say, ‘Duh, it won’t pay without it.’”
The KX modifier has become almost a default position for providers, with some
HMEs putting the KX modifier on nearly every claim. Getting the claim through is
not the purpose of the KX modifier, van Halem says.
“The KX modifiers means something very important,” he says. “It means the
provider knows that the patient qualifies for coverage based on the LCD. If providers
put a KX modifier on a claim and get audited, and it is determined that the patient is
not qualified for coverage, then that provider could be liable for a false claim violation.
… And the penalty for a false claim is $11,000.
“Providers who are billing a claim with a KX modifier without requesting or
looking at documentation before putting that modifier on a claim are taking a huge,
huge gamble,” he warns.
To give an idea of how ingrained the application of the modifier is, some HME billing
in claims systems automatically appends the KX modifier to a claim, van Halem notes.
The provider doesn’t have the option to decide whether or not to apply it.
“It should be something that the provider puts on the claim once they have the
documentation and have reviewed it,” he says.
The situation regarding the KX modifier isn’t as simple as providers trying to
simply push claims through, van Halem notes. Medicare is applying the modifier
to more and more product categories. That could be bait in that could land unsuspecting
providers in an audit trap.
“The OIG has had [the KX modifier] in their OIG work plan and it is in there again
this year,” he says. “They keep tweaking the terminology. All of this makes me think
that they’re using this KX modifier as a tool to implement false claims violations on
providers.
“And it’s not just DME,” he continues. “KX modifiers are in other types of provider
services, as well — physical therapy, all sorts of services.”
That said, this move by CMS appears to be a work in progress, van Halem says.
“The government is not there yet,” he explains. “I’ve not seen any false claim violations
with a KX modifier, but they are certainly denying claims, and I think they’re
moving toward that. I think this is a tool that government is looking to use, and
they’re just building up to it. It scares the heck out of me, quite frankly.”
This article originally appeared in the February 2012 issue of HME Business.
About the Author
David Kopf is the Publisher HME Business, DME Pharmacy and Mobility Management magazines. He was Executive Editor of HME Business and DME Pharmacy from 2008 to 2023. Follow him on LinkedIn at linkedin.com/in/dkopf/ and on Twitter at @postacutenews.