DME Pharmacy
Fostering Good Documentation Practices
Accreditation helps DME pharmacies put the right documentation policies and procedures in place.
- By Joseph Duffy
- Dec 01, 2016
To sell Medicare reimbursable DME products, pharmacies need to be accredited
unless they have been in the DME business long enough to be grandfathered
in. Accreditation helps pharmacies providing DME products to construct excellent
documentation practices that help minimize their exposure to audits.
Sandra Canally, President of The Compliance Team, a
healthcare accreditation organization, offers these documentation
tips for pharmacies serving Medicare-funded
patients. But beware — pharmacies must understand
their own state requirements for DME products. Canally
suggested using the National Supplier Clearinghouse
Licensor Directory (www.palmettogba.com/nsc) because it goes through every state and every item
requirement.
- Get any type of licensor or certification that’s required
to sell DME products. Research what the billing
criteria is through the local coverage determination (LCD). This will tell you if
you need a license or a certification for that type of product.
- Document employee training on products requiring it. For example, if you are
carrying diabetic shoes, you will need patient instruction and fitting documentation,
which is part of what any auditor would look at.
- Collect documentation that shows the patient’s ailment. For example, if selling
diabetic shoes, you should collect and document that the patient is in fact a diabetic.
Another product carried extensively by pharmacies is the nebulizer because the
pharmacies carry the drugs used with it, says Canally. The nebulizer is a respiratory
item so the pharmacy must have documented follow-up and access with 24/7 capability
to respond if somebody’s nebulizer fails.
Further, nebulizers can be a rental or purchase item. If it’s a rental item, when it
comes back to the pharmacy, there needs to be documentation of cleaning, testing, etc.
Mary Ellen Conway, president of consulting firm Capital
Healthcare Group LLC., offers these documentation tips:
- Don’t use a yellow highlighter because when the
audit company gets your record, they scan it to create
an electronic file. A yellow highlighter may end up
blocking out what it is supposed to highlight.
- Don’t submit records with post-it notes attached
or write notes on medical records. Instead, place a
summary narrative on the front of every record that
tells the reviewer what they’re going to find, what page
it is on, where it is, etc.
- Never use white-out. Instead, initial and date all corrections regarding your own
submittals. Obviously you cannot correct anything the doctor or prescriber might
have written.
- All signatures must be legible. Do not use stamped signatures. If a doctor’s or
prescriber’s signature is illegible, take the time to get a signature attestation.
This article originally appeared in the DME Pharmacy December 2016 issue of HME Business.
About the Author
Joseph Duffy is a freelance writer and marketing consultant, and a regular contributor to HME Business and DME Pharmacy. He can be reached via e-mail at [email protected].