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My husband went to the ophthalmology office for routine eye exam. He told the doctor the primary reason for visit is need a prescription for new pair eyeglass. When the doctor bill to the insurance, they used code for medical eye exam and refuse to submit service as routine eye exam. Because during the exam doctor find pinguecula “a type of conjunctival degeneration in the eye. It is extremely common and it is most prevalent in tropical climates and is in direct correlation with UV exposure”

My question is: can doctor bill this service as medical eye exam?

2007-06-27 05:16:01 · 3 answers · asked by rock77 2 in Health Other - Health

How is an eye exam classified as routine or medical? Is base on the purpose of the exam, not the findings?

2007-06-27 14:06:18 · update #1

3 answers

yes because technically it was a medical eye exam.... an ophthamologist is a medical doctor so an exam he does is considered a medical exam... if your husband would have gone to an optometrist, which is not considered a medical doctor, then the exam could have been billed as a routine eye exam

2007-06-27 05:31:48 · answer #1 · answered by Loolu 2 · 0 0

I think he can, because even though your husband went in for a routine eye exam, the doctor ended up performing a medical eye exam.

2007-06-27 05:23:56 · answer #2 · answered by kat 7 · 0 0

I would check with my insurance provider. It should probably be billed as an eye exam but the doctor gets more money for listing at as a medical eye exam. Only YOUR insurance company can tell you. Good luck!

2007-06-27 05:24:38 · answer #3 · answered by Sweetkat 5 · 0 0

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