Perinatology Billing Experts

Perinatology Medical Billing Services

Perinatology billing, also known as maternal-fetal medicine, involves high-risk obstetric care coding that extends beyond standard OB global packages.

Perinatology Medical Billing Services
96%

First-Pass Clean Claim Rate

$1.8K

Avg. MFM Consultation Revenue Protected

3.6%

Client Denial Rate

18 Days

Average Days to Payment

Overview

Specialized Billing for High-Risk Pregnancy Care

Perinatology billing, also known as maternal-fetal medicine, involves high-risk obstetric care coding that extends beyond standard OB global packages. Antepartum surveillance codes for non-stress tests (59025), biophysical profiles (76818-76819), and detailed fetal ultrasounds (76811-76812) are frequently performed and must be documented with specific clinical indications to justify medical necessity beyond routine prenatal care.

High-risk pregnancy management often requires consultation codes and subsequent care codes that run concurrently with the primary OB provider's global package. Coordination between the perinatologist's billing and the delivering provider's billing demands clear documentation of which services fall inside versus outside the global OB fee.

Specialized Billing for High-Risk Pregnancy Care
Challenges

Common Perinatology billing Challenges We Solve

Every Perinatology billing team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage. We tighten those weak points before they turn into write-offs.

Global OB Package Coordination

When an MFM specialist provides services for a patient whose primary OB has billed the global OB package, distinguishing which services are included in the global package and which are separately billable by the MFM requires detailed knowledge of obstetric bundling rules.

Consultation vs. Referral Coding

MFM specialists frequently receive referrals for second opinions on high-risk pregnancies. Whether to code the visit as a consultation (where payers still accept consultation codes) or a new patient E/M visit affects reimbursement and requires payer-specific knowledge.

Fetal Diagnostic Procedure Billing

Procedures like amniocentesis (59000), CVS (59015), and cordocentesis (59012) have specific coding rules, risk-based documentation requirements, and genetic counseling components that must be captured separately for full reimbursement.

Antepartum Testing Frequency Justification

High-risk patients may require weekly or twice-weekly non-stress tests and biophysical profiles. Payers review testing frequency and deny claims when documentation does not support the medical necessity for the testing interval ordered.

Services

Complete Perinatology billing Services

Support spans the full revenue cycle, from front-end verification to denial recovery and reporting.

MFM consultation coding with payer-specific consultation vs. E/M determination

Fetal ultrasound billing (76801-76828) including detailed anatomy and fetal echo

Invasive procedure coding: amniocentesis (59000), CVS (59015), cordocentesis (59012)

Antepartum surveillance billing (NST 59025, BPP 76818-76819) with frequency justification

Global OB package coordination between MFM and referring obstetrician

High-risk pregnancy documentation support for medical necessity and payer appeals

Coverage

Serving Perinatology billing Teams Nationwide

We support independent practices, multisite groups, and growing provider organizations with flexible workflows.

Independent physician groups

Multi-location practices

Private equity backed platforms

Hospital-owned outpatient groups

Guide

The Complete Guide to Perinatology billing

Perinatology Medical Billing Overview

She was 31 weeks pregnant with twins when her OB referred her to the maternal-fetal medicine specialist. One twin had intrauterine growth restriction. Surveillance ultrasounds were ordered twice weekly. Amniocentesis was scheduled. The MFM physician spent 45 minutes reviewing the fetal anatomy findings with the family and coordinating with the neonatology team at the delivery hospital. The care was coordinated and attentive. The billing was not. Three biophysical profiles were billed at the wrong technical component rate. The amniocentesis claim lacked the correct professional versus technical split modifier. The 45-minute counseling session was never billed at all. Over four weeks of high-risk care, the practice lost nearly $1,400 in legitimate reimbursement to billing errors that nobody caught.

Perinatology, or maternal-fetal medicine (MFM), covers the highest-acuity segment of obstetric care. MFM specialists manage twin and triplet pregnancies, fetal anomalies, maternal medical complications, and preterm labor, all with billing complexity that surpasses standard obstetric global fee billing. Unlike routine OB practices that bill a global delivery package (CPT 59400, 59510), MFM specialists rarely bill the obstetric global. They bill individual antepartum visits, diagnostic procedures, and consultations, each with its own coding requirements. Medicare and Medicaid cover MFM services for Medicaid-eligible high-risk pregnancies, while commercial payers including UnitedHealthcare, BCBS, Aetna, Cigna, and Humana apply their own antepartum and diagnostic procedure coverage policies.

Common Billing Challenges in Perinatology

  • Technical versus professional component splitting for ultrasound: MFM practices that own their ultrasound equipment bill the global code for both technical and professional components (CPT 76811 for detailed fetal anatomy survey). Practices that use hospital-owned equipment bill only the professional component with modifier 26. Billing the global code when only the professional component is appropriate generates hospital duplicate billing disputes and overpayment demands from payers.
  • Biophysical profile coding specificity: A biophysical profile (CPT 76818) includes ultrasound evaluation plus a nonstress test (NST). A biophysical profile without NST (CPT 76819) covers only the ultrasound component. Billing 76818 when an NST was not performed, or billing 76819 when both components were completed, results in coding inaccuracy that generates both underpayment and overpayment exposure depending on the error direction.
  • Antepartum visit coding after global OB transfer: When a patient’s global OB care is transferred to an MFM specialist mid-pregnancy, the MFM practice must bill antepartum visits individually (99213/99214 or 59425 for antepartum care, 4-6 visits) rather than under a global package. Practices that do not understand the global transfer process incorrectly bill individual visits to payers that have a global package on file with the referring OB, generating coordination of benefits denials.
  • Fetal intervention procedure prior authorization: Procedures including amniocentesis (59000), chorionic villus sampling (59015), fetal blood sampling, and laser coagulation for twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) require prior authorization from most commercial payers. BCBS and UnitedHealthcare require genetic counseling documentation and specific diagnosis codes before approving invasive fetal procedures. Authorization failures delay procedures and result in claim denials when services are performed before approval is obtained.

Key CPT Codes for Perinatology Billing

  • 76811: Ultrasound, pregnant uterus, fetal and maternal evaluation, detailed fetal anatomic examination, the primary code for the comprehensive MFM anatomy survey
  • 76818: Fetal biophysical profile, with nonstress testing, the complete biophysical profile code used for high-risk pregnancy surveillance
  • 59000: Amniocentesis, any method, the procedural code for diagnostic or therapeutic amniocentesis requiring precise technical and professional component documentation
  • 59025: Nonstress test, the standalone NST code used when a nonstress test is performed without the full biophysical profile ultrasound component
  • 99214: Office visit, established patient, moderate complexity, the primary E/M code for MFM specialist antepartum consultations and follow-up visits

Revenue Cycle Considerations for Perinatology

Perinatology practices see denial rates of 14% to 22%, with ultrasound component coding errors and prior authorization failures driving the majority of initial denials. Average A/R days run 45 to 60 days, influenced by Medicaid processing timelines (Medicaid covers a significant share of high-risk pregnancies due to income-based eligibility) and commercial payer prior authorization workflows for invasive procedures.

The surveillance ultrasound volume in an active MFM practice is substantial. A practice monitoring 50 high-risk pregnancies with twice-weekly biophysical profiles is generating 100 procedure claims per week, plus the associated NST claims, antepartum visit claims, and consultation charges. Even a 5% coding error rate at that volume represents hundreds of misbilled claims per month.

How My Medical Bill Solution Helps Perinatology Practices

The family with the growth-restricted twin needed a billing team as attentive as their physician. My Medical Bill Solution provides perinatology billing services with the technical and professional component accuracy, biophysical profile coding precision, antepartum visit tracking, and fetal intervention prior authorization management that MFM practices require. We do not treat perinatology as a subset of obstetrics. It is its own specialty with its own coding rules and its own payer policy landscape.

We work with MFM practices on ultrasound component split billing, global OB transfer coordination, Medicaid antepartum billing by state, and surveillance procedure claim volume management. Contact My Medical Bill Solution to audit your perinatology billing and find out where your practice is leaving revenue behind on the high-volume surveillance procedures that define the specialty.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Perinatology billing

Answers to the questions practice owners and managers ask most often before switching billing partners.

How does MFM billing differ from standard OB billing?

MFM specialists typically do not provide routine prenatal care or delivery services, so they do not bill the global OB package. Instead, MFM billing focuses on consultations, fetal diagnostic procedures, antepartum surveillance, and management of high-risk conditions. Each service is billed individually rather than as part of a global fee.

Can MFM specialists bill consultations to Medicare and commercial payers?

Medicare eliminated consultation codes (99241-99245) and requires new or established patient E/M codes instead. Many commercial payers still accept consultation codes, which typically reimburse at higher rates. We verify payer policy and bill the appropriate code type for each encounter.

How do you bill for fetal echocardiography?

Fetal echocardiography uses codes 76825 (real-time with image documentation) and 76826 (follow-up or repeat study). When performed with a detailed fetal anatomy ultrasound (76811), both can be billed if documented as distinct services. We ensure the indication, findings, and interpretation are documented for each study.

What documentation supports frequent antepartum testing?

Documentation must include the specific high-risk condition (gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, IUGR, multiple gestation), the clinical rationale for the testing frequency, and the results and clinical response for each test. We help practices maintain testing logs that satisfy payer medical review criteria.

How do you coordinate billing between MFM and the primary OB?

We track which services the primary OB is billing under the global package and ensure the MFM specialist only bills for services not included in that package. This prevents overlapping claims that trigger denials for both providers. Clear documentation of the referral relationship and each provider's distinct services is maintained.

What are common denial reasons for perinatology claims?

Common denials include services deemed included in the primary OB's global package, insufficient documentation of high-risk indication for antepartum testing, consultation code denials from payers that no longer accept them, and medical necessity disputes for the frequency of fetal surveillance testing.

Comparison

How We Compare for Perinatology billing

The difference is operational discipline. We focus on clean submissions, fast follow-up, and transparency.

Criteria My Medical Bill Solution Typical Provider
Specialty-specific billing workflows Included Often generic
Dedicated account ownership Yes Shared queue
Denial root-cause reporting Weekly Ad hoc
Claim submission speed Within 24 hours Varies
Communication cadence Planned check-ins Reactive only

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