The General Surgery Billing Cycle
General surgery billing operates in a cycle that begins well before the operating room and continues for up to 90 days after the procedure. A general surgeon performing 8 to 12 cases per week generates approximately 35 to 50 surgical claims per month, plus E/M claims for pre-operative consultations and post-operative follow-up during global periods. The billing workflow must coordinate pre-operative authorization, same-day operative documentation, global period tracking, and return-to-OR scenarios. Each step has specific timing requirements that, if missed, result in denied or delayed claims.
Step 1: Pre-Operative Authorization and Verification
Obtain prior authorization for all elective surgical procedures. Most commercial payers require authorization for laparoscopic cholecystectomy, hernia repair, breast surgery, and other scheduled general surgery procedures. Emergency procedures (emergency appendectomy, incarcerated hernia repair) may be performed without prior authorization, but notification within 24 to 48 hours is typically required. Verify the authorization number, approved procedure code, approved facility, and authorization expiration date. If the surgical plan changes intraoperatively (laparoscopic converts to open, additional procedures are needed), the authorization may need to be updated retroactively. Document the clinical reason for the change.
Step 2: Operative Note Documentation
The operative note is the legal document that supports the CPT code selection and drives reimbursement. A complete general surgery operative note must include: pre-operative diagnosis, post-operative diagnosis, procedure performed (using the exact nomenclature matching the CPT description), surgeon name and assistant surgeon (if applicable), anesthesia type, findings, technical description of the procedure (approach, dissection, hemostasis, closure), estimated blood loss, specimens sent to pathology, drains placed, and complications or absence thereof. The operative note should be completed within 24 hours of the procedure. Delayed operative notes risk coding errors because the surgeon memory of specific details fades.
Step 3: Code Assignment and Modifier Selection
The coder reviews the operative note and assigns CPT codes matching the documented procedure. Key modifier decisions in general surgery: modifier 50 for bilateral procedures (bilateral inguinal hernia repair), modifier 22 for increased complexity (supported by documentation of additional work and time), modifier 62 for co-surgery when two surgeons of the same specialty operate together, modifier 80 for surgical assistant, and modifier 78 for unplanned return to the operating room for a related complication during the global period. If multiple procedures are performed in the same operative session, the highest-valued procedure is the primary code and additional procedures receive modifier 51 (multiple procedures), which applies a payment reduction of 50% on the second procedure and 50% on subsequent procedures.
Step 4: Global Period Management
Track every surgical patient global period start and end date. For 90-day global procedures (cholecystectomy, appendectomy, hernia repair, breast surgery), all routine post-operative care is included in the surgical fee. This includes inpatient hospital rounds, discharge planning, wound checks, drain removal, and post-operative office visits. Do not bill separately for these services. When a patient develops an unrelated condition during the global period, bill the E/M with modifier 24 and a diagnosis code unrelated to the surgery. When a related complication requires a return to the OR, bill the re-operation with modifier 78 (which pays at the intraoperative percentage of the fee, typically 70% to 80%).
Step 5: Claim Submission
Submit surgical claims within 72 hours of the procedure. Include the operative note with the claim for procedures that require medical records review (modifier 22 claims, unusual combinations, unlisted codes). For facility-based procedures, verify that the surgeon claim and the facility claim use the same CPT codes, same modifiers, and same date of service. Discrepancies between the surgeon and facility claims trigger payer review and delay payment. Place of service is 21 (inpatient hospital) for procedures requiring overnight stay, 22 (outpatient hospital) for same-day procedures at a hospital, and 24 (ambulatory surgical center) for ASC procedures.
Step 6: Post-Operative Revenue Capture
While routine post-operative care is included in the global period, some post-operative services are separately billable. Pathology review consultations, when the surgeon discusses pathology findings with the patient and makes treatment decisions based on pathology results, may be billable as E/M with modifier 24 if the discussion addresses a new or distinct clinical problem (such as staging a newly diagnosed cancer). Post-operative complications requiring unplanned procedures (wound debridement for surgical site infection, drainage of post-operative abscess) are billable with modifier 78. Track these opportunities actively because they represent legitimate revenue that is frequently missed.