PM&R Billing Experts

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Medical Billing Services

Physical medicine and rehabilitation billing spans therapeutic interventions, functional assessments, and assistive device prescriptions.

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Medical Billing Services
96%

First-Pass Clean Claim Rate

$340

Avg. Multi-Code Encounter Value Captured

3.5%

Client Denial Rate

16 Days

Average Days to Payment

Overview

Multi-Service Billing Expertise for Physiatry Practices

Physical medicine and rehabilitation billing spans therapeutic interventions, functional assessments, and assistive device prescriptions. E/M visits in PM&R typically involve high complexity due to multiple comorbidities and functional limitations, yet many providers underbill by not fully documenting the medical decision-making involved in rehabilitation planning. Functional outcome measures like the FIM score must be recorded to support ongoing treatment authorization.

Procedures such as joint injections (20600-20611), trigger point injections (20552-20553), and EMG/NCS studies (95907-95913) represent significant procedural revenue for PM&R practices. Each procedure has specific documentation requirements regarding the anatomical site, technique, and clinical indication, and bundling rules between these services must be carefully observed.

Multi-Service Billing Expertise for Physiatry Practices
Challenges

Common Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation billing Challenges We Solve

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

Multi-Code Encounter Management

PM&R visits frequently involve multiple billable services: E/M, injections, therapy procedures, and diagnostic studies. Properly sequencing codes, applying modifiers, and avoiding NCCI bundling edits across these service types requires specialty-specific billing knowledge.

Therapy Service Billing by Physicians

When PM&R physicians personally perform therapeutic procedures (manual therapy, therapeutic exercise), different coding and documentation rules apply compared to services delivered by therapists. Ensuring physician-performed therapy is coded correctly maximizes reimbursement.

Electrodiagnostic Study Coding

EMG and nerve conduction studies (95907-95913) require documentation of each nerve tested, the number of muscles examined, and the clinical indication. The 2020 code restructuring consolidated NCV codes, and practices using outdated code sets face systematic denials.

DME and Orthotic Prescription Billing

PM&R physicians prescribe braces, orthotics, wheelchairs, and other DME. Proper HCPCS coding, certificate of medical necessity documentation, and compliance with DME supplier requirements are essential for patient access and practice revenue.

Services

Complete Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation billing Services

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

Multi-code PM&R encounter billing with E/M, injection, and therapy code coordination

Trigger point and joint injection coding (20552-20553, 20610-20611) with modifier accuracy

EMG and nerve conduction study billing (95907-95913) with per-nerve documentation

Physician-performed therapy procedure coding (97140, 97530, 97110) with proper documentation

DME and orthotic HCPCS coding with certificate of medical necessity support

Therapy cap tracking and KX modifier management for rehabilitation services

Coverage

Serving Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 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 Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation billing

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Medical Billing Overview

Physiatrists bill across more code categories than almost any other specialty. In a single patient encounter, a PM&R physician might perform an E/M service, document and interpret electrodiagnostic studies, supervise physical therapy procedures, administer an injection, and prescribe a DME device. Each of those services has distinct coding rules, distinct documentation requirements, and distinct payer policies. The physician who performs all of them in one day can easily generate three to five separate billing errors in a single visit if the practice does not have specialty-specific billing expertise in place.

PM&R practices treat patients recovering from stroke, spinal cord injury, traumatic brain injury, chronic pain conditions, and musculoskeletal disorders. The payer mix reflects the patient population. Medicare is typically the dominant payer, representing 45% to 65% of most PM&R practices. Medicare’s therapy billing rules, electrodiagnostic study coverage criteria, and injection coding requirements apply to the majority of claims in most practices. UnitedHealthcare, BCBS, Aetna, Cigna, and Humana fill out the commercial payer mix with their own prior authorization requirements for rehabilitation stays, electrodiagnostic testing, and durable medical equipment.

Common Billing Challenges in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

  • Electrodiagnostic study documentation gaps: Nerve conduction studies (CPT 95907-95913) and electromyography (CPT 95860-95872) must be interpreted by the physician, not just performed by a technician. Medicare requires that the interpreting physician’s signed report be part of the medical record for every EDX study billed. Claims submitted without the signed interpretation, or where the report is unsigned or templated without patient-specific findings, are denied on audit.
  • Supervision level errors for therapy services: PM&R physicians who supervise physical, occupational, and speech therapy in outpatient settings must document their supervision level. Direct supervision (physician physically present in the office suite) versus general supervision (physician available by telephone) determines which codes are billable under which provider’s NPI. Billing therapy services performed without required direct supervision as if they were directly supervised creates compliance exposure.
  • Same-day injection and E/M billing without modifier 25: Physiatrists frequently perform joint or trigger point injections (CPT 20552, 20610) on the same day as an E/M visit. Without modifier 25 on the E/M code, UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, and BCBS bundle the E/M into the injection and pay only the injection rate, effectively denying the E/M service. The modifier requires documentation that the E/M addressed a condition or decision separate from the injection itself.
  • Rehabilitation facility billing versus outpatient billing: PM&R physicians who practice in inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs) bill under different code sets than outpatient physiatrists. IRF physician billing uses inpatient consultation and subsequent visit codes under specific Medicare IRF coverage rules. Outpatient PM&R uses the standard E/M and procedure code set. Practices that see patients in both settings must maintain separate billing workflows to avoid setting-of-service errors.

Key CPT Codes for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Billing

  • 99213 / 99214: Office visit E/M codes for established patients, the highest-volume billing codes for most outpatient PM&R practices
  • 95907 / 95908: Nerve conduction studies, 1-2 studies (95907) and 3-4 studies (95908), the electrodiagnostic codes billed based on the number of nerve segments studied
  • 20552: Injection of trigger point, one or two muscles, a high-frequency procedure in PM&R for myofascial pain management
  • 97110: Therapeutic exercises, 15 minutes, billed when the physician or qualified healthcare professional directly supervises therapeutic exercise
  • 62323: Injection, epidural, lumbar or sacral, including imaging guidance, the spinal injection code used for epidural steroid injections in chronic pain management within PM&R

Revenue Cycle Considerations for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

PM&R practices see denial rates of 15% to 23%. The leading denial categories are electrodiagnostic study documentation failures, same-day injection and E/M bundling, and prior authorization issues for outpatient rehabilitation services. Average A/R days run 45 to 60 days, influenced by Medicare’s adjudication timelines and commercial payer prior authorization delays for high-cost rehabilitation services.

The therapy supervision component adds revenue risk unique to PM&R. Practices that employ physical therapists, occupational therapists, or exercise physiologists under physician supervision must bill those services correctly under the appropriate provider type and supervision level. Billing errors in this category are a known audit target for Medicare Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs).

How My Medical Bill Solution Helps Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Practices

PM&R billing rewards specialization. Generalist billing services misapply EDX codes, miss modifier 25 requirements, and do not know the difference between direct and general supervision as it applies to therapy billing. My Medical Bill Solution brings PM&R-specific expertise to every claim: signed interpretation documentation audits for electrodiagnostic studies, modifier 25 compliance review for same-day injection and E/M encounters, and supervision level documentation review for therapy services billed under physician oversight.

We also manage prior authorization for outpatient rehabilitation programs, injection procedures requiring authorization from UnitedHealthcare and Cigna, and IRF-to-outpatient billing transitions for patients who move between care settings. Our denial management team pursues every appeal with the specific documentation MAC and commercial payer reviewers require. Contact My Medical Bill Solution and stop losing PM&R revenue to billing errors that a specialty-focused team would catch before the claim leaves your office.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation billing

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

How do you bill when a PM&R physician provides both E/M and injection services?

When a significant E/M service is performed on the same day as an injection procedure, the E/M code is billed with modifier -25. The documentation must support that the E/M service involved its own clinical evaluation and medical decision-making beyond what is inherent in the injection procedure. We review documentation for each encounter to ensure modifier -25 use is defensible.

What changed with EMG/NCV coding in recent years?

The 2020 CPT restructuring consolidated nerve conduction study codes into a tiered system (95907-95913) based on the number of studies performed rather than individual nerve codes. EMG codes (95860-95872) were also updated. Practices using the previous code structure face systematic denials. We ensure current code sets are applied.

Can PM&R physicians bill therapy codes?

Yes. PM&R physicians can bill therapy procedure codes (97110, 97140, 97530) when they personally perform the therapeutic service. The documentation must reflect the physician's direct involvement, the techniques used, and the time spent. Physician-performed therapy is not subject to the therapy assistant payment reduction.

How do you manage DME billing for PM&R practices?

We handle HCPCS coding for prescribed DME items, prepare certificates of medical necessity, and ensure documentation supports the clinical need for each device. For custom orthotics and braces, we verify coverage criteria and manage the authorization process with DME-specific payers.

What documentation supports multi-code PM&R encounters?

Each billable service in a multi-code encounter requires its own documentation section. The E/M requires history, exam, and medical decision-making. Injections require site, technique, medication, and volume. Therapy procedures require time, technique, and patient response. We provide encounter templates that capture all required elements.

How do PM&R therapy services interact with therapy caps?

Therapy services billed by PM&R physicians under therapy codes count toward the Medicare therapy cap threshold. When services approach the cap, the KX modifier indicates continued medical necessity. We track cumulative therapy charges and ensure documentation supports the exception when caps are exceeded.

Comparison

How We Compare for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 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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