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AmeriHealth requires all physicians who provide services to our members to
be credentialed and contracted. However, under certain circumstances, we do
allow for locum tenens arrangements.
What is a locum tenens arrangement?
Substitute physicians are generally called locum tenens physicians.
According to the Medicare Claims Processing Manual, it is a long-standing and
widespread practice for physicians to retain locum tenens physicians in their
professional practices when they are absent for reasons of illness, pregnancy,
vacation, or continuing medical education.
It is also acceptable for the regular physician to bill and receive payment
for the locum tenens physician?s services as if he performed them himself. The
locum tenens physician generally has no practice of his own and moves from area
to area as needed. It is customary for the regular physician to pay the locum
tenens physician a fixed amount per diem.
Locum tenens status is that of independent contractor rather than an
employee. In addition, locum tenens provisions apply only to physicians.
Services of non-physician practitioners (e.g., Certified Registered Nurse
Anesthetists, Nurse Practitioners, and Physician Assistants) may not be billed
under the locum tenens guidelines from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services. These provisions apply only to physicians.
Duration of a locum tenens arrangement
If a regular physician is absent longer than 60 days without returning to
work, the locum tenens must be credentialed and enrolled as if he or she were
joining your practice as a new physician.
The 60 days is a "consecutive" 60-day period. For example, a locum tenens
physician providing coverage three days a week beginning on September 1 can
still only provide services for the same absentee physician through October 30.
This also applies even if several different locum tenens physicians are used to
provide coverage during the 60-day period, because the
limitation is tied to the billing of the Q6 modifier, not to the number of days
that any particular locum tenens physician provides coverage.
Therefore, a new 60-day period for billing the services of a locum tenens
physician does not commence as a result of a break in service of the locum
tenens physician. Instead, a new 60-day period commences only by a break in the
absence of the physician for whom a locum tenens physician is necessary. After
the regular physician returns to work and provides services for at least one
day, then a locum tenens physician can provide services as a substitute for
that regular physician again at some point in the future, if necessary, for up
to 60 consecutive days.
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