By Rachel Smith
•
September 29, 2025
Dear Families, We’d like to address questions we have had surrounding well visits where an additional charge has been added when a physician addresses a health issue during the well visit. A patient may receive separate charges for a well visit and an ill visit if a "significant, separately identifiable" medical problem is addressed during a scheduled preventive visit. The well portion of the visit is billed as preventive care, while the ill portion is billed as a problem-focused visit. This is a standard insurance requirement and is not a billing error. Your recent appointment may have been billed as two separate services because, in addition to your annual wellness exam, your child also had a significant, separately identifiable medical problem addressed during the same visit. The wellness visit covers routine check-up items, such as a physical exam, updating your health history, and screening for common health concerns. For most plans, this service is covered with no out-of-pocket cost. The sick visit charge is for the diagnosis and management of a specific health issue. When this is treated at the same visit as your wellness exam, insurance rules require us to bill for it separately. This is a distinct service that often involves its own copay, coinsurance, or deductible. Chronic health issues in children that may prompt a separate follow-up visit during a well-child visit include asthma, ADHD, obesity, allergies, eczema, sleep disorders, developmental concerns, and behavioral or mood disorders. These issues may be identified during routine screenings and often require more resources, time and/or documentation than a standard wellness visit. Insurance companies require the clinic to bill for the two different types of services separately. Often, the health issue is tied to the child’s overall well-being and should not wait. Rather than ask parents to make an additional appointment, the family receives two separate services in a single, convenient trip to the clinic. This combination saves them from making and paying for another appointment later. The clinic is following standard coding and billing rules. Privia’s certified coders will add CPT modifier 25 to communicate this to payers when a combined charge is appropriate and there is documented support. Pediatric Associates Inc/ Privia Medical Group