View Associated Notes
Category 1 - PROFESSIONAL ATTENDANCES
92057 - Additional Information
Contribution by a medical practitioner (not including a general practitioner, specialist or consultant physician) by video to a multidisciplinary care plan prepared by another provider or a review of a multidisciplinary care plan prepared by another provider (other than a service associated with a service to which any of items 235 to 240 or 735 to 758 of the general medical services table apply)
NOTE: It is a legislative requirement that this service must be performed by the patient’s eligible telehealth practitioner (please see Note AN.1.1 for the definitions as some exemptions do apply)
Fee: $65.70 Benefit: 100% = $65.70
(See para AN.15.3, AN.15.7, AN.36.2 of explanatory notes to this Category)
Associated Notes
Category 1 - PROFESSIONAL ATTENDANCES
AN.15.3
Overview of MBS items to support the management of chronic conditions in general practice
Publication date: 1 November 2025
Summary
This note provides an overview of MBS items to support the management of patients with chronic conditions in general practice by general practitioners (see GN.4.13) and prescribed medical practitioners (see AN.7.1). For detailed information on the individual items, including item requirements and patient eligibility, see item-specific notes listed below.
MBS and management of patients with chronic conditions
There are a range of MBS items for clinically relevant services provided in general practice for patients with chronic conditions. These include:
- time-tiered attendance items (see AN.0.9), which can be used when a more specific MBS item does not apply
- health assessment items for early detection and prevention of chronic conditions in specific patient cohorts (see AN.0.36, AN.0.43, AN.14.2 and AN.14.3)
- items to support general practitioners and prescribed medical practitioners to develop and review plans for the care of patients with a chronic condition and, where relevant, refer patients to MBS-supported allied health and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing services (see AN.0.47 for GP chronic condition management plans and AN.15.7 and AN.15.8 for multidisciplinary care plans)
- medication management reviews to support quality use of medicines and minimise the risk of medication misadventure (see AN.0.52 and AN.7.18)
- case conferencing items to support multidisciplinary team care (see AN.0.49).
Patients with a mental health condition or eating disorder may be eligible for treatment through the Better Access mental health items (see AN.0.56) or eating disorder items (see AN.36.2).
It is important to note that:
- some of these items have specific eligibility criteria that are detailed in the item-specific explanatory notes, and
- all MBS services must be clinically relevant, meaning they are generally accepted in the medical profession as necessary for the appropriate treatment of the patient
General practitioners and prescribed medical practitioners in primary care can also refer patients to specialists where appropriate as part of the management of their chronic condition.
GP chronic condition management plans and multidisciplinary care plans
GP chronic condition management plans and multidisciplinary care plan items allow GPs/prescribed medical practitioners to develop and periodically review structured plans for patients with a chronic condition.
Patient Eligibility
These items are available to patients that have at least one medical condition that has been (or is likely to be) present for at least 6 months, or is terminal. There is no list of eligible conditions. It is up to the GP or prescribed medical practitioner’s clinical judgment to determine whether an individual patient with a chronic condition would benefit from a structured plan for the management of their condition.
In considering the need for a structured plan, GPs and prescribed medical practitioners need to ensure the service is clinically relevant, which is a requirement of the Health Insurance Act 1973. The Act defines a clinically relevant services as “a service rendered by a medical or dental practitioner or an optometrist that is generally accepted in the medical, dental or optometric profession (as the case may be) as being necessary for the appropriate treatment of the patient to whom it is rendered.”
GP chronic condition management plans
A GP chronic condition management plan is a plan that is developed collaboratively between the general practitioner/prescribed medical practitioner and the patient for the management of the patient’s chronic condition(s). Patients registered with a practice through MyMedicare must access these services through the practice at which they are registered. Patients that are not registered can access these services from their usual medical practitioner See AN.0.47 for detailed information on GP chronic condition management plans.
Multidisciplinary care plans
Multidisciplinary care plans allow for the general practitioner/prescribed medical practitioner to contribute to a plan which may be coordinated by another person. MBS items 232, 731, 92027 and 92058 are available for patients living in a residential aged care facility; MBS items 231, 729, 92026 and 92057 are available for patients not in residential aged care.
Patients living in residential aged care who have a multidisciplinary care plan have the same access to allied health, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing, and other services as patients with a GP chronic condition management plan.
See AN.15.7 and AN.15.8 for detailed information.
Services available under GP chronic condition management plans and multidisciplinary care plans
A range of MBS-supported multidisciplinary services may be available to patients with a GP chronic condition management plan or a multidisciplinary care plan, where those services are consistent with the plan.
Patients who had a GP management plan and/or team care arrangement prior to 1 July 2025 can continue to access the services outlined below until 30 June 2027 under those plans. For more information about the transition arrangements for GP chronic condition management plans see AN.15.5.
Services provided by a practice nurse or Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health practitioner
Patients with a GP chronic condition management plan or a multidisciplinary care plan can access up to 5 services per calendar year provided by a practice nurse or Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health practitioner on behalf of a medical practitioner to support management of their chronic condition (MBS items 93201, 93203 and 10997). The services provided must be consistent with the patient’s plan. See MN.12.4 for detailed information about the use of these items.
For follow up services provided by a practice nurse or Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health practitioner, on behalf of a medical practitioner, for a person of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent who has received a health assessment see MN.12.3.
Individual allied health and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing services
Patients with a GP chronic condition management plan or care recipients of an aged care facility who have a multidisciplinary care plan can access up to 5 (10 for a person of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent) individual MBS-supported allied health and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing services per calendar year. The services provided must be consistent with the patient’s plan and a referral is required.
For more information on the types of allied health and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing services available see AN.15.4.
For detailed information about the allied health and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing items see MN.3.1.
For information on referral requirements for allied health and other primary health care services see AN.15.6.
Group allied health service for patients with type 2 diabetes
Patients with type 2 diabetes who have a GP chronic condition management plan, or are a care recipient of an aged care facility and have a multidisciplinary care plan, can be assessed for their suitability for group diabetes education, exercise physiology or dietetics services. Patients are eligible for one assessment per calendar year and, if they are found suitable, up to 8 group services per calendar year.
For detailed information on suitability assessments and group allied health services see MN.9.1 and MN.9.2.
Related Items: 231 232 245 249 392 393 729 731 900 903 965 967 10950 10951 10952 10953 10954 10955 10956 10957 10958 10959 10960 10962 10964 10966 10968 10970 10997 81100 81105 81110 81115 81120 81125 81300 81305 81310 81315 81320 81325 81330 81335 81340 81345 81350 81355 81360 92026 92027 92029 92030 92057 92058 92060 92061 93201 93203
Category 1 - PROFESSIONAL ATTENDANCES
AN.15.7
Multidisciplinary care plans for patients who are not a care recipient in a residential aged care facility (MBS items 231, 729, 92026, 92057)
Publication date: 1 November 2025
SUMMARY
Multidisciplinary care plans are part of the MBS framework for managing patients with chronic conditions (see AN.15.3 for an overview of MBS items that support the management of chronic conditions).
The multidisciplinary care plan items covered in this note are for patients who are not care recipients in a residential aged care facility. The items can be used to contribute to the preparation or review a multidisciplinary care plan prepared by another provider. For multidisciplinary care plans for patients who are care recipients in a residential aged care facility see AN.15.8.
Multidisciplinary care plans allow GPs (see GN.4.13) and prescribed medical practitioners (see AN.7.1) to contribute to or review the patient’s plan that is developed by other providers.
Patients with a multidisciplinary care plan and living in the community are not eligible for MBS-supported allied health and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing, and other services.
USE OF THE ITEMS
Multidisciplinary care plans are intended to support multidisciplinary care for patients with a chronic condition.
The Health Insurance (General Medical Services Table) Regulations 2021 (the Regulations) define a multidisciplinary care plan as a written plan that:
“(a) is prepared for the patient by:
(i) a general practitioner (for items 729 [and 92026]) or a prescribed medical practitioner (for items 231 [and 92057], in consultation with 2 other collaborating providers, each of whom provides a different kind of treatment or service to the patient, and one of whom may be another medical practitioner; or
(ii) a collaborating provider (other than a general practitioner or a prescribed medical practitioner, as the case may be), in consultation with at least 2 other collaborating providers, each of whom provides a different kind of treatment or service to the patient; and
(b) describes, at least, treatment and services to be provided to the patient by the collaborating providers.”
For the purpose of the multidisciplinary care plans, the Regulations specify that a collaborating provider is “a person, including a medical practitioner, who:
(a) provides treatment or a service to a patient; and
(b) is not an unpaid carer of the patient.”
Multidisciplinary care plan items 231, 729, 92026 and 92057 allow the GP or prescribed medical practitioner to contribute to the plan, or a review a plan prepared by another provider.
The Regulations state that contributing to a multidisciplinary care plan includes the following:
"(a) preparing part of a multidisciplinary care plan and adding a copy of that part of the plan to the patient’s medical records;
(b) preparing amendments to part of a multidisciplinary care plan and adding a copy of the amendments to the patient’s medical records;
(c) giving advice to a person who prepares part of a multidisciplinary care plan and recording in writing, on the patient’s medical records, any advice provided to the person;
(d) giving advice to a person who reviews part of a multidisciplinary care plan and recording in writing, on the patient’s medical records, any advice provided to the person.”
What is a chronic condition?
For the purpose of multidisciplinary care plans, the Regulations define a chronic condition to be a medical condition that has been (or is likely to be) present for at least 6 months, or is terminal.
There is no list of eligible conditions. It is up to the GP or prescribed medical practitioner’s clinical judgment to determine whether an individual patient with a chronic condition requires multidisciplinary care to manage the condition.
The items are for contributing to a plan or review. Who prepares the multidisciplinary care plan?
The multidisciplinary care plan is prepared by another provider (i.e. not the GP or prescribed medical practitioner using MBS items 231, 729, 92026 or 92057).
Is there a maximum number of collaborating providers for a multidisciplinary care plan?
No, there is no maximum number of collaborating providers. However, a multidisciplinary care plan requires a minimum of three collaborating providers (including the GP or prescribed medical practitioner) supplying different types of services to the patient.
At least one of the collaborating providers must be a medical practitioner. A maximum of two medical practitioners can be counted in the minimum requirement of three collaborating providers. This means that if there are more than two medical practitioners collaborating on the plan (e.g. a GP, an orthopaedic surgeon and a neurologist) there must also be at least one collaborating provider that is not a medical practitioner.
Do all collaborating providers have to be health care professionals?
No. Any person providing a treatment or service to the patient is a collaborating provider unless they are an unpaid carer of the patient. However, MBS benefits are only available for the GP or prescribed medical practitioner’s contribution to the multidisciplinary care plan.
Do all collaborating providers have to provide services under the MBS?
No. At least one of the collaborating providers must be the GP or prescribed medical practitioner who bills the multidisciplinary care item. That a GP or prescribed medical practitioner has contributed to or reviewed a multidisciplinary care plan under these items does not give a patient who is not a care recipient of a residential aged care facility access to MBS subsidised allied health and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing services. Other collaborating providers may provide MBS services (e.g. a specialist), but could also include providers that do not provide services under the MBS e.g. a social worker.
Do all collaborating providers have to meet the MBS item requirements?
The GP or prescribed medical practitioner who bills the multidisciplinary care plan item must meet the requirements of the item.
Other collaborating providers are not able to bill these MBS items and are therefore not required to comply with the item requirements.
How often can the patient have a multidisciplinary care plan?
Multidisciplinary care plan items 231, 729, 92026 and 92057 can be provided once in a 3 month period. However, it cannot be provided if the patient has:
- In the preceding 3 months had a multidisciplinary care plan for a resident of an aged care facility (see AN.15.8) or a review of their GP chronic condition management plan, or
- In the preceding 12 months had a service:
- by the general practitioner who performs the service to which item 729 would, but for this item, apply; and
- for which a payment has been made for a GP chronic condition management plan.
- by the general practitioner who performs the service to which item 729 would, but for this item, apply; and
My patient’s clinical condition has changed unexpectedly and their plan should be updated. Can an update ever be done sooner than 3 months?
Yes, the Regulations provide for multidisciplinary care services to be provided to a patient sooner if exceptional circumstances apply. The Regulations define exceptional circumstances as “there has been a significant change in the patient’s clinical condition or care circumstances that necessitates the performance of the service for the patient”. The reasons for exceptional circumstances should be documented in the patient’s notes.
Services Australia needs to be advised that exceptional circumstances apply to pay a benefit sooner than is generally allowable. To facilitate this the patient's invoice, Medicare voucher or the digital claim should indicate that exceptional circumstances apply, no further explanation is required to support payment.
Can patients with a multidisciplinary care plan access allied health and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing services?
Patients with a multidisciplinary care plan who are not care recipients in a residential aged care facility are not eligible to access MBS-supported allied health and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and wellbeing services. This will apply to all patients at the time a GP or prescribed medical practitioner provides the services described in this note.
ELIGIBLE PATIENTS
Patients are eligible for a multidisciplinary care plan if they:
- have at least one medical condition that has been (or is likely to be) present for at least 6 months, or is terminal, and
- the patient must not be a care recipient in a residential aged care facility, and
- requires ongoing care from at least three collaborating providers, each of whom provides a different kind of treatment or service to the patient, and at least one of whom is a medical practitioner. One of the collaborating providers must also be a provider other than a medical practitioner.
To be eligible for a multidisciplinary care plan provided by telehealth (video) the patient must have an established clinical relationship with the medical practitioner providing the service (see AN.1.1).
ELIGIBLE PRACTITIONERS
Multidisciplinary care plan items are available for different practitioner types:
- general practitioner items can be claimed by GPs only (see GN.4.13).
- prescribed medical practitioner items can be claimed by prescribed medical practitioners only (see AN.7.1).
| GP item number | Prescribed medical practitioner item number | |
| Face to Face | 729 | 231 |
| Video | 92026 | 92057 |
Noting that, under certain circumstances a multidisciplinary care plan can be provided to a patient in a hospital, the Regulations state that multidisciplinary care items can only be used by medical practitioners that:
- are not employed by the proprietor of a hospital that is not a private hospital, or
- is employed by the proprietor of a hospital that is not a private hospital and provides the service otherwise that in the course of employment by that proprietor.
RECORD KEEPING AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
As outlined above, the Regulations require that contributions to a patient’s multidisciplinary care plan, including any advice, be added to the patient’s medical records.
Providers are responsible for ensuring services claimed from Medicare using their provider number meet all legislative requirements and they may be required to submit evidence for compliance checks related to Medicare claims. Practitioners should ensure they keep adequate and contemporaneous records. For information on what constitutes adequate and contemporaneous records see GN.15.39.
Clause 4.3 of the Health Insurance Act 1973 specifies that, where an item specifies the creation of a document (however described) and a document is created, the document must be retained for the period of 2 years.
RELEVANT LEGISLATION
Details about the legislative requirements of the MBS item(s) can be found on the Federal Register of Legislation at www.legislation.gov.au. Multidisciplinary care plan items are set out in two regulatory instruments:
Category 1 - PROFESSIONAL ATTENDANCES
AN.36.2
Eating Disorders Treatment and Management Plans Explanatory Notes
Eating Disorders Treatment and Management Plans Explanatory Notes (items 90250-90257, 92146-92153, 90260-90261, and 92162-92163)
This note provides information on Eating Disorders Treatment and Management Plan (EDTMP) items and should be read in conjunction with the Eating Disorders General Explanatory Notes
Eating Disorder Treatment and Management Plan (EDTMP) items overview
The EDTMP items define services for which Medicare benefits are payable where practitioners undertake the development of a treatment and management plan for patients with a diagnosis of anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge-eating disorder and other specified feeding or eating disorder diagnoses who meet the eligibility criteria.
The EDTMP items trigger eligibility for items which provide delivery of eating disorders psychological treatment services (up to a total of 40 psychological services in a 12-month period) and dietetic services (up to a total of 20 in a 12-month period).
For any particular patient, an eating disorder treatment and management plan expires at the end of a 12-month period following provision of that service. Eating Disorders treatment services are not available to the patient if the EDTMP has expired.
Preparation of the EDTMP must include:
- discussing the patient’s medical and psychological health status with the patient and if appropriate their family/carer;
- identifying and discussing referral and treatment options with the patient and their family/carer where appropriate, including identification of appropriate support services;
- agreeing goals with the patient and their family/carer where appropriate - what should be achieved by the treatment - and any actions the patient will take;
- planning for the provision of appropriate patient and family/carer education;
- a plan for crisis intervention and/or for relapse prevention, if appropriate at this stage;
- making arrangements for required referrals, treatment, appropriate support services, review and follow-up;
- documenting the results of assessment, patient needs, goals and actions, referrals and required treatment/services, and review date in the patient's plan;
- discussing and organising the appropriate reviews throughout the patient’s treatment; and
- discussing the need for the patient to be reviewed to access a higher intensity of eating disorder psychological treatment services in a 12-month period.
Preparing a Medical practitioner in general practice Eating Disorder Treatment & Management Plan (items 90250-90257 and 92146-92153)
Who can provide the service
Items in subgroup 1 of Group A36 can be rendered by a medical practitioner in general practice. This includes:
- Medical practitioners who can render a general practitioner service in Group A1 of the MBS (see note AN.0.9 for the types of medical practitioners). These medical practitioners can render a ‘general practitioner’ service for items in subgroup 1 of Group A36.
- Medical practitioners who are not general practitioners, specialists or consultant physicians. These medical practitioners can render a ‘medical practitioner’ service for items in subgroup 1 of Group A36.
What is Involved - Assess and Plan
It is expected that the practitioner developing the EDTMP has either performed or reviewed the assessments and examinations required to make a judgement that the patient meets the eligibility criteria for accessing these items.
Items 90250-90257 and their equivalent telehealth items (92146-92153) provide services for development of the eating disorder treatment and management plan. Where a comprehensive physical examination is performed, either on the same occasion or different occasion, the appropriate item could be claimed provided the time taken performing the assessment is not included in the time for producing the plan, or time producing the EDTMP is not included in the time for assessment.
It is emphasised that it is best practice for the practitioner to perform a comprehensive physical assessment to facilitate ongoing patient management and monitoring of medical and nutritional status.
Patient Assessment
An assessment of a patient with an eating disorders includes:
- taking relevant history (biological, psychological, social, including family/carer support);
- eating disorder diagnostic assessment;
- medical review including physical examination and relevant tests;
- conducting an assessment of mental state, including identification of comorbid psychiatric conditions;
- an assessment of eating disorder behaviours;
- an assessment of associated risk and any medical co-morbidity, including as assessment on how this impacts on the patients functioning and activities of daily living;
- an assessment of family and/or carer support; and
- administering an outcome measurement tool, except where it is considered clinically inappropriate.
Risk assessment for a patient with an eating disorder should include identification of:
- medical instability and risk of hospitalisation;
- level of psychological distress and suicide risk;
- level of malnourishment;
- identification of psychiatric comorbidity;
- level of disability;
- duration of illness;
- response to earlier evidence-based eating disorders treatment;
- level of family/carer support.
It should be noted that the patient's EDTMP should be treated as a living document for updating as required. In particular, the plan can be updated at any time to incorporate relevant information, such as feedback or advice from other health professionals on the diagnosis or treatment of the patient.
Preparing a Consultant Psychiatrist Eating Disorder Treatment & Management Plan (90260-90261 and 92162-92163)
Who can provide the service
Items in subgroup 2 of Group 36 can be rendered by consultant psychiatrists (items 90260 and 90261, and their respective telehealth items 92162 and 92163).
What is Involved – Assess and Plan
Items 90260-90261 and their equivalent telehealth items (92162 and 92163) provide access to specialist assessment and treatment planning. It is expected that items will be a single attendance. However, there may be particular circumstances where a patient has been referred by a GP for an assessment and management plan, but it is not possible for the consultant to determine in the initial consultation whether the patient is suitable for management under such a plan. In these cases, where clinically appropriate, other appropriate consultation items may be used. In those circumstances where the consultant undertakes a consultation (in accordance with the item requirements) prior to the consultation for providing the referring practitioner with an assessment and management plan. It is expected that such occurrences would be unusual for the purpose of diagnosis under item 90260.
Patient Assessment
In order to facilitate ongoing patient focussed management, an assessment of the patient must include:
- administering an outcome measurement tool during the assessment and review stages of treatment, where clinically appropriate. The choice of outcome tool to be used is at the clinical discretion of the practitioner;
- conducting a mental state examination;
- taking relevant history (biological, psychological, behavioural, nutritional, social);
- assessing associated risk and any co-morbidity; and
- making a psychiatric diagnosis for conditions meeting the eligibility criteria.
Risk assessment for a patient with an eating disorder should include identification of:
- medical instability and risk of hospitalisation;
- level of psychological distress and suicide risk;
- level of malnourishment;
- identification of psychiatric comorbidity;
- level of disability;
- duration of illness;
- response to earlier evidence-based eating disorders treatment;
- level of family/carer support.
Where a consultant psychiatrist provides an EDTMP service, the service must also include:
- administering an outcome measurement tool, where clinically appropriate. The choice of outcome tool to be used is at the clinical discretion of the practitioner. Practitioners using such tools should be familiar with their appropriate clinical use, and if not, should seek appropriate education and training; and
- conducting a mental state examination.
Consultation with the patient’s managing practitioner
A written copy of the EDTMP should be provided to the patient’s managing practitioner, within a maximum of two weeks of the assessment. It should be noted that two weeks is the outer limit and in more serious cases more prompt provision of the plan and verbal communication with the managing practitioner may be appropriate.
Additional Claiming Information (general conditions and limitations)
Patients seeking benefits for items 90250-90257 and 90260-90261 will not be eligible if the patient has had a claim within the last 12-months.
Items 90250-90257 cannot be claimed with Items 2713, 279, 735, 758, 235 and 244. Items 90261 cannot be claimed with Items 110, 116, 119, 132, 133.
Consultant psychiatrist and paediatrician EDTMP items 90260-90261 do not apply if the patient does not have a referral within the period of validity.
Before proceeding with the EDTMP the medical practitioner must ensure that:
(a) the steps involved in providing the service are explained to the patient and (if appropriate and with the patient's permission) to the patient's carer; and
(b) the patient's agreement to proceed is recorded.
The medical practitioner must offer the patient a copy of the EDTMP and add the document to the patient's records. This should include, subject to the patient's agreement, offering a copy to their carer, where appropriate. The medical practitioner may, with the permission of the patient, provide a copy of the EDTMP, or relevant parts of the plan, to other providers involved in the patient's treatment.
The medical practitioner EDTMP cover the service of developing an EDTMP. A separate consultation item can be performed with the EDTMP if the patient is treated for an unrelated condition to their eating disorder. Where a separate consultation is performed, it should be annotated separately on the patient’s account that a separate consultation was clinically required/indicated.
All consultations conducted as part of the EDTMP must be rendered by the medical practitioner and include a personal attendance with the patient. A specialist mental health nurse, other allied health practitioner, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health practitioner or Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health worker with appropriate mental health qualifications and training may provide general assistance to the medical practitioner in provision of this care.
Additional Claiming Information (interaction with Chronic Condition Management and Better Access)
It is preferable that wherever possible patients have only one plan for primary care management of their disorder. As a general principle the creation of multiple plans should be avoided, unless the patient clearly requires an additional plan for the management of a separate medical condition.
The Chronic Condition Management (CCM) items (items 231, 232, 392, 393, 729, 731, 965, 967, 92026, 92027, 92029, 92030, 92057, 92058, 92060 and 92061) continue to be available for patients with chronic medical conditions, including patients with complex needs.
Where a patient has a separate chronic medical condition, it may be appropriate to manage the patient's medical condition through a CCM Plan, and to manage their eating disorder through an EDTMP. In this case, both items can be used. Where the patient receives dietetic services under the CCM arrangements (item 10954), these services will count towards the patients maximum of 20 dietetic services in a 12-month period.
Where a patient has other psychiatric comorbidities, these conditions should be managed under the EDTMP. Once a patient has a claim for an EDTMP, the patient should not be able to have a claim for the development or review of a Mental Health Treatment plan by a GP (items 2700, 2701, 2715 and 2717) or medical practitioner in general practice (items 272, 276, 281 and 282) within 12-months of their EDTMP unless there are exceptional circumstances.
For the purpose of the 40 eating disorder psychological treatment count; eating disorder psychological treatment service includes a service provided under the following items: 90271-90278, 92182, 92184, 92186, 92188, 92194, 92196, 92198, 92200, 2721, 2723, 2725, 2727, 283, 285, 286, 287 and items in Groups M6, M7 and M16 (excluding item 82350).
Related Items: 110 116 119 132 133 231 232 235 244 272 276 281 282 283 285 286 287 392 393 729 731 735 758 965 967 2700 2701 2715 2717 2721 2723 2725 2727 82350 90250 90251 90252 90253 90254 90255 90256 90257 90260 90261 90271 90272 90273 90274 90275 90276 90277 90278 92026 92027 92029 92030 92057 92058 92060 92061 92146 92147 92148 92149 92150 92151 92152 92153 92162 92163 92182 92184 92186 92188 92194 92196 92198 92200
Legend
- Assist - Addition/Deletion of (Assist.)
- Amend - Amended Description
- Anaes - Anaesthetic Values Amended
- Emsn - EMSN Change
- Fee - Fee Amended
- Renum - Item Number Change (renumbered)
- New - New Item
- NewMin - New Item (previous Ministerial Determination)
- Qfe - QFE Change