Remote Care Cheat Sheet: 2025 CPT Billing Codes for RPM, CCM, APCM, PCM, TCM, RTM, AWV

Delivering high-quality care between visits has never been more important or more reimbursable. Yet for many healthcare professionals, navigating the maze of remote care billing codes can feel like learning a new language. Between Chronic Care Management (CCM), Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM), Principal Care Management (PCM), Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM), Transitional Care Management (TCM), Remote Therapeutic Monitoring (RTM) and Annual Wellness Visits (AWVs), it’s easy to wonder: am I using the right codes, documenting correctly, and maximizing reimbursement?
This guide was created to make things simpler. A one-stop cheat sheet for clinicians, practice managers, and billing teams who are:
- New to remote care and need a clear, confident starting point for implementing reimbursable virtual services.
- Running a DIY operation and want to ensure they’re not leaving money on the table through missed codes, incomplete documentation, or improper time capture.
Each section summarizes the essential 2025 billing codes for remote and preventive care, including brief descriptions, time thresholds, and CMS national reimbursement rates. Use it as a quick reference, a training tool for your staff, or a checklist for your billing workflow.
And while this cheat sheet helps you operate confidently, remember that billing compliance and scalability get much easier with the right infrastructure. Lara Health’s all-in-one platform automates documentation, time tracking, consent management, and audit reporting, allowing you to focus on patient care while we handle the coding precision and compliance behind the scenes.
This 2025 Remote Care Billing Codes Cheat Sheet brings together everything you need to run a compliant, profitable care management program built on RPM, CCM, PCM, APCM, TCM, and AWVs, whether you’re doing it yourself or ready to scale with Lara Health.
Understanding the building blocks of remote and preventive care
Before diving into the billing codes, it helps to understand what each of these programs actually does and how they fit together. RPM, CCM, PCM, APCM, TCM , RTM and AWV form a connected care ecosystem that allows your practice to care for patients year-round, both inside and outside the office:
Annual Wellness Visits (AWVs): The entry point. The AWV is Medicare’s preventive anchor, performed once every 12 months to assess risks and create a Personalized Prevention Plan (PPP). It identifies unmet needs and determines which patients qualify for CCM, PCM, APCM or RPM.
Chronic Care Management (CCM): The backbone of longitudinal care, CCM covers non-face-to-face care coordination for patients with two or more chronic conditions. It ensures continuity, medication adherence, and coordination between providers through monthly follow-ups.
Principal Care Management (PCM): Focused support for one condition. PCM is similar to CCM but focuses on patients with one serious chronic condition that requires intensive management for at least three months, often handled by specialists or primary care during acute flares.
Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM): Continuous data-driven oversight. RPM reimburses for reviewing and acting on physiologic data (e.g., blood pressure, glucose, weight, oxygen saturation) from FDA-cleared devices. It provides early warning of deterioration and helps clinicians intervene before complications arise.
Transitional Care Management (TCM): Bridging hospital to home. TCM pays for care coordination in the 30 days following discharge from an inpatient or skilled nursing facility. It reduces readmissions by ensuring timely contact, medication reconciliation, and follow-up visits.
Together, these programs create a continuum of care that moves patients seamlessly from prevention to chronic management to post-acute recovery, while generating compliant, recurring revenue.
Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) Codes
Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) enables healthcare providers to track and manage patients’ vital signs and clinical data from outside the office using connected, FDA-cleared devices. It’s one of Medicare’s most impactful virtual care programs, designed to improve outcomes for patients with chronic conditions while creating a sustainable, recurring revenue stream for practices.
RPM programs typically monitor blood pressure, glucose, weight, oxygen saturation, or heart rate with FDA-approved devices, helping providers detect worsening conditions earlier and intervene before a hospitalization is needed.
Why RPM matters
Benefits for patients
- Early intervention: Providers can spot changes in vital signs before symptoms worsen, reducing ER visits and hospitalizations.
- Convenience and reassurance: Patients stay connected to their care team without frequent office visits.
- Empowerment: Patients see their own data trends, which boosts engagement and adherence to treatment plans.
Benefits for practices
- Stable, recurring revenue: RPM provides predictable monthly reimbursement for ongoing monitoring.
- Improved outcomes: Continuous oversight translates to better blood pressure control, lower A1c levels, and higher patient satisfaction.
- Operational efficiency: RPM data feeds into supporting programs such as Chronic Care Management (CCM) or Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM), helping teams prioritize outreach based on real-time patient status.
When implemented with a platform like Lara Health, practices can integrate RPM seamlessly, pairing cellular-enabled devices, automated patient alerts, and built-in documentation and patient health education to meet CMS’s requirements without adding administrative burden.
RPM Billing Codes (2025)
RPM includes two categories of codes: device setup/supply and clinical management.
Validate locally. Compliance note: RPM, CCM, APCM and PCM may be billed in the same month if all requirements are independently met and time is not double-counted across code families.
How RPM connects with other programs
RPM works best when combined with CCM, APCM and AWVs:
- Use AWVs to identify patients who would benefit from monitoring (hypertension, diabetes, COPD, heart failure).
- Enroll those patients into CCM or APCM for care coordination and use RPM to provide the data backbone for ongoing decisions.
- Together, these programs enhance both patient engagement and clinical outcomes while creating a steady, compliant revenue stream.
RPM is not just a billing opportunity: it’s a patient safety and engagement tool. For practices, it bridges the gap between visits and builds a predictable, monthly revenue stream. With Lara Health’s integrated platform, clinicians can launch, scale, and manage programs efficiently, without adding administrative complexity.
Chronic Care Management (CCM) Codes
Chronic Care Management (CCM) is the foundation of modern, reimbursable care coordination. It was introduced by CMS in 2015 to compensate practices for the non-face-to-face care they already provide to patients with multiple chronic conditions, medication checks, care-plan reviews, follow-up calls, lab coordination, and communication with specialists. CCM transforms this invisible, unpaid work into a structured, monthly revenue stream, while improving continuity of care for patients who need it most.
Why CCM matters
Benefits for patients
- Proactive support: Patients get monthly check-ins that catch issues early (before they escalate into emergency visits or hospitalizations).
- Personalized care plans: Each patient has a care plan tailored to their unique conditions, medications, and goals.
- Improved coordination: The care team communicates across providers, ensuring smoother transitions and fewer errors.
- Better engagement: Patients feel more connected and supported, which improves adherence and satisfaction.
Benefits for practices
- Recurring, predictable revenue: CCM pays a fixed per-member-per-month (PMPM) amount for each patient enrolled, independent of visit volume.
- Improved quality scores: Regular follow-ups help meet MIPS, Star Ratings, and ACO benchmarks for chronic care control.
- Reduced clinician burnout: Routine follow-ups can be delegated to trained nurses or MAs under general supervision, freeing physicians for higher-acuity work.
- Built-in scalability: Once a CCM infrastructure is in place, the same workflow can support hundreds or thousands of patients with minimal overhead.
Who qualifies for CCM?
Patients with two or more chronic conditions expected to last at least 12 months (or until death) and that pose a significant risk of death, acute exacerbation, or functional decline. Common examples include: hypertension, diabetes, COPD or asthma, heart failure, CK, depression or anxiety
CCM Billing Codes (2025)
CCM reimburses for time spent each month coordinating and managing chronic conditions, and has two main tracks: clinical staff time and provider (physician/NP/PA) time.
Validate locally. Compliance tip: CCM can be billed concurrently with TCM, RPM orRTM if all requirements are independently met and time is non-overlapping.
Key requirements for compliance
- Patient consent: Must be documented (verbal or written).
- Comprehensive care plan: Created, updated, and shared with the patient.
- 24/7 access: Patient must have access to urgent clinical support.
- Time tracking: Minimum of 20 minutes of billable time per month (non-complex CCM).
- Supervision: Clinical staff works under general supervision of the billing healthcare provider.
Bottom line: CCM bridges the gap between preventive visits and daily management. For patients, it means reliable, proactive support. For practices, it means consistent, compliant monthly revenue, all without relying on temporary telehealth flexibilities. With Lara Health, CCM becomes easier to implement, easier to track, and more profitable to sustain.
Principal Care Management (PCM) Codes
Principal Care Management (PCM) is Medicare’s solution for patients who have one complex chronic condition requiring focused management by a physician, qualified health professional, or clinical staff for at least three months. Unlike Chronic Care Management (CCM), which supports patients with multiple chronic conditions, PCM zeroes in on a single high-acuity issue (such as uncontrolled diabetes, COPD, advanced heart failure, or severe asthma,) that demands consistent, intensive follow-up. PCM is particularly valuable for specialists (cardiologists, endocrinologists, pulmonologists, etc.) or primary care providers managing an acute flare of one key condition.
Why PCM matters
Benefits for patients
- Targeted, focused support: Patients get sustained follow-up for one major health issue that might otherwise fall through the cracks between visits.
- Better outcomes for complex conditions: Continuous monitoring, medication adjustments, and coordination with other specialists reduce complications and hospitalizations.
- Clear care plan: Each patient receives a single-condition management plan with specific goals and interventions, ensuring consistency across care teams.
- Personalized education and coaching: Frequent check-ins reinforce treatment adherence and improve patient confidence in managing their condition.
Benefits for practices
- New revenue for condition-specific work: PCM pays for the focused, non-face-to-face management specialists already provide, like follow-up calls, reviewing test results, medication titration, and care coordination.
- Complement to CCM: PCM allows providers to bill for management of one condition when the patient doesn’t yet qualify for CCM (two or more conditions).
- Referral continuity: Specialists can initiate PCM and later transition the patient to CCM with the primary care provider once multiple conditions need coordination.
- Stronger outcomes, better retention: Regular patient contact builds trust and improves performance on chronic care quality metrics.
Who qualifies for PCM?
To qualify, a patient must have:
- One serious chronic condition expected to last at least three months,
- That condition places the patient at significant risk of hospitalization, acute exacerbation, or functional decline, and
- The patient requires continuous monitoring and management.
Common PCM-eligible conditions include:
- Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus
- Advanced COPD or asthma
- Congestive heart failure (CHF)
- Atrial fibrillation
- Chronic kidney disease (stage 4 or 5)
- Parkinson’s disease or advanced neurologic disorders
PCM Billing Codes (2025)
There are two parallel tracks for PCM: provider (physician/NP/PA) time and clinical staff time under general supervision.
Validate locally.
Example use case: From PCM to CCM
Dr. Patel, a cardiologist, enrolls a patient in PCM for heart failure management. Over three months, the patient stabilizes but develops worsening diabetes and kidney function. At that point, the primary care provider transitions the patient into CCM, expanding the scope to multiple conditions, maintaining continuous coverage without overlap or gaps in billing.
Bottom line: PCM allows practices to deliver focused, reimbursable management for patients with one complex condition, an often-overlooked opportunity for specialists and primary care providers alike. When run through Lara Health’s remote care platform, PCM becomes easy to document, track, and scale, ensuring both clinical consistency and financial efficiency.
Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM) Codes
Introduced for the 2025 calendar year by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), APCM is a monthly, per-beneficiary care-management service designed to support primary care providers who assume responsibility for all of a patient’s primary care services and act as the continuing focal point for their needed care. Unlike traditional care-management codes (such as CCM or PCM), APCM is not strictly time-based and not limited to patients with only two or more chronic conditions. It is intended to cover a broad range of between-visit and population-health management activities, bundling elements from prior care-management, transitional-care, and communication-technology-based services.
Eligibility & code levels
The APCM codes are stratified by patient complexity:
- G0556 - Level 1: Patients with one or fewer chronic conditions.
- G0557 - Level 2: Patients with two or more chronic conditions expected to last at least 12 months or until death.
- G0558 - Level 3: Patients who are Qualified Medicare Beneficiaries (QMB) with two or more chronic conditions.
Any Medicare beneficiary may be eligible as long as the billing practitioner meets the role criteria and the required service elements are in place.
Service elements & key requirements
Before billing any APCM code, a practice must:
- Obtain patient consent (verbal or written) and document it in the medical record. The consent must inform the patient that only one practitioner may bill APCM services in a calendar month and that cost-sharing may apply.
- Conduct an initiating visit (for new patients or those not seen in the last three years).
- Provide 24/7 access to the care team or practitioner for urgent assessment and coordinate care transitions.
- Maintain a comprehensive, electronic patient-centered care plan that is implemented, revised, and routinely updated.
- Ensure continuity of care via a designated team member and enable alternative care-delivery methods such as telehealth, home-visits or extended-hours outreach.
- Be prepared to deliver all defined service elements; note that not all elements must be delivered every month, but the practice must have the capability to deliver them.
Billing frequency & concurrency rules
- Each APCM code may be billed once per calendar month per eligible beneficiary.
- A patient may not be billed by the same practitioner for APCM and CCM, PCM or TCM in the same month; practices must choose which care-management code applies for that month.
- APCM services can be billed concurrently with Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) codes when the requirements are met.
APCM billing codes (2025)
Benefits to practices and patients
- Reduced administrative burden: Because APCM is not strictly time-based, it removes the need to document specific minutes every month.
- Broader eligibility: Practices can enroll patients who may not meet the strict “two-or-more chronic conditions” rule under CCM, allowing earlier intervention.
- Aligned with value-based care: The code supports population-health management, continuity of care, and advanced primary care capabilities, all priorities in CMS’s broader strategy.
- Revenue opportunity: For many practices, APCM offers a predictable monthly revenue stream tied to proactive care management rather than episodic visits.
Transitional Care Management (TCM) Codes
Transitional Care Management (TCM) is one of Medicare’s most valuable (albeit, often underutilized) programs for supporting patients after hospital or skilled nursing facility discharge. It reimburses providers for coordinating post-discharge care, ensuring patients make a safe transition back to their home or community setting.
TCM services encompass everything from medication reconciliation and care-plan updates to early follow-up visits and patient education. The goal is simple: to reduce readmissions, prevent complications, and help patients stabilize after a vulnerable period, while fairly compensating the clinic for the intensive coordination this requires.
Why TCM matters
Benefits for patients
- Safety during the most vulnerable period: The first 30 days after discharge carry the highest risk of readmission. TCM provides structured oversight that aids a smooth transition from a facility-based care back to a primary care setting.
- Fewer hospital readmissions: Coordinated follow-up ensures medication changes, wound care, or therapy needs are addressed promptly.
- Continuity and confidence: Patients have a direct line back to their primary care team for questions and reassurance, which improves trust and adherence.
Benefits for practices
- Higher reimbursement for necessary work: TCM codes pay more than standard office visits because they recognize the clinical and administrative work required post-discharge.
- Improved quality performance: Lower readmission rates and better follow-up compliance directly improve MIPS, ACO, and Star Ratings.
- Gateway to long-term programs: TCM naturally transitions into Chronic Care Management (CCM) for patients who need continued support after the 30-day post-discharge period.
- Stronger referral relationships: Hospitals and specialists value practices that close the loop quickly, making your clinic a preferred post-acute partner.
Who qualifies for TCM?
Any patient being discharged from one of the following settings qualifies for TCM:
- Inpatient hospital (acute or psychiatric)
- Observation stay
- Skilled nursing facility (SNF)
- Partial hospitalization program
TCM Billing Codes (2025)
Validate locally.
Why TCM deserves your attention
- TCM is one of the highest-paying evaluation and management (E/M) codes available for primary care, yet many practices miss it due to workflow gaps.
- When properly implemented, TCM delivers measurable improvements in readmission rates, patient satisfaction, and revenue, while laying the groundwork for CCM, APCM, RPM, and AWV integration.
Bottom line: Transitional Care Management ensures patients get much needed intensive support after discharge, and pays your team for the coordination that makes recovery successful. With Lara Health, you can automate TCM outreach, scheduling, and documentation, track compliance effortlessly, and turn post-discharge transitions into predictable, reimbursable care pathways.
Remote Therapeutic Monitoring (RTM) Codes
Remote Therapeutic Monitoring (RTM) is designed for services that collect, assess, and act upon non-physiological data from patients living outside the clinical setting: think of metrics like therapy adherence, pain scores, range of motion, respiratory flow, or musculoskeletal system status. Unlike Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM), which focuses on vital signs (e.g., blood pressure, oxygen saturation, glucose), RTM targets therapeutic response and functional data, often applicable to rehabilitation and non-acute chronic conditions. The CPT codes for RTM fall into two categories:
- Service/supply codes (device setup, supply of devices)
- Treatment management/time-based codes (reviewing data, interacting with the patient)
Below are the key elements providers must know:
- Devices used must meet the definition of a “medical device” (FDA cleared or under enforcement discretion) when required.
- For supply codes (e.g., 98976/98977) there is generally a requirement of at least 16 days of data collected within a 30-day period before billing.
- Treatment management codes (98980/98981) require at least one interactive communication within the calendar month with the patient or caregiver, plus minimum time thresholds (first 20 minutes then additional 20-minute increments).
- Only one practitioner may bill RTM (or RPM) services for a given patient during a 30-day period.
RTM therefore presents a valuable alternative or complement to RPM, especially in practice scenarios where therapeutic monitoring, rehab adherence, or non-vital-sign sensors (e.g., musculoskeletal or respiratory therapy devices) are applicable. For practices that already have RPM or CCM workflows, RTM may extend their reach into additional patient populations and new revenue streams.
How RTM differs from RPM in practice
RTM CPT codes – table of service and treatment management codes
Practical benefits of RTM for patients and practices
For patients:
- Enables more frequent monitoring of therapy adherence, functional improvement, or symptoms between visits, especially valuable in rural or underserved settings where travel is burdensome.
- Facilitates timely intervention before minor issues become major ones (e.g., rehab non-compliance, therapy failure, functional decline).
- Offers remote access and convenience, which boosts engagement and equity.
For practices:
- Opens new revenue streams beyond face-to-face visits, especially useful as model shifts reduce reliance on traditional E/M income.
- Provides a differentiated service offering: practices can market functional monitoring, rehab support, therapy adherence programs.
- Aligns with value-based care goals: early intervention, remote engagement, fewer avoidable complications/hospitalizations.
- When integrated with care-management programs (e.g., CCM, APCM), RTM builds continuity of care and strengthens patient-practice relationships.
Annual Wellness Visit (AWV) Codes
Annual Wellness Visits (AWVs) are the cornerstone of Medicare’s preventive care strategy. They focus on long-term health promotion and risk detection (not acute problem management) and are covered once every 12 months for all Medicare beneficiaries.
Unlike a traditional physical exam, AWVs are conversation and assessment-based, emphasizing prevention, early detection, and the creation of a Personalized Prevention Plan (PPP). This plan helps providers coordinate screenings, vaccinations, and follow-up care across the year, making AWVs the ideal launch point for ongoing programs like Chronic Care Management (CCM), Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM) and Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM).
Why AWVs matter
Benefits for patients
- Preventive visibility: Identifies unaddressed screenings, vaccines, and chronic risk factors.
- Comprehensive planning: Generates a personalized prevention roadmap tailored to the patient’s health history and social determinants.
- Empowerment: Educates patients about managing their risks, improving engagement and adherence to care plans.
Benefits for practices
- Reimbursed prevention: Medicare fully reimburses AWVs without patient cost-sharing in most cases.
- Pipeline to care-management programs: Every AWV identifies patients who qualify for CCM, PCM, APCM or RPM.
- Improved quality performance: Higher AWV completion rates directly lift MIPS, Star Ratings, and ACO quality metrics.
- Population health foundation: AWVs generate the baseline data practices use for risk stratification and proactive outreach.
AWV Billing Codes (2025)
Validate locally.
Integrating AWVs with other care programs
- AWV to CCM/APCM: Identify patients with 2 or more chronic conditions and obtain CCM/APCM consent immediately.
- AWV to PCM/APCM: Flag patients with a single complex condition that needs focused management.
- AWV to RPM: Enroll eligible patients in remote monitoring for blood pressure, weight, or glucose tracking.
- AWV to TCM: Schedule future follow-up appointments for patients recently discharged or at high risk for readmission.
When performed systematically, AWVs are more than preventive check-ins: they’re the foundation of a proactive, data-driven care strategy that feeds every other remote care program.
Bottom line: Annual Wellness Visits aren’t just preventive - they’re strategic. They fuel the pipeline for CCM, PCM, APCM and RPM while strengthening compliance, patient satisfaction, and value-based performance. When run through Lara Health, AWVs become a repeatable, timely data-backed process that reliably improves both patient outcomes and practice revenue.
Putting it all together
The highest-performing practices combine these programs to build a sustainable, year-round care model: AWVs identify risks; CCM/PCM deliver monthly coordination; RPM provides real-time visibility; TCM protects patients during post-acute transitions. Together, they improve outcomes, raise quality scores, and create consistent, compliant revenue, independent of temporary telehealth policies.
Mastering remote care billing strengthens both patient outcomes and practice economics. Knowing the codes that power RPM, CCM, PCM, APCM, TRM, TCM, and AWV lets your team convert everyday coordination into sustainable, reimbursable care.
With Lara Health, that transformation is seamless. The platform automates documentation, consent, and time capture across all care management programs - and ties phone/video directly to the correct code families. Whether you’re launching a first CCM cohort or managing thousands of RPM patients, Lara Health helps you capture every eligible minute and every earned dollar right in your EHR, while giving patients the consistent support they deserve. Book a demo with Lara Health to see how easy it is to manage all your remote care billing in one place with confidence, compliance, and measurable results.
Sources
CMS. Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (CY2025).
CMS. Chronic Care Management Services - MLN Fact Sheet (2025).
CMS. Remote Patient Monitoring Services - CPT/HCPCS Guidance (2025).
CMS. Transitional Care Management Services - MLN Booklet (2024).
CMS. Medicare Wellness Visits - MLN Booklet (2024).
FAQs
What are the key remote care billing codes for 2025?
The five core Medicare programs for remote and preventive care in 2025 are:
- RPM (Remote Patient Monitoring) - CPT 99453, 99454, 99457, 99458
- CCM (Chronic Care Management) - CPT 99490, 99439, 99491, 99437, 99487, 99489
- PCM (Principal Care Management) - CPT 99424–99427
- TCM (Transitional Care Management) - CPT 99495, 99496
- AWV (Annual Wellness Visit) - HCPCS G0438, G0439, G0402
What’s the difference between CCM and PCM?
CCM is for patients with two or more chronic conditions, while PCM is for patients with one serious or complex condition that requires focused management for at least three months. Both can be billed monthly when requirements are met.
Can RPM and CCM be billed together?
Yes. RPM and CCM can be billed in the same month if the time spent is separate and independently documented for each service. CMS prohibits double-counting minutes across RPM, CCM, and other care management codes.
How often can an Annual Wellness Visit (AWV) be billed?
Medicare covers one Initial AWV (G0438) per lifetime and one Subsequent AWV (G0439) every 12 months thereafter. The “Welcome to Medicare” visit (G0402) is available within the first 12 months of Part B enrollment.
What are the requirements for billing TCM (Transitional Care Management)?
For TCM 99495, you must contact the patient within 2 business days of discharge and see them face-to-face within 14 days. For TCM 99496, contact must occur within 2 business days, and the visit within 7 days. The provider must manage the patient’s care for 30 days post-discharge.
Can TCM and CCM be billed in the same month?
Yes. CMS allows TCM and CCM to be billed concurrently as long as time and activities are distinct and fully documented.
Do RPM and PCM require patient consent?
Yes. All care management programs (RPM, CCM, APCM, RTM and PCM) require documented verbal or written patient consent before billing. Consent must explain program details, potential copays, and the opt-out process.
Why should practices use a platform like Lara Health for remote care billing?
Lara Health automates documentation, time capture, consent tracking, and reporting across all care management programs. The platform integrates phone and video directly into CCM, RPM, PCM, APCM, RTM and TCM workflows, making compliance and reimbursement seamless. Practices can use their own staff or rely on Lara Health’s US-based virtual care team for additional capacity and guaranteed quality control. Most importantly, Lara Health allows you run any of your program right from your EHR.
What’s the best way to start a remote care program in 2025?
Start with your Annual Wellness Visit (AWV) patients, identify those with chronic conditions, enroll them in CCM, APCM or PCM, and use RPM and RTM to monitor their progress. Partnering with a compliant, integrated platform like Lara Health ensures smooth implementation, accurate billing, and consistent revenue growth.
Can these codes be used for commercial or Medicare Advantage patients?
Yes. Most commercial and Medicare Advantage plans mirror Medicare’s coverage for CCM, PCM, RPM, TCM, and AWV, but always confirm coverage and rates with individual payers.
How does using these codes help practices grow?
These programs replace one-time visits with predictable, recurring revenue while improving patient outcomes. Practices that systematically use AWV, CCM, APCM, PCM, RPM, RTM and TCM codes typically see 1.5×–3× growth in Medicare-related revenue and significant improvements in quality scores.
Can Lara Health help my staff stay compliant with time and supervision rules?
Yes. Lara Health’s built-in compliance rails automatically prompt for consent, track minutes by service line, log supervision, and generate audit-ready reports. This ensures compliance while freeing staff from manual tracking.
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