The outpatient psychiatric limitation in HI 00610.480 is applied to the physician's therapeutic services but not to the physician's diagnostic
            services (except those administered to follow the progress of a course of psychiatric
            treatment for a diagnosed condition).
         
         An initial visit to a psychiatrist for the psychiatrist's personal professional services
            often combines diagnostic evaluation and the start of therapy; such a visit is neither
            solely diagnostic nor solely therapeutic. The initial visit is deemed to be diagnostic
            so that the limitation does not apply. Separating diagnostic and therapeutic components
            of a visit is not administratively feasible, and determining the entire visit to be
            therapeutic is not justifiable since some diagnostic work must be done before even
            a tentative diagnosis can be made, and certainly before therapy can be instituted.
            Moreover, the patient should not be disadvantaged because therapeutic as well as diagnostic
            services are provided in the initial visit. Similarly, when a physician's diagnostic
            psychiatric services take more than one visit, the limitation does not apply to the
            additional visits, When a physician bills for more than one visit for the physician's
            personal professional diagnostic services, the claim must be documented to show the
            reason(s) for more than one diagnostic visit.