CARC 155 Active

OA-155: Patient Refused the Service/Procedure

TL;DR

The patient refused the service. If it was not rendered, write off the claim and fix your billing process to prevent submitting claims for refused services.

Action
Review & Decide
Who Pays
Depends
Appeal
No
Patient Impact
Indirect
Disclaimer
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional billing advice. Always verify information against your payer contracts and current coding guidelines. Consult a certified billing specialist for specific claim issues.

What Does OA-155 Mean?

OA-155 is the standard pairing for this code. The OA designation classifies this as a general adjustment — the denial is due to the patient's refusal, which is an administrative situation that does not fit standard contractual obligation or patient responsibility categories. If the service was not rendered, there is no financial responsibility to assign — the claim simply should not have been submitted. Write off the amount and focus on preventing this from happening again.

CARC 155 appears on your remittance when the payer has denied the claim because the patient refused to receive the service or procedure that was billed. This is a fundamentally different type of denial — it is not about coverage, coding, or medical necessity. It is about whether the service was actually rendered.

The most common reason you see CARC 155 is a billing workflow breakdown: the service was scheduled and queued for billing, but the patient declined it before or during the encounter, and the claim was submitted anyway. This happens when clinical staff does not communicate the refusal to billing, or when automated billing systems generate claims for scheduled services without verifying they were completed. The second scenario is that the payer has information (from the patient or another source) indicating the patient refused the service, even though the provider's records show it was delivered.

This denial almost always appears with the OA group code, designating it as a general adjustment outside standard contractual or patient responsibility frameworks. If the patient genuinely refused the service, there is nothing to appeal — you cannot bill for a service that was not rendered. The correct action is to write off the claim and update the patient's records. If the service was actually performed despite the payer's assertion, you need to resubmit with clinical documentation proving the service was rendered, including treatment notes, patient signatures, and any consent forms.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Patient declined recommended treatment or procedure The patient made a conscious decision to refuse the service after being informed of the treatment plan, resulting in the service not being rendered despite being scheduled or ordered Most Common
Service billed despite patient refusal The billing department submitted a claim for a service that was scheduled but not actually performed because the patient refused it, indicating a breakdown in communication between clinical and billing staff Most Common
Inadequate informed consent process The patient was not properly informed about the service, its benefits, risks, or alternatives before being asked to consent, leading to a refusal that could have been avoided with better communication Common
Patient refusal not properly documented The patient refused the service but the refusal was not properly documented in the medical record, causing confusion about whether the service was actually rendered Common
Patient refused due to cost concerns The patient declined the service after learning about out-of-pocket costs, copayments, or deductible amounts, but the service was still billed in error Occasional

How to Resolve

Confirm whether the service was rendered or refused, then either write off the claim or resubmit with proof the service was actually performed.

  1. Confirm the service was not rendered Verify with the clinical team that the patient declined the service and that it was not performed.
  2. Document and write off Ensure the refusal is documented in the patient's record and write off the claim amount.
  3. Prevent future billing errors Implement a workflow that flags services the patient has refused and prevents those services from generating claims automatically.
Do Not Appeal This Code

This adjustment is typically correct as processed. Review the specific circumstances before taking further action.

Common RARC Pairings

The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the OA-155:

RARC Description
N381 Alert: The service was not performed as the patient refused the treatment

How to Prevent OA-155

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC 155 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/155
  2. https://docs.claim.md/docs/claim-adjustment-reason-codes
  3. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.