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Showing posts with label ICD-10 Codes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ICD-10 Codes. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Moving to ICD-10



When will we move to using the ICD-10 codes? The mandated implementation date has been pushed back from October 1, 2011 to October 1, 2013. By that date, use of the ICD-9 code set must be replaced by the ICD-10 code set.

Hospitals, and physician practices and health insurance companies should be gearing up for ICD-10 now. Most have not started or have begun only rudimentary planning. They should have identified staff to train on ICD-10 and develop training materials. Product requirements need to be determined.

One reason is that providers tend to see the change as more minor than it is; they see it as only a more extensive version of the yearly diagnosis code updates. Instead, transitioning from ICD-9 to ICD-10 is a huge project. It has been compared to the Y2K date correction in scale. Stakeholders include physicians, hospitals, other healthcare providers, and medical billing and health insurance claims staff, all of whom must be trained to use the new coding system. 

Technology vendors must update their medical record, billing, insurance and reporting software to simultaneously handle both ICD-9 and ICD-19 codes until transition is complete. Health insurance policies will also need to be updated to accommodate the newly-recognized diagnosis and procedure codes.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

A Comparison of ICD-9 and ICD-10



Here is a comparison of ICD-9 and ICD-10:

ICD-9

13,000 diagnosis codes

3,000 procedure codes

3 – 5 numeric digit codes

Lacks laterality

Uses generic terms for body parts

Non-specific codes cause difficulty in analyzing data

Based on outdated technology

Limits DRG assignment


ICD-10

68,000 diagnosis codes, plus the ability to add more

Symptoms can be better linked to diagnoses in the new codes

87,000 procedure codes, plus expandability

3 – 7 alphanumeric character codes, allowing for greater specificity and detail

Provides laterality

Uses detailed descriptions for body parts

Detail allows better data analysis for medical research/reporting and healthcare purchasing

Works with current technology and will work with the new HIPAA form

Allows DRG definitions to better recognize new technologies and devices

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Tags: ICD-Codes, ICD-9 Codes, ICD-10 Codes, EMR, EHR

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Limitations of ICD-9 Codes



The US still uses the old ICD-9 coding system. The limitations of this outdated system are increasing as new diagnostic and treatment procedures become available, because 

1) ICD-9 does not have the ability to add new codes for them. 

2) The same is true for new diagnoses. 

3) The system also cannot provide granularity of sub-classifications of diagnoses or related problems from socioeconomic or lifestyle issues. 

4) Moreover, because one of the main uses of the ICD codes is in the medical billing – health insurance payment transaction, and that transaction is now almost universally done electronically, there is a need for the transaction to be able to use the new HIPAA electronic transaction forms. ICD-9 codes are not set up to do this.

What does this mean?

One thing it means is that healthcare providers cannot always give the most accurate diagnosis and procedure information. This generates more work on the part of health insurance companies, as claims analysts must review ambiguous codes in billing, and medical reviews must be done case-by-case for tests and treatments that might otherwise be standardized by codes. It means valid medical care bills are sometimes denied or that payments for them are determined incorrectly because the true value cannot be easily seen from the codes. 

It can potentially seriously affect patient care, as inaccurate coding can lead to missing the true diagnosis and prescribing the wrong treatment. It means that public policy does not have the most accurate information from their research. And it means that, because the US is behind a whopping 153 other countries in getting up to speed, we do not have the capability of interoperability with them.

Tags: ICD Coding | EMR | EHR

Thursday, October 4, 2012

ICD-10 Codes


ICD (International Classification of Diseases) codes are medical diagnosis and procedure codes used for billing and health insurance reimbursement, automated decision support and government statistical reports on morbidity and mortality. In fact, they are used around the world – not a US creation, the ICD coding system is published by WHO (the World Health Organization, a UN agency) And they’ve been around a long time: Version 1 was created in 1900, with precursors to the ICD codes existing as early as 1853. 

ICD-10 is the latest revision. To the US healthcare IT industry, ICD-10 seems like the next big thing, but in fact it’s been in existence since 1990. To date, 153 nations use the ICD-10 codes, though not all of them use the coding system in its entirety. In the US, ICD-10 codes are “not currently valid for any purpose or use,” according to the National Center for Health Statistics, a division of the CDC. The government does use the codes for mortality reporting, according to the American Health Information Management Association, but that is about all.

The US still uses the old ICD-9 coding system. The limitations of this outdated system are increasing as new diagnostic and treatment procedures become available, because ICD-9 does not have the ability to add new codes for them. The same is true for new diagnoses. The system also cannot provide granularity of sub-classifications of diagnoses or related problems from socioeconomic or lifestyle issues. Moreover, because one of the main uses of the ICD codes is in the medical billing – health insurance payment transaction, and that transaction is now almost universally done electronically, there is a need for the transaction to be able to use the new HIPAA electronic transaction forms. ICD-9 codes are not set up to do this.

Tags: EMR | EHR