Title: Renato L. Estrella, MS, RHIA, Director HIM
1DRG/Coding Issues and CMS Target Area DRGs
CC Pairs
January 5, 2006
- Renato L. Estrella, MS, RHIA, Director HIM
- Ravi Moses, CCS, Sr. HIM Validator
- Kathy Terry, Ph.D., Sr. Director, Data Analysis
EvaluationMedicare/Federal Healthcare
Assessment, IPRO
2Todays Presentation
- Appropriate for administrators, analytic staff,
compliance and financial officers, and HIM
directors and Coding staff. - Goal is to provide an in-depth discussion of the
coding issues surrounding the target area of
complication/co-morbidity (CC) pairs.
3Todays Agenda
- PEPPER overview
- Diagnosis Related Group (DRG) and Complication
and Co-morbidity (CC) in brief - Common denial reasons
- Top error DRGs in detail
- Relevant Hospital Payment Monitoring
- Program projects findings
- Next steps
4General Training Recap
- PEPPER The Program for Evaluating Payment
Patterns Electronic Report. - HPMP and PEPPER an effort to reduce the
national payment error rate. - PEPPER
- Presents the pattern of payments made to your
hospital from CMS compared to the rest of the
hospitals in your state. - Focus is only acute care, prospective payment
system (PPS), short stay inpatient hospitals.
5General Training Recap
- PEPPER and auditing are part of an Office of
the Inspector General (OIG) recommended
compliance program. - seeking correctly documented and billed Medicare
charges. - PEPPER helps hospitals prioritize their on-going
auditing tasks. - guiding current and future auditing.
- monitoring (identification and prevention of
payment errors).
6General Training Recap
- PEPPER is a report on past administrative claims
data. - PEPPER does not identify your hospitals payment
errors. - PEPPER indicates which hospitals within the state
are outliers in terms of the volume of claims
paid by CMS. - Concentrates on CMS target areas that are at risk
for payment errors.
7PEPPER Target Area
- New target area
- Proportion of discharges for claims with a CC
relative to all claims in CC pairs.
8CMS HPMP Target Area
- CMS selected the target areas based on
historical knowledge, experience and analysis
of payment errors. - Demonstration
9Diagnosis-Related Groups (DRGs) in a Nutshell
DRGs are classifications of medically related
diagnoses where patients have similar lengths of
stay and resource consumption.
10Diagnosis Related Group
- Currently 559 Medicare DRGs.
- 25 major diagnostic categories.
- Organized into two sections
- - medical (diagnosis codes) and,
- - surgical (operating room procedures).
- Adjusted based on relative weight, arithmetic
- mean length of stay geometric mean
- length of stay.
11Diagnosis Related Group
- Assignment process
- Principal diagnosis and secondary diagnosis and
procedure codes, - Sex,
- Age,
- Discharge Status,
- Presence or absence of complications and
- co-morbidities (CCs).
12Diagnosis Related Group
- When a CC is present as a secondary diagnosis,
it may affect DRG assignment. - Complication is a condition that arises during
hospital stay that prolongs the length of stay
by at least one day in approximately 75 of the
cases. -
- Co-morbidity is a pre-existing condition and,
- because of its presence with a specific
- diagnosis, causes an increase in length of
- stay by at least one day in approximately
- 75 of the cases.
13DRG Pair CC Analysis
- CC is required in order to change the DRG to its
companion DRG that has with CC in its title. - Example
- DRG 182 - Esophagitis, Gastroenteritis Misc.
- Digestive Disorder Age gt 17 with CC
- Relative Wt. 0.8413.
- DRG 183 - Esophagitis, Gastroenteritis
- Misc. Digestive Disorder Age gt 17
- without CC, Relative Wt. 0.5848.
14Most Commonly Used CCs
- Anemia due to blood loss, Hematuria
- acute/chronic Hypertensive heart
- Atrial fibrillation/flutter disease w/ CHF
- Congestive heart failure Hyponatremia
- COPD Respiratory failure
- Dehydration Urinary Tract Infection
- Decubitus Ulcer
- Diabetes mellitus
- Hematemesis
-
-
15Most Common Documentation/Coding Issues
- Physician documentation issues
- Quality of physician documentation,
- Communications (query process),
- Physician clinical terminology versus
- ICD-9 (sepsis vs. urosepsis),
- Co-morbidities complications,
- Illegibility,
- Inadequate documentation.
16Most Common Documentation/Coding Issues
- General documentation issues
- Lack of documentation,
- Absence or presence of documented complications
and co-morbidities (CCs). - Impact
- Decreased physician reimbursement,
- Decreased hospital reimbursement,
- Longer length of stay,
- Increased re-admission rates.
17Common Reasons for Denials
- Principal diagnosis is not present at admission.
- Principal diagnosis is not the principal reason
for hospitalization. - Complication/co-morbidity/secondary diagnosis
billed but is not substantiated in the medical
record. - Procedures
- billed but not substantiated,
- determined medically unnecessary,
- substantiated in the record, but not billed.
18Some Top DRGs in Error In Depth Analysis (from
Payment Error Cause Analysis)
DRG 182/183 DRG 296/297 DRG 320/321 DRG
089/090
DRG 174/175 DRG 141/142 DRG 188/189 DRG 079/080
19Top DRGs by Major Diagnostic Category (MDC)
- MDC 4 Respiratory System
- 079/080 Respiratory Infections Inflammations,
Agegt17 with or without CC - 089/090 Simple Pneumonia Pleurisy,
- Agegt17 with or without CC
- MDC 5 Circulatory System
- 141/142 Syncope Collapse with or without CC
-
20Top DRGs by MDC
- MDC 6 Digestive System
- 174/175 GI Hemorrhage with or without CC
- 182/183 Esophagitis, Gastroenteritis,
Miscellaneous Digestive Disorders,
gt17 with or without CC - 188/189 Other Digestive System Diagnoses,
Agegt17 with or without CC
21Top DRGs by MDC
- MDC 10 Endocrine, Nutritional Metabolic
- 296/297 Nutritional Miscellaneous Metabolic
Disorders, Age gt17 with or without CC - MDC 11 Kidney Urinary Tract
- 320/321 Kidney Urinary Tract Infections, Agegt
17 with or without CC -
22Interpreting PEPPER
23DRG 182/183
- DRG 182 Esophagitis, gastroenteritis, and
miscellaneous digestive disorders, agegt17, with
complication and co-morbidity. - DRG 183 Esophagitis, gastroenteritis and
miscellaneous digestive disorders, agegt17,
without CC. - Numerator count of discharges to DRG 182 or 183
with a length of stay less than or equal to one
day. - Denominator all DRG discharges to 182 or 183.
24DRG 182/183
- Common CC dehydration
- Examples
- Good scenario
- Documentation may show that the physician
thought the patient was dry and he ordered
fluids, and he states dehydration. - Less than ideal scenario
- Physician documented signs but did not
state dehydration. Coder might
infer that dehydration is a secondary
diagnosis and, case groups to
182.
25DRG 182/183
- Helpful hints
- Cases with signs or symptoms for the principal
diagnosis must be evaluated to ascertain whether
or not the documentation substantiates a more
specific principal diagnosis. - If there was more than one reason for admission
and treatment (i.e., gastroenteritis
dehydration), try to determine from the medical
documentation if the principal diagnosis is the
condition that required inpatient treatment.
26DRG 296/297
- DRG 296 Nutritional and miscellaneous metabolic
disorders, agegt17, with CC. - DRG 297 Nutritional and miscellaneous metabolic
disorders, agegt17 without CC. - Numerator count of all discharges to DRG 296 or
297 with length of stay less than or equal to one
day. - Denominator all DRG discharges to 296 or 297.
- LOS for DRG 296 is 4.8 and 3.1 for DRG 297.
- LOS less than 3 days for DRG 296/297 may signify
an improperly assigned case.
27DRG 296/297
- Issues
- Dehydration vs. acute renal failure.
- Electrolyte imbalance vs. gastrointestinal
disease and disorder. - Common CC
- Acute renal failure
- Chronic renal failure
- Diabetes with ketoacidosis.
28DRG 296/297
- Helpful hints
- When to assign dehydration as principal
diagnosis - When a known cancer patient was admitted only for
management of dehydration. - When the condition established after study to be
chiefly responsible for occasioning the admission
of the patient to the hospital. - Associated conditions with dehydration include
acute or chronic renal failure, diabetes with
ketoacidosis, etc.
29DRG 296/297
- Codes for signs, or symptoms should not be used
as the principal diagnosis when a related
definitive diagnosis has been established. - Do not code abnormal findings (laboratory,
x-ray, pathologic and other diagnostic results)
unless the physician indicates their clinical
significance.
30DRG 296/297
- When a patient is admitted with hyperkalemia due
to non-compliance with dialysis and is treated
with dialysis, the principal diagnosis should be
hyperkalemia. - Determination as to whether or not dehydration
should be assigned as the principal diagnosis
depends on the circumstances of the admission and
the physicians judgment.
31DRG 320/321
- Issues
- Coding UTI when documentation supports
septicemia - Not identifying the condition responsible for
admission - Specific site of infection, not documented
- Laboratory findings and physician documentation
- UTI vs. Sepsis
- UTI with LOS gt48 hours may indicate,
under-coding and might be sepsis. - Sepsis with LOS lt 48 hours may indicate
upcoding and might be UTI.
32DRG 320/321
- Common CC dehydration, acute renal failure,
sepsis. - Helpful hint
- If the specific site (cystitis, nephritis) is
identified the code must be assigned to the
specific site. - In cases where documentation indicates urosepsis,
the physician should be queried on whether the
urosepsis was intended to mean generalized sepsis
(septicemia) caused by leakage of urine or toxic
urine by-products, or the urine contaminated by
bacteria.
33DRG 89/90
- Diagnoses that commonly group to DRG 089 are
pneumococcal pneumonia (streptococcus pneumoniae)
(481) and pneumonias, not otherwise specified
(486). - An abnormal finding on a sputum stain is not
necessarily indicative of pathogen. - Never report a diagnosis on the basis of
abnormal laboratory findings alone.
34DRG 89/90
- Helpful hints
- Compare discharges for each pneumonia
DRG to the national and/or state
norms. - Note the documentation substantiating
pneumonia results
of chest x-ray,
sputum culture, WBC, and temperature. - When the physician does not specify
the causative
organism or the
type of pneumonia, code
486
unspecified pneumonia, should be
assigned.
35DRG 174/175
- Gastrointestinal (GI) hemorrhage may vary widely,
depending on the site of presentation. - GI bleeding can vary from occult bleeding to
acute hemorrhage. - The same rules apply to the sequencing of codes
on the digestive system as apply to all other
systems.
- Many GI disorders have a combination code with
the 5th digit identifying the presence or
absence of hemorrhage.
36DRG 174/175
- Now that combination codes are available, the use
of category 578 (GI hemorrhage) is only to be
used when a GI bleed is documented but the cause
or site of bleeding has not been determined. - Coding DRG 174 is determined by the use of a 5th
digit code. - When physician documents that bleeding is not
due to the GI condition, two codes should be
assigned, one for GI without hemorrhage and the
other to identify the type of hemorrhage.
37DRG 174/175
- Code assignment must be based on physician
documentation to avoid inappropriately reporting
incidental findings. - When a physician lists a diagnosis of guaiac
positive stool with no indication of the source
of the bleed or more severe hemorrhage code
792.1(non specific abnormal findings in other
body substance stool contents) is assigned. - Common CC anemia.
38DRG 141/142
- Syncope
- Syncope may be a symptom of an underlying
condition. - When the physician documentation states that the
syncope was secondary to urinary tract infection,
or sick sinus syndrome, or atrial fibrillation
and or electrolyte imbalance, one of these
conditions may become the principal diagnosis,
and it may group to a different DRG. - Example Syncope due to bradycardia.
39DRG 141/142
- Helpful hints
- When the cause of syncope is not documented,
query the physician as to whether the cause has
been established. - Physician documentation and the coding rules must
be followed in assigning the principal diagnosis
of syncope.
40DRG 188/189
- Common CC dehydration
- A very common co-morbid or complicating condition
associated with conditions such as burns,
gastrointestinal disease, peritonitis, ascites,
renal failure, and urinary tract infections and
other infections are often accompanied by
dehydration. -
41DRG 188/189
- Principal diagnosis codes include
- Benign neoplasm of the colon (211.3)
- Hernia (550.xx)
- Foreign body (935.1)
- Includes obstruction, stricture and stenosis due
to the presence of the foreign body, - Codes cannot be assigned separately,
- Attention to artificial opening of GI tract
(V55.x) - Stomas were created most probably due to
malignancy of the GI tract. -
42DRG 079/080
- DRG 079 Respiratory infections and
inflammations, age gt17,with CC. - Numerator number of discharges coded to DRG 079.
- Denominator number of discharges coded to DRG
079, 080, 089, 090. - DRG 79 and 80 are types of pneumonias that
require longer length of stay and more powerful
antibiotic treatment than DRG 89 and 90, simple
pneumonia with or without CC. - DRG 080 Respiratory infections and
inflammations,
agegt17 without CC. - DRG 089 Simple pneumonia and
pleurisy, age gt17, without CC.
43DRG 079/080
- At or above 75th percentile
- Possible coding or billing errors related to
over-coding, - Look at principal diagnosis codes 507.x
(aspiration pneumonia, 482.83 pneumonia due to
other gram-negative pneumonia, or 482.89
pneumonia due to another specified bacteria, - Ensure documentation supports the principal
diagnosis. - At or below 10th percentile
- Coding or billing errors related to under-coding.
44DRG 079/080
- Average national length of stay for DRG 79 is
8.5. - Issues
- Claims listed principal diagnosis as specific
bacterial pneumonia, however documentation only
supports viral or unspecified pneumonia. - Longer length of stay.
- Inadequate documentation for pneumonia (history
and physical exam, no chest x-ray).
45DRG 079/080
- Common CC COPD
- If there is documentation in the medical record
to indicate that the patient has COPD, it should
be coded. - If the physician mentions the COPD only in the
history section with no contradictory
information, the condition should be coded. - Abnormal findings
- Laboratory, x-ray, pathologic, and
- other diagnostic results.
- (Coding clinic 2002-second quarter article 59)
46DRG 079/080
- Helpful hints
- Review all pneumonia DRGs and look at the length
of stay. - Cases that group to DRG 79 with a LOS lt 8.5 may
indicate an incorrect code assignment. - Physician should be responsible for determining
if the patient has gram-negative pneumonia, even
in the absence of confirmatory laboratory
findings. - If physician does not identify pneumonia
as aspiration, look for the
risk factors such as
bedridden, patients with feeding tubes
or malnutrition.
47DRG 079/080
- When the laboratory finding supports a more
specific diagnosis than the physician has
documented, query the physician to confirm the
more specific diagnosis. - Never assign a diagnosis based on a patients
signs and symptoms without confirmation by the
physician. - Documentation of risk factors, symptoms and
treatments suggestive of aspiration pneumonia do
not preclude a
diagnosis of aspiration pneumonia.
- The physician must be queried as to the
presence or absence of
aspiration pneumonia.
48General Guideline
- Principal diagnosis is the key factor in a DRG
assignment - Determination depends on the circumstances of
the admission and the physicians judgment. - A thorough review of the medical record is
essential in identifying potential CCs as
secondary diagnoses. - Codes for signs and symptoms, and ill defined
conditions should not be used as the principal
diagnosis when a related definitive diagnosis
has been established.
49General Guideline
- When a CC is not present as a secondary
diagnosis, the case will group DRG without CC. - In cases where there is disagreement between the
attending physicians final diagnosis and an
examination report, the attending determines
whether or not the medical record documentation
substantiates the principal diagnosis the
reason for admission and treatment, and supports
the complication and/or co-morbidity.
50HPMP Project Outcome
- HPMP CC Pairs Project 1
- Arkansas DRG 182/183 special project
- Initiated a project to address payment errors on
DRG 182 and 183.
51HPMP Project Outcome
- Problems identified
- Underutilization of the observation setting for
Medicare patients - Billed principal diagnoses that were not
supported by chart documentation. - Billed secondary diagnoses that were not
supported by chart documentation - Billed secondary diagnosis of dehydration when
the diagnosis was not listed by the attending
physicianin the final diagnostic statement.
52HPMP Project Outcome
- Factors to consider when analyzing the cause of
DRG errors - Is the coding and billing of incomplete records
causing DRG errors? - Is inadequate/incomplete physician documentation
a primary reason for DRG errors?
53HPMP Project Outcome
- Do you have physicians on your medical staff who
do not provide a final diagnostic statement? - Do physicians on your medical staff as a whole,
or individually, need to be better educated
regarding Medicare documentation requirements?
54HPMP Project Outcome
- Are DRG errors occurring because of coding errors
or because coding guidelines are not being
followed appropriately? - Would your hospital benefit from having a
physician who is on your medical staff serve as a
physician liaison to address physician
documentation issues?
55HPMP Project Outcome
- HPMP CC Pairs Project 2
- Pennsylvania
- Initiated CC pair DRG project (DRG 182/183 and
296/297).
56HPMP Project Outcome
- Hospital issues identified
- Hospital continue to code without discharge
summaries. - Inconsistencies in the application of query
processes. - Coders did not code the most legitimate resource
intensive DRG. - Documentation needed on whether dehydration was
the condition that required admission, or if
another condition was the cause of dehydration
and subsequent admission.
57HPMP Project Outcome
- DRG 182/183 Esophagitis, Gastroenteritis, and
Miscellaneous Digestive Disorders - Found a need to document a specific diagnosis
(e.g., GERD gastroenteritis, etc.), if known,
or indicate that the diagnosis cannot be
further specified.
58HPMP Project Outcome
- Need for documentation on the
- Significance of abnormal findings (e.g.,
colonoscopy, EGD, cultures, sigmoidoscopy, etc.) - Probable cause of symptoms on admission(e.g.,
abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea/vomiting, etc.)
59Where do we go from hereSharing Best Practices
- Conduct regular audits to ensure that the
accuracy of coding assignment is correct and is
supported by the documentation in the medical
record. - Use PEPPER data to identify areas of potential
overpayments and underpayments that may require
auditing and monitoring.
60Where do we go from hereSharing Best Practices
- Cases with physician documentation problem should
be referred to a physician for clarification. - Encourage coders to query the physicians despite
the pressure to drop the bills fast. - Review the medical record to
- ensure that the diagnosis billed as principal
meets the necessary requirements, - determine if documentation was overlooked that
could have resulted in a more accurate principal
diagnosis.
61Where do we go from hereSharing Best Practices
- Determine if all the secondary diagnoses,
complications/co-morbidities, and procedures
billed are supported and coded correctly. - Implement changes that will eliminate payment
errors in areas determined to be problematic. - Abnormal findings documented in the radiological
reports must be clarified with the physician if
it is appropriate to add the diagnosis.
Make sure the physician documents the
diagnosis in the body
of medical record.
62Where do we go from hereSharing Best Practices
- Continue to monitor and audit the risk area
trends to ensure improvement and continued
compliance. - Continuous monitoring and auditing allow you to
target problem areas, and know where to dedicate
your resources - Educate all coding staff and physicians on
correct documentation and coding policies and
procedures from a clinical and coding
perspective, not a reimbursement one.
63Resources
- Coding Clinic 1997, 2nd Quarter, Article 24
- Coding Clinic 1999, 1st Quarter, Article 17
- Coding Clinic 2000, 3rd Quarter, Article 6
- Coding Clinic 2000, 2nd Quarter, Article 11
- Coding Clinic 2003, 1st Quarter, Article 19
- Coding Clinic 2003, 4th Quarter, Article 35
- Coding Clinic 2005, 1st Quarter, Article 1,
- Article 32, and Article 88
- Coding Clinic 2005, 3rd Quarter, Article 10
- 2006 Ingenix DRG Expert
- http//www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd9/icdguide.pdf
64Contact Information
- Kathy Terry, Ph.D., Sr. Director, Data Analysis
Evaluation - Renato L. Estrella, MS, RHIA, Director, HIM
- Ravi Moses, CCS, Sr. HIM ValidatorMedicare/Federa
l Healthcare Assessment, IPRO - Email kterry_at_nyqio.sdps.org
restrella_at_nyqio.sdps.org
rmoses_at_nyqio.sdps.org - Web site(s)http//pepperinfo.org/
- http//jeny.ipro.org/forum display.pup?f53