Title: Sepsis
1Sepsis Impact of Coding upon Metrics
2Sepsis Impact of Coding upon Metrics
- Paul Evans, RHIA, CCS, CCS-P, CCDS
- Manager, CDI
- Sutter West Bay
- San Francisco, CA
- (evanspx_at_sutterhealth.org)
3Agenda
- WHY Care About Coding?
- WHAT is Required for Accurate Data?
- HOW is Sepsis Coded?
- Impact of Key Terms Upon Data (ROM)
- Documentation Tips for Sepsis
4Why Care About Coding?
- Accuracy of severity and predicted mortality
factors are adjusted for risk using coding - Public Reporting
5Data Trends
- Financial
- 3rd parties use coded data for reimbursement,
audits and compliance - Consumers
- Healthgrades Leapfrog State Organizations
CMS - Pay for Performance
- RAC, Value-Based Purchasing, Never Events
6Why Does Data Matter? (Hospital and physician
profiling data is available to the public)
7(No Transcript)
8Public Websites on Outcomes Coding Used to
Report Outcomes
9Increased Physician Scrutiny
- Without all factoring conditions documented,
profiles will inappropriately reflect higher than
expected mortality - Complete documentation, reflective of the true
severity of your patients, helps justify outcomes - Profiles are used for both commercial and public
use - Future reimbursement methods will likely
incorporate profiles in the formula (pay for
performance)
10Formulas for Sepsis MD Facility Scores
- Combined mortality for Severe Sepsis (ICD-9
995.92) and Septic Shock (785.52) - (Number of expired severe sepsis patients
Number of expired septic shock patients) /
(Number of severe sepsis cases Number of septic
shock cases). - Ratio of Observed to Expected Mortality for
Septicemia Disseminated Infections (APR-DRG
720) - Number of observed expired septicemia
disseminated infection patients / Number of
expected expired septicemia disseminated
infection patients. IMPACTED BY Coding of
Septic Patients
11Sepsis Coding Formula
- Note the codes for Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock
must be applied in order for accurate reporting
of outcomes - The coding is driven by very explicit clinical
documentation of discharges noted at the time of
discharge - It is possible that Severe Sepsis with Shock will
be treated, and the Bundles will be completed,
but cases will not be in the study due to coding
issues?
12Problematic Terms
- Urosepsis, Bacteremia, Pneumonia Hypotension
- Severe Sepsis or Septic
Shock! - Severe Sepsis with Multi-Organ Failure
Explicitly document the specific organ failure
13The AHRQ Quality Indicators and the APR-DRGs
- The APR DRGs - used by Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ) for risk adjustment
to the Inpatient Quality Indicators (IQI) - The IQI - indicators of inpatient mortality for
selected procedures and conditions.
14APR-DRG Gold Standard for Risk-Adjusted
Outcomes Data
- The determination of the severity of illness
and risk of mortality is disease-specific
(Different ROM for patient admitted with Acute
Exacerbation of Asthma, Simple or Complex PNA,
CVA, Sepsis, so forth)
15APR-DRG Gold Standard for Risk-Adjusted
Outcomes Data
- In APR DRGs, high severity of illness or risk of
mortality are primarily determined by the
interaction of multiple diseases - Patients with multiple comorbid conditions
involving multiple organ systems represent
difficult-to-treat patients who tend to have poor
outcomes
16Uses of APR-DRG
- To quantify demographic and clinical risk
factors. - Comparisons between disparate populations or
groups. - Clinical outcomes
- Mortality
- Complications
- Utilization measures
- Length of Stay
- Cost
17 APR-DRG Structure
- Set of patient groups (APR-DRGs) that include
adjustments for Severity of Illness (SOI) and
Risk of Mortality (ROM) - The groups are designed to describe the complete
cross-section of patients seen in acute care
hospitals - Four subclasses (Grade 1 -4) for both SOI ROM
- Clinical model that has been extensively refined
with historical data from all payers and the
logic is open to users.
18System Generates SOI/ROM for All Acute Admissions
- Four Severity of Illness Subclasses
- Minor
- Moderate
- Major
- Extreme
- Physiologic decompensation or
- organ system loss of function
- Four Risk of Mortality Subclasses
- Minor
- Moderate
- Major
- Extreme
- Likelihood of dying
19APR Examples 65 y/o admitted with Severe Sepsis
Note Impact of Types of ARF
Option 1 Option 2 Option 3 Option 4 Option 5
Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis
SDx None SDx ATN SDx Acute Cortical Necrosis SDx Acute Medullary Necrosis SDx ARF, Not Specified
SOI 1 SOI 3 SOI 3 SOI 3 SOI 2
ROM 1 ROM 3 ROM 2 ROM 2 ROM 2
20 Note Impact of Other Organ Failure
Option 1 Option 2 Option 3 Option 4 Option 5
Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis
SDx Critical Illness Myopathy SDx DIC SDx Encephalopathy SDx Shock Liver SDx Septic Shock
SOI 3 SOI 3 SOI 2 SOI 3 SOI 2
ROM 2 ROM 3 ROM 2 ROM 3 ROM 3
21Impact of Multiple Organ Failures on SOI/ROM
Option 1 Option 2 Option 3 Option 4
Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis Severe Sepsis
SDx UTI SDx UTI (ADD) Septic Shock SDx UTI Septic Shock (ADD) Acute Renal Failure SDx UTI Septic Shock Acute Renal Failure (ADD DIC)
SOI 1 SOI 2 SOI 3 SOI 4
ROM 2 ROM 3 ROM 4 ROM 4
22Lower to Greater SOI
- Clinically Significant but Low SOI
- Severe Hypoxia (SS)
- Urosepsis
- Uncontrolled NIDDM
- Severe COPD on continuous O2
- Community Acquired Pneumonia and dysphasia,
s/p CVA. - Serum Na of 145 mEq/L
- Early or mild Acute Respiratory Failure
- UTI with Sepsis
- Type 2 DM with Hyperosmolarity, uncontrolled.
- Chronic Respiratory Failure
- Possible Aspiration Pneumonia -Community Acquired
- Hypernatremia
23Examples Documenting Consequences of Sepsis
- Acute Kidney Failure - not insufficiency
- Acute Respiratory Failure not hypoxia
- Critical Illness Myopathy not weakness
- DIC not coagulopathy
- Encephalopathy not AMS
- Acute Hepatic Failure Not Elevated Liver
Enzymes - Septic Shock not hypotension
- State ALL manifestations of Sepsis in the
Discharge Diagnosis!
24Importance of Reliable Documentation Best
Place Discharge Summary
-
- Discharge summary documents all significant
conditions - Discharge summary must be consistent with
documentation in the body of the record. If not,
query the physician
25Discharge Documentation - Example
- The summary should clarify if conditions were
present on admission and have resolved, are still
to be ruled out, or were in fact ruled out. - Admission note Sepsis with Septic Shock
secondary to Pneumonia. - Progress note Sepsis, and Shock improving.
- Discharge summary Sepsis, Septic Shock and
pneumonia, resolved
26Coding Brief Notes
- Bacterial Sepsis and Septicemia
- In most cases, it will be a code from category
038, Septicemia, that will be used in conjunction
with a code from subcategory 995.9 such as the
following - Streptococcal sepsis If the documentation in the
record states streptococcal sepsis, codes 038.0,
Streptococcal septicemia, and code 995.91 should
be used, in that sequence. - Streptococcal septicemia If the documentation
states streptococcal septicemia, only code 038.0
should be assigned, however, the provider should
be queried whether the patient has sepsis, an
infection with SIRS
27Coding Brief Notes
- Sepsis or severe sepsis may be present on
admission, but the diagnosis may not be confirmed
until sometime after admission - If the documentation is not (crystal) clear
whether the sepsis or severe sepsis was present
on admission, the provider should be queried - May have quality implications
28Special Note Comfort Care
- Document reasons for Comfort Care
- All patients factor into the MD personal O/E
(Outcomes) data and the facility O/E (Outcomes)
Data
29Query??
- A coder or other concurrent reviewer may query
a clinician regarding Severe Sepsis if certain
conditions are present and the condition is not
stated (or, sepsis IS stated, but not supported
by clinical indicators) - AHIMA released Guidelines for Achieving a
Compliant Query Practice, in the February 2013
edition of the Journal of AHIMA. The document,
created in collaboration with ACDIS volunteers
and approved by the ACDIS Advisory Board, states
that coding (or CDI) staff should query the
physician if a diagnosis is not supported by
clinical indicator(s) in the medical record
30Query??
- The focus of external audits has expanded in
recent years to include clinical validation
review. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) has instructed coders to refer to
the Coding Clinic guidelines and query the
physician when clinical validation is required.
The practitioner does not have to use the
criteria specifically outlined by Coding Clinic,
but reasonable support within the health record
for the diagnosis must be present. When a
practitioner documents a diagnosis that does not
appear to be supported by the clinical indicators
in the health record, it is currently advised
that a query be generated to address the conflict
or that the conflict be addressed through the
facilitys escalation policy - Source AHIMA Practice Brief Guidelines for
Achieving a Compliant Query Practice
31Query??
- The generation of a query should be considered
when the health record documentation - Is conflicting, imprecise, incomplete, illegible,
ambiguous, or inconsistent - Describes or is associated with clinical
indicators without a definitive relationship to
an underlying diagnosis - Includes clinical indicators, diagnostic
evaluation, and/or treatment not related to a
specific condition or procedure - Provides a diagnosis without underlying clinical
validation - Is unclear for present on admission indicator
assignment
32Query??
- Best Practice for Facility
- Accredited Coders/CDI Staff
- Linkage to Physician Advisors Quality Staff
- Facility formulation, to the extent possible of
evidence-based and physician approved definitions
for major/key conditions AMI, ARF, Sepsis,
Septic Shock, Acute Respiratory Failure, CHF - Define, Document, Defend using approved
definitions - Support Quality Measures and generate ACCURATE
coding to support risk-adjusted outcomes data
33Sample Study Why is O/E Not on Par?
34Data Mining
- Ensure all expired cases with low scores (2 or
less) are reviewed systematically by clinician
and coder prior to final coding - Review APR/DRG 720 for ROM/SOI Scores
- Review cases with code assignment for 995.92
Severe Sepsis with a ROM of 2 or less
(995.92, Severe Sepsis) implies an organ failure
the ROM is could be greater than 2 when
certain organ failure or combinations is/are
reported with Severe Sepsis - Review cases with major infections that ARE NOT
coded to Sepsis Did these meet the SIRS
Criteria and are not coded to Sepsis? - Examples, patients with Pneumonia, SBP,
Cholangitis focus on those with high charges
and/or extended LOS (GMLOS per MS-DRG Methodology)
35Questions?