Title: ICD-10-CM/PCS Physician Education Infectious Disease
1UHS, Inc. ICD-10-CM/PCS Physician Education
Infectious Disease
2ICD-10 Implementation
- October 1, 2015 Compliance date for
implementation of ICD-10-CM (diagnoses) and
ICD-10-PCS (procedures) - Ambulatory and physician services provided on or
after 10/1/15 - Inpatient discharges occurring on or after
10/1/15 - ICD-10-CM (diagnoses) will be used by all
providers in every health care setting - ICD-10-PCS (procedures) will be used only for
hospital claims for inpatient hospital procedures
- ICD-10-PCS will not be used on physician claims,
even those for inpatient visits
3Why ICD-10
- Current ICD-9 Code Set is
- Outdated 30 years old
- Current code structure limits amount of new codes
that can be created - Has obsolete groupings of disease families
- Lacks specificity and detail to support
- Accurate anatomical positions
- Differentiation of risk severity
- Key parameters to differentiate disease
manifestations
4Diagnosis Code Structure
5ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code Format
6Comparison ICD-9 to ICD-10-CM
7Procedure Code Structure
8ICD-10-PCS Code Format
9ICD-10 Changes Everything!
- ICD-10 is a Business Function Change, not just
another code set change. - ICD-10 Implementation will impact everyone
- Registration, Nurses, Managers, Lab, Clinical
Areas, Billing, Physicians, and Coding - How is ICD-10 going to change what you do?
10 ICD-10-CM/PCS Documentation Tips
11ICD-10 Provider Impact
- Clinical documentation is the foundation of
successful ICD-10 Implementation - Golden Rule of Documentation
- If it isnt documented by the physician, it
didnt happen - If it didnt happen, it cant be billed
- The purpose in documentation is to tell the story
of what was performed and what is diagnosed
accurately and thoroughly reflecting the
condition of the patient - what services were rendered and what is the
severity of illness - The key word is SPECIFICITY
- Granularity
- Laterality
- Complete and concise documentation allows for
accurate coding and reimbursement
12Gold Standard Documentation Practices
- Always document diagnoses that contributed to the
reason for admission, not just the presenting
symptoms - Document diagnoses, rather that descriptors
- Indicate acuity/severity of all diagnoses
- Link all diseases/diagnoses to their underlying
cause - Indicate suspected, possible, or likely
when treating a condition empirically - Use supporting documentation from the dietician /
wound care to accurately document nutritional
disorders and pressure ulcers - Clarify diagnoses that are present on admission
- Clearly indicate what has been ruled out
- Avoid the use of arrows and symbols
- Clarify the significance of diagnostic tests
13ICD-10 Provider Impact
- The 7 Key Documentation Elements
- Acuity acute versus chronic
- Site be as specific as possible
- Laterality right, left, bilateral for paired
organs and anatomic sites - Etiology causative disease or contributory
drug, chemical, or non-medicinal substance - Manifestations any other associated conditions
- External Cause of Injury circumstances of the
injury or accident and the place of occurrence - Signs Symptoms clarify if related to a
specific condition or disease process
14ICD-10 Documentation Tips
- Do not use symbols to indicate a disease.
- For example ?lipids means that a laboratory
result indicates the lipids are elevated - or ?BP means that a blood pressure reading is
high - These are not the same as hyperlipidemia or
hypertension
15ICD-10 Documentation Tips
- Status of disease
- Newly diagnosed
- Acute
- Chronic
- Site of infection or infestation (TB of lung)
- Cause of the infection (streptococcus)
- Link manifestations and other conditions
- Autoimmune and related diseases (Kaposis
sarcoma) - Infectious agents in other types of disease
(wound infection caused by staph)
16ICD-10 Documentation Tips
- AIDS / HIV
- Status of disease
- AIDS
- HIV positive
- HIV-related illness
- Newly diagnosed
- Asymptomatic
- Inconclusive serology
- Clearly indicate the reason for admission
- For HIV or unrelated condition
- List related conditions and manifestations
- Document as due to or with
- Is the patient pregnant
17ICD-10 Documentation Tips
- Hepatitis
- Specify acuity
- Acute, Chronic, Acute on chronic
- With or without hepatic coma
- Identify type
- A, B, or C
- Hepatitis B patients with hepatitis D (delta
agent) must have documentation to support both
viral agents
18ICD-10 Documentation Tips
- Influenza
- Organism, document as known or suspected
- Avian influenza
- H1N1 influenza
- Link associated conditions / manifestations
- Influenza with secondary gram negative pneumonia
- Laryngitis
- Pleural effusion
- Influenzal encephalopathy
- Influenzal myocarditis
- Influenzal otitis media
19ICD-10 Documentation Tips
- Pneumonia
- Organism, document as known or suspected
- Viral adenoviral, respiratory syncytial,
parainfluenza, human metapneumovirus, viral
unspecified - Bacterial streptococcus, hemophilus, E coli,
klebsiella, pseudomonas, staphlococcus, MRSA,
MSSA, mycoplasma, bacterial unspecified - Link associated conditions
- Influenza with secondary gram negative pneumonia
- Sepsis due to pneumonia
- Acute respiratory failure due to pneumonia
- Whooping cough / pertussis
- Aspiration
- Due to solids or liquids
- Due to anesthesia during L/D or procedure
- Due to anesthesia during puerperium
- Laterality of lung involvement left, right,
both
20ICD-10 Documentation Tips
- Sepsis
- Acuity sepsis, severe sepsis, septic shock,
SIRS - Organism due to / suspected
- Streptococcus (A or B)
- Staphylococcus aureus
- MSSA
- MRSA
- Hemophilus influenzae
- Gram-negative organism
- E Coli
- Serratia
- Enterococcus
- Manifestations
- With acute organ dysfunction
- With multiple organ dysfunction
- SIRS due to infectious process with organ
dysfunction - Shock
21ICD-10 Documentation Tips
- Sepsis Criteria
- Altered mental status
- Heart rate gt 90 beats per minute
- Hypoxemia
- PaCO2 lt 32mmHg
- Respiratory rate gt 20 breaths per minute
- Temperature gt 100.9 F or lt 96.8 F
- WBC gt 12,000 cells/mm3 lt 4,000 cells/mm3 and/or
gt 10 immature band - Blood cultures do not need to be positive to
support the diagnosis of sepsis the physician
may clinically diagnose based on signs and
symptoms - Septic shock circulatory failure and sepsis
that are related, include severe sepsis in the
documentation - When was the onset of sepsis prior to admission
or during admission
22ICD-10 Documentation Tips
- Drug Under-dosing is a new code in ICD-10-CM.
- It identifies situations in which a patient has
taken less of a medication than prescribed by the
physician. - Intentional versus unintentional
- Documentation requirements include
- The medical condition
- The patients reason for not taking the
medication - example financial reason
- Z91.120 Patients intentional underdosing of
medication due to financial hardship
23Summary
- The 7 Key Documentation Elements
- Acuity acute versus chronic
- Site be as specific as possible
- Laterality right, left, bilateral for paired
organs and anatomic sites - Etiology causative disease or contributory
drug, chemical, or non-medicinal substance - Manifestations any other associated conditions
- External Cause of Injury circumstances of the
injury or accident and the place of occurrence - Signs Symptoms clarify if related to a
specific condition or disease process