Thursday, June 18, 2015

3 Specialties Facing Important ICD-10 Code Changes

ICD-10 implementation is confirmed to take place on October 1. Any remaining hopes for further postponing of the new coding system have completely vanished by now. While this may appear as good news to some people, October 1 is actually a deadline for all physicians and medical practices to complete the training and testing phase of their ICD-10 conversion plan, in order to avoid Penalties from CMS
ICD-10 training and testing is not all that medical practices must prepare for before October 1.

Physicians must be ready to face some major drawbacks of ICD-10 that will hit Medical Practices hard in the first few months like slowed productivity, reimbursement in capabilities and stalled cash flow. ICD-10 codes transition is another important negative aspect that will affect practice Revenue Cycle Management of various medical specialties. Some medical specialties will be facing more difficulty in transition as compared to others, not just because of the increase in number of codes but other variations in the coding structure as well. Some of these specialties are as follows:

1. Cardiology
Cardiologists will not only have to trouble themselves with learning additional and specified codes for every diagnosis, but also interpret the actual definition of the statement. Some diagnoses have undergone definition changes in the new coding system. For example, the acute phase of myocardial infarction originally lasts for 8 weeks in ICD-9, but is being reduced to 4 weeks in ICD-10. Some diagnoses of ICD-9 are not mentioned in ICD-10 either. Like for example, the ICD-9 code 410.00 of “an unspecified episode of care” for AMI of the anterolateral wall, when converted to ICD-10 becomes I21.09, which does not address episode of care at all. Similarly, some diagnosis that required two separate ICD-9 codes, have been converted to one ICD-10 code. These changes make it all the more difficult for cardiologists to be Ready for ICD-10 before the deadline.

2. Neurology
The neurologists are in no better situation. According to the American Academy of Neurology, neurology diagnosis codes have entered a whole other level of complexity in ICD-10 coding system. For example, the new ICD-10 code for Alzheimer’s disease is G30.9, when converted from ICD-9 code 331.0. After that, ICD-10 further specifies Alzheimer’s disease in 3 different ICD-10 codes: G30.0 for Alzheimer’s disease with early onset, G30.1 for Alzheimer’s disease with late onset and G30.8 for Other Alzheimer’s disease. Similarly, CMS provides 10 addition ICD-10 codes for Migraines, which originally had only one ICD-9 code, 346.90.

3. Pediatrics
Like the former two medical specialties, pediatricians must also be prepared to deal with an upcoming large collection of complex codes for various specified diagnosis. In ICD-9, bronchiolitis has only one code (466.11) while in ICD-10 it is specified in two different diagnoses, RSV (J21.0) and human metapneumovirus (J21.1). A common ICD-9 code 774.6 (for unspecified neonatal jaundice) when converted through the ICD-9 to ICD-10 converter, will become P59.9. This is a code for a specified jaundice diagnosis.


The new complicated variations in ICD-10 coding system will be quite a challenge for physicians to learn in such a short time. Even if physicians and billers do manage to adjust to the new coding system, the probability of them making errors in patient documentation and claim processing will still be very high in the first few months post ICD-10 Implementation. The new coding system regulations make it compulsory for physicians to mention the specified diagnosis in their documentation and not to miss any detail, because according to the popular ICD-10 phrase; “If it isn’t documented, it didn’t happen!” 




Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Must Know secrets for easier EHR Documentation

Documentation consumes more than a quarter of the time  that clinical staff and physicians save for patient care. In this webinar, CureMD will share some secrets from which medical practices can benefit by documenting more effectively and focus more on patient care.


Must Know secrets for easier EHR Documentation from CureMD on Vimeo.