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CCHP Coding Guidelines (2013) CCHP • Purpose – Reimburse MA organizations accurately and fairly by adjusting payment for enrollees based on health status. • Background – Prior to 2000 MA payments were based on demographics – 2003 CMS HCC Risk Adjustment Model phased in • 90/10 (90% old demographic model and 10% Risk Adjustment model) – 2007, CMS revenue to the MA organizations is based solely on the Risk Adjustment model – 2012, CMS Revenue has been split between Star Ratings and Risk Adjustment. 2 • Hierarchical Condition Categories (HCC) – Categorized ICD-9 codes of separate groups of clinically related codes or HCCs, (e.g. diabetes, cancer, ischemic heart disease, chronic kidney disease, etc.) – 2011-2012 76 HCC Categories comprised of over 3525 Diagnoses – Risk Adjustment Factor (RAF) score is assigned to each HCC category – Possible talk of increasing the HCC Categories with the implementation of ICD-10 in 2014 • Additive Model – The risk adjustment factors (RAF) for each member’s qualifying chronic conditions are added together to determine the member’s health status 3 • Lagged Model – CMS uses diagnostic information from the prior (DOS) year reporting period as the predictor of health care costs and revenue for the upcoming year. • Demographics Variable – – – – • Age Sex Medicaid eligibility Disability status Disease Interactions and Hierarchies – Certain Disease Interactions allow for additional risk adjustment factors to be added to the enrollee’s total risk adjustment factor score. 4 Valid Data Sources • Professional Providers - this does not limit to primary care physician (PCP). Other acceptable physician specialties: Oncology Allergy/Immunology Anesthesiology Dermatology Gastro Enterology Obstetrics/Gynecology Opthalmology Psychiatry Pulmonary Disease General Surgery Otolaryngology Cardiology Colorectal Surgery Internal Medicine Neurology/Neuro Surgery Othropedic Surgery Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery Urology etc… REFERENCE: COMPLETE LIST OF 2013 ACCEPTABLE PHYSICAN SPECIALTY TYPE: http://www.csscoperations.com/internet/cssc3.nsf/docsCat/CSSC~CSSC%20Operations~Risk%20Adjustment%20Pr ocessing%20System~References?open&expand=1&navmenu=Risk%5eAdjustment%5eProcessing%5eSystem|| Acceptable non-physician providers: Oral Surgery (Dentist) Nurse Practitioner (NP) Optometry Physician Assistant (PA) 5 Acceptable Physician Specialty Types for 2014 Payment Year (2013 Dates of Service) Risk Adjustment Data Submission CODE SPECIALTY CODE 1 General Practice 25 2 3 General Surgery Allergy/Immunology 26 27 SPECIALTY Physical Medicine And Rehabilitation Psychiatry Geriatric Psychiatry CODE SPECIALTY 4 Otolaryngology 28 Colorectal Surgery 76* 5 6 7 Anesthesiology Cardiology Dermatology 29 33* 34 Pulmonary Disease Thoracic Surgery Urology 77 78 79 8 Family Practice 35 Chiropractic 80 Vascular Surgery Cardiac Surgery Addiction Medicine Licensed Clinical Social Worker 36 Nuclear Medicine 81 Critical care (intensivists) 37 38 Pediatric Medicine Geriatric Medicine 82 83 Hematology Hematology/Oncology 67 Occupational Therapist 68 72* Clinical Psychologist Pain Management Peripheral Vascular Disease 12 Interventional Pain Management (IPM) Gastroenterology Internal Medicine Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine 39 Nephrology 84 Preventive Medicine 13 14 Neurology Neurosurgery 40 41 Hand Surgery Optometry 85 86 Maxillofacial Surgery Neuropsychiatry 15 Speech Language Pathologist 42 Certified Nurse Midwife 89* Certified Clinical Nurse Specialist 16 Obstetrics/Gynecology 43 Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist 90 Medical Oncology 17 Hospice And Palliative Care 44 Infectious Disease 91 Surgical Oncology 18 19 20 46* 48* 50* Endocrinology Podiatry Nurse Practitioner 92 93 94 Radiation Oncology Emergency Medicine Interventional Radiology 21 Ophthalmology Oral Surgery Orthopedic Surgery Cardiac Electrophysiology 62* Psychologist 97* Physician Assistant 22 Pathology 64* Audiologist 98 23 Sports Medicine 65 Physical Therapist 99 Gynecologist/Oncologist Unknown Physician Specialty 24 Plastic And Reconstructive Surgery 66 Rheumatology C0 Sleep Medicine 9 10 11 6 Valid Data Sources (cont..) • Hospital Inpatient - must be an acceptable inpatient facility Acceptable Inpatient Facility Short term hospital Long term hospitals Rehabilitation hospitals Children’s hospitals Psychiatric hospitals Med assistance facilities/Critical access hospitals Religious non-medical institution (formerly Christian Science sanatoria) Non-acceptable Facility- these facilities submits directly to CMS Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNF) Hospital inpatient swing bed Intermediate care facilities Respite care Hospice • Hospital Outpatient - please see list of acceptable providers under professional providers 7 Documentation Requirements A. Legibility - the medical record must be legible B. Patient Identification - every page must contain the following patients information: a) Patient first & last name b) Patient’s date of birth C. Visit Date - all encounters must have a date of service otherwise, it becomes an invalid record *** Consult notes MUST include the date of service and not just the date of when the letter was created. D. Abbreviations - Only standard and commonly used abbreviations & symbols are acceptable in risk adjustment documentation Example of unacceptable symbols: ↑↓ Note: Interpreting (↑↓) symbols is prohibited for coding ICD-9 Coding Clinic, Vol 28 No 1, 1st Qtr 2011 8 Documentation Requirements (cont..) E. Medical Record Documentation Well documented medical records promote effective communication, coordination, continuity and quality of care thereby overall efficiency of a patient’s health management. F. Coding ▪ Accurate coding is the key to prompt and entitled reimbursement, practice profiling and contract negotiations. It is critical for both legal and financial reasons. ▪ While in the past reimbursement was driven by CPT (service) codes reported, under the Risk Adjustment model the combined assigned risk value of ICD-9 (diagnosis) codes drives payment from CMS. ▪ For this reason, the completeness of clinical documentation has reached an all new level of importance. It is now more important than ever for providers and coders alike to thoroughly document and code to ensure complete and accurate reporting of all relevant health conditions. 9 Documentation Requirements (cont..) G. Face-to-Face a) b) The medical record must clearly demonstrate a face-to-face visit for risk adjustment purposes. Hospital discharge note must also demonstrate that it was a face-to-face visit otherwise, it is an unacceptable document. What to look for: I spoke with the patient today…. c) When reviewing a consult note please verify that the visit was a face-to-face encounter and that the date of service is clearly documented. Note: The dictation of the consult note cannot be assumed as the DOS. The key word “today” identifies the dictation date as the DOS. c) d) e) Surgical notes are all acceptable. Telephone messages as an addendum to a valid face-to-face visit is acceptable otherwise, it is an unacceptable document. Other unacceptable notes: • Super bills • Encounter forms • Referrals H. Format of the medical record - SOAP (Subjective, Objective, Assessment & Plan) or free form are acceptable formats. 10 Documentation Requirements (cont..) I. Provider name, credentials, signature and signature date • • • • • • All medical record should include the full name and credentials of the valid provider and the date it was signed. Signatures must include credentials and must be legible Date when the note was signed should also be included Preprinted forms with the providers complete information is acceptable only if it is signed. Signature stamps are no longer acceptable effective January 1, 2009. CR 5971 (Transmittal #248) was issued prohibiting stamped signatures. This mandate applies to all providers and suppliers Electronic signature are acceptable. The document must specifically state that it was reviewed and signed by the provider Example of valid electronic signature: [Electronically} Signed by, Authenticated by, Approved by, Completed by, Finalized by, Validated by, Verified by, Signed:, Confirmed by, Example of invalid electronic signature: Created by, Received by/for, Administratively signed, Digitally signed (unless there is a digital signature on the document) • Ambiguous credentials such as PhD is required to specify the specialty such as Psychologist to qualify for Risk Adjustment purposes. *** Records with unacceptable signatures should still be coded. An attestation for the note however, should be submitted to qualify for Risk Adjustment purposes. 11 Risk Adjustment – Coding Rule & Practices DO: Follow standard ICD-9-CM and Coding Clinic coding guidelines to properly substantiate the reporting of diagnostic codes. DO: Report codes only from documentation meeting the established guidelines set forth by ICD-9-CM, Coding Clinic, in addition to any other governing authoritative entities. DO: Continually review coding practices through self-auditing to ensure that all diagnostic data has been reported correctly so that accurate reimbursement is received. Always seek guidance from a coding manager when in doubt. DON’T: Code a diagnosis to obtain higher reimbursement without proper supporting documentation. Coding without proper supporting documentation (a.k.a. “upcoding”) is considered fraudulent and is punishable by law. 12 Risk Adjustment – Coding Rule & Practices (Cont.) ■ Use the corresponding ICD-9-CM book to the date of service ■ Use the upcoming year’s ICD-9-CM book effective October 1st of the current year to assign the updated diagnosis codes Example: Date of Service: ICD-9-CM Book: 10/1/2012 2013 ■ Code to the highest degree of specificity by assigning the most precise ICD - 9 code to describe the symptom or condition ■ Do not code signs/symptoms integral to a more definitive diagnosis Do not code from memory; index to the tabular all diagnosis codes 13 ICD-9 Coding Guidelines 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Use both alphabetical index & tabular list when assigning codes. Code all diagnoses to the highest specificity. Symptoms should never be coded unless a definitive diagnosis was not established at the end of the visit or admission. Include multiple codes when correct coding of a condition or combination of conditions warrants usage. – Example: • Hypertensive Heart Disease with Chronic Kidney Disease Stage III and CHF: 404.91 + 428.0 + 585.3 Diagnoses described as acute/sub-acute and chronic, Use a code that describes acute on chronic. If such code is not available, code both acute & chronic. Late effects usually have two codes. The condition of the late effect, sequenced first followed by the late effect code. **** There are certain exclusions, e.g. late effect of stroke/CVA) 14 HCC Coding Guidelines A. Necessity of document - written documentation is the ONLY basis of coding abstraction. If it was not written(DOCUMENTED), it does not exist. B. All conditions captured must be supported by MEAT or the required specific MEAT for certain conditions (e.g. cancer, MI, CVA, TIA, PE, etc.) What does MEAT stand for? M = Monitoring - Ordering/referencing labs/other tests E = Evaluating - Examining (as in the Physical Exam) A = Assessing and/or - Acknowledging/Giving Status/Level of a Condition Addressing T = Treating - Prescribing medication, surgical/other therapeutic intervention, referral to other specialists for treatment/consult, any plan for management of a condition A minimum of one of the above MEAT components is required. Note: Some conditions require specific MEAT to confirm new or active status (e.g. cancer, MI, CVA, TIA, pulmonary embolism, fracture, etc.) Key Point: Adhering to M.E.A.T. requirements is critical. Noncompliance with documentation requirements poses serious legal and financial risk the health plan, to the company, and to the coder! 15 HCC Coding Guidelines (cont.) 1. All diagnoses in the medical record must be addressed in any manner as indicated above (MEAT). Status codes may sometimes be exempt from this. Ask yourself- Was the condition Monitored, Evaluated, Assessed or Treated? 2. Conditions may be described and validated in certain parts of the medical chart: History of Present Illness (HPI), Physical Exam (PE) and Assessment. 3. Medication List may only be used to validate a condition if the provider specifically says that the medication list has been reviewed and for the patient to continue present medication. 4. Blood pressure and glucose reading are adequate measures to support the condition as the provider is Monitoring the condition. 5. Referrals to specialist , order of medication and other treatments may also be used in supporting the written diagnoses 16 HCC Coding Guidelines (cont.) C. Combination Codes 1. When a condition is appropriately described to be a manifestation of another code, and only one condition has MEAT, the entire combination code should be coded. Example: A patient with diabetic nephropathy was seen by the doctor and the treatment was specifically for diabetes alone. This should be coded as 250.40, 583.81 2. When two conditions exist but were not appropriately linked, the conditions should be coded separately. Example: A patient came in with diabetes, taking insulin, complaining about peripheral vascular disease being treated by trental. DX: DM, PVD This should be coded as 250.00, 443.9 3. These relationship should not be inferred except in specific cases where ICD-9 makes special allowance. Example: Hypertension + CKD DM + Gangrene 403.90+585.9 250.70+784.4 17 HCC Coding Guidelines (cont.) D. Highest Specificity - Code to the highest specificity at all times. Signs and symptoms should never be coded unless the doctor did not specify a definitive diagnosis. E. Chronic Conditions - All chronic condition should be reassessed year after year for risk adjustment purposes. F. Qualified Conditions 1. Outpatient setting- qualified conditions are never to be coded. These conditions are usually indicated as: rule out, probable, suspect, questionable etc. 2. Inpatient setting- for risk adjustment purposes, qualified conditions may be coded ONLY if it is still qualified at the day of discharge and not ruled out. Therefore, qualified diagnoses should only be captured in the discharge report. 18 HCC Coding Guidelines (cont.) G. Historical Conditions/ Status Codes 1. 2. H. Code all historical conditions that are relevant to the patient’s health status. a) Status codes representing late status of a historical event such as: amputation, - ostomy status, may be coded even if there was no MEAT as they no longer need attention, unless an acute complication occurs. b) Status codes representing a current medical regiment such as: renal dialysis status, long term insulin use may also be coded without MEAT. Some doctors often document “history off” a certain condition but is still currently being treated. On these cases, although it is obviously an active condition, it cannot be coded as current. Coder’s SHOULD NEVER assume Query the provider Sequencing - In risk adjustment, sequencing is irrelevant. 19 Common Coding Errors 20 Neoplasm Coding 1. Active Treatment a) b) c) d) When validating neoplasms, the first few questions you need to ask yourself are; Is it active or history? Is there treatment or on watchful waiting? Surgery to remove cancer does not always indicate that the cancer is inactive. Any form of treatment qualifies the cancer to be coded as active. Common Treatments: Chemotherapy, Radiation, Anti-neoplastic drug therapy, surgical exclusion, etc. Note: Referral to another provider for follow-up (unless it is clearly documented that the patient is newly diagnosed and being referred for evaluation of surgical/other cancer treatment options) is not considered adequate supporting documentation to code active cancer. Also, simple monitoring of PSA for a patient with known prostate cancer is not considered adequate supporting documentation to code active prostate cancer 2. Specificity Code all diagnoses to the highest specificity as described in the medical record. a) Site b) Morphology 21 Neoplasm (cont.) 3. Primary & Secondary Site a) b) 4. When the cancer is documented as “metastatic of/to”, code the neoplasm as secondary. When the cancer is documented as “metastatic from”, The site mentioned is primary. Unspecified Site Use code 199.1 for unspecified site, primary or secondary. EXAMPLE: a) Patient status-post mastectomy for breast cancer, on Arimidex- 174.9, breast cancer, unspecified b) Secondary malignant neoplasm of the kidney, currently on chemo- 198.0, 199.1 (secondary kidney cancer, unknown primary site) 22 Cardiac Arrhythmias Sick Sinus Syndrome/ Arrhythmia with pacemaker a) If the implantation has been successfully done & the provider did not document any complication, the arrhythmia becomes historical and should NOT be coded as active. b) Medications are clear document to support for conditions such as atrial flutter and/or fibrillation. Code as active. 23 Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) 1. CAD is coded as subcategory 414.0? The fifth digit specifies the particular type of blood vessel in which the disease was found • Native- naturally occurring to the patient 414.01 • Graft- vessel is placed by a surgical procedure 414.00 2. Unspecified type of vessel with history of Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG), select 414.00. 3. If the only documentation is CAD and no documentation of CABG was done, select code 414.01. 24 Diabetes Mellitus 1. Supporting Documents: a) b) c) d) e) 2. Medications Insulin status - Code separately Referrals Lab Orders Glucose monitoring Types of Diabetes a) b) Type I - Usually juvenile onset and insulin dependent. Type II - Often adult onset. ****The type must be documented by the provider. Unspecified diabetes defaults to diabetes type II regardless if the patient is on insulin. 25 Diabetes (cont.) 3. Diabetic Control • • • • 2 Types of Control: Controlled Uncontrolled The term control in diabetes refers to the glucose levels. It is in the discretion of the provider to qualify the control. Clear documentation is required to code uncontrolled diabetes. Terms to consider for uncontrolled diabetes: Out of control Without control Not controlled Uncontrolled Unacceptable terms to code uncontrolled: Poorly controlled Not well controlled Not optimally controlled etc. 26 Diabetes (cont.) 4. Diabetic Complications/Manifestations ■ ■ ▪ 60% of diabetics have systemic complications* Appropriate linkage is required to establish the complication/manifestation. Terms to consider: Diabetic Due to Associated with Secondary to With Related to Exception to this rule is the presence of gangrene and/ or hypoglycemia diabetic patient. It is always assumed to have a casual relationship 27 Diabetes (cont.) • Fourth digit classifications depends on the system being affected. – – – – – – – – – – • • 250.0X 250.10 250.2X 250.3X 250.4X 250.5X 250.6X 250.7X 250.8X 250.9X Diabetes with no complications Diabetes with ketoacidosis Diabetes with hypersmolarity Diabetes with other coma Diabetes with renal manifestations Diabetes with ophthalmic manifestations Diabetes with neurological manifestations Diabetes with peripheral circulatory disorders Diabetes with other specified manifestations Diabetes with unspecified complications Multiple manifestations, requires multiple codes. The above codes should be followed by the specific manifestation code. 28 Chronic Kidney Disease/Failure • Staging of CKD 585.1 Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 1 585.2 Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage II (mild) 585.3 Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage III (moderate) 585.4 Chronic Kidney Disease, State IV (severe) 585.5 Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage V 585.6 End Stage Renal Disease 585.9 Chronic Kidney Disease, unspecified 29 Chronic Kidney Disease (cont.) Things to remember: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is the best estimate of kidney function. Persistent proteinuria means CKD. High risk groups include those with DM, HTN and family history of kidney disease. HTN causes CKD and CKD causes HTN (always linked together). Three simple tests can detect CKD: blood pressure, urine albumin and serum creatinine. V Codes: • V42.0 Kidney transplant, status • V45.11 Renal dialysis, status Coder should never interpret lab results. When in doubt, query the doctor. 30 Chronic Kidney Disease (cont.) Physicians sometimes use the terms renal insufficiency and renal failure interchangeably. Renal Insufficiency – Renal insufficiency is considered an early stage of renal impairment: • Acute – 593.9 • Chronic – 585.9 • Not specified as acute or chronic, but with stated cause or pathology - 583.0583.9 • Due to a procedure – 997.5 Renal Failure • • Acute Renal Failure - 584.9 Renal Failure, Unspecified- 586 31 Myocardial Infarction & Angina Myocardial Infarction – It considered acute for a period of eight weeks after initial onset. This should be coded from category 410. – If the onset date is not given, code 412, Old MI. – The fourth digit sub classification pertains to the location. – The fifth digit sub classifications represents episode of care: 410.X1 - Initial 410.X2 - Subsequent 410.X0 - Unspecified 32 Myocardial Infarction & Angina (cont.) Angina – It is a cardiac related chest pain. – Although the pain is not always present, and it could be noted to be stable on medication, angina should still be coded. – After angina is treated surgically and completely resolved, it should then NO longer be coded. – Angina with no further specification should be coded as 413.9, Angina pectoris. – Unstable angina(411.1), Equivalent to Intermediate Coronary Syndrome and usually results to instant hospitalization. 33 Myocardial Infarction & Angina (cont.) Acute myocardial infarction & unstable angina rarely happens in an outpatient physician’s visit. Things to Look for: 1. 2. Patient was sent to the ER. Ambulance was called for the patient to be transferred to the hospital. 34 Stroke Simply Stated: – – When did the event occur? What deficits were left after the event that are evident today? When did the event occur? – Document Acute Stroke on first admission to hospital only - 434.91 – Document Residual Deficits of Stroke on office visits following the acute incident – 438.XX – Document History of CVA if there are no residual deficits from a prior stroke code V12.54 – Code 436, Acute, but ill-defined, cerebrovascular disease is NOT a stroke code. 35 Stroke (cont.) Late Effects of Stroke – A late effect is the residual condition that remains after recovery of the acute phase. – Document deficits after discharge from the initial acute episode. Example: Aphasia due to CVA 6 months ago CVA two years ago with residual hemiplegia – There is no time limit for the development of a residual. – Code for CVA late effects should be selected from category 438. – Dominant side vs. non-dominant side Dominant - 483.X1 Non-Dominant - 483.X2 Unspecified - 438.X0 36 Missed Opportunities 37 Protein-Calorie Malnutrition • Category 263 - Other and unspecified protein–calorie malnutrition is often underreported. • Factors that limit nutrient ingestion and absorption: ▪ Cancer ▪ ESRD ▪ Pancreatitis ▪ Alcoholic hepatitis ▪ Alcohol abuse and/or dependence ▪ Cirrhosis ▪ Liver disease ▪ Celiac disease ▪ Obesity (post-bariatric surgery) ▪ Cystic fibrosis ▪ Anemia ▪ Depression 38 Protein Calorie Malnutrition (cont.) It’s worth a Second Look! • – – – – • On the report: Abnormal Weight Loss Loss of Appetite Underweight Failure to Thrive Query the provider: – Malnutrition, Mild Degree – Malnutrition, Moderate Degree – Cachexia (Severe) 39 Traumatic vs. Pathologic Fractures • Unlike traumatic fractures, which are caused by an external injury, pathologic fractures occur spontaneously in bones that are weakened by diseases such as: • Osteoporosis Nutritional maladies Paget’s Disease Asceptic necrosis Bone cancer Spontaneous pathologic fractures are often associated with a fall; this could mistakenly lead the coder to believe that it is a traumatic fracture. 40 Chronic Skin Ulcers • Words like "open wound” or “lesion” in documentation when “decubitus” or other forms of non-healing ulcers are seen must be queried. Chronic ulcers usually are due to chronic inflammation, ischemia or both. Example: Diabetic ulcer, left foot Ulcer, sacrum • Foot ulcers may develop from conditions such as diabetic neuropathy or diabetic peripheral vascular disease. Specific documentation will assure correct code selection. 41 Arthritis • The term “Arthritis” is unspecified. • Indicate type of arthritis for greater specificity: – Osteoarthritis – Rheumatoid – Traumatic • Include complication if applicable: – Traumatic arthritis due to ankle fracture sustained five years ago (Late effect) 42 COPD/Bronchitis • Correct coding depends on accurate documentation. • COPD(496) is assigned only when the medical record does not specify the type of COPD: – Chronic obstructive bronchitis – Chronic bronchitis with emphysema – Obstructive chronic bronchitis, with acute exacerbation Note: COPD is a nonspecific term that encompasses many different respiratory conditions; review medical record and query physician for more specific documentation of emphysema, bronchitis, asthma, etc. 43 Anemia • Often seen in the “generalized” term, “Patient is anemic.” • The use of precise terminology makes the difference: – – – – – – Aplastic anemia Drug induced anemia Anemia in CKD Anemia in neoplastic disease Pancytopenia Neutropenia 44 Depression vs. Major Depression • Category 311 (Depression) is reserved for depressive disorders not assigned a more specific diagnosis. • Category 296.xx is reserved for patients having single or recurrent episodes of: Depressive psychosis Involutional melancholia Psychotic depression Psychosis or reaction Endogenous depression Monopolar depression Manic-depressive Autogenous depression 45 Documenting Complications of Care • Complications of surgical and medical care - categories 996-997 • These categories include complications of surgical and medical care that occur when the patient suffers additional pathology, injury or other complication during, or as a result of, a procedure or medical treatment as documented by the physician. 46 Complications of Care • Mechanical problems of devices, implants, grafts category 996 • • • • • Breakdown (mechanical) Obstruction, mechanical Displacement Perforation Leakage • Protrusion Such as: • Cardiac device, implant and graft • Vascular device, implant and graft • Indwelling urinary catheter • Internal joint prosthesis • Peritoneal dialysis catheter • Other internal orthopedic device, implant and graft • Other internal prosthetic device, implant and graft • Other complications of internal (biological), (synthetic) prosthetic device, implant, and graft category 996.7X • • • • • • Occlusion due to the presence of any device, implant or graft Embolism due to the presence of any device, implant or graft Fibrosis due to the presence of any device, implant, or graft Hemorrhage due to presence of any device, implant or graft Pain due to the presence of any device, implant or graft Stenosis due to the presence of any device, implant or graft 47 Complications of Care (cont.) • Infection and inflammatory reaction due to internal prosthetic device, implant and graft 996.6x Cardiac e.g. pacemaker Vascular e.g. infusion pump Nervous system e.g. spinal canal catheter Indwelling urinary catheter (sepsis or cystitis?) Genitourinary e.g. intrauterine contraceptive device Internal joint prosthesis Internal prosthetic e.g. breast or ocular lens 48 Complications of Care (cont.) • Complications affecting specified body systems, not elsewhere classified category 997 This classification does not define a time limit for the development of a complication. It may occur during the hospital episode in which the surgery was performed, shortly thereafter, or years later. The Coding Clinic, Second Quarter, 2002 49 HCC RISK ADJUSTMENT & PROCESS IMPROVEMENT Contact Name Telephone Email Address Lisa Williams, Director Process Improvement (323)-728-7232 ext. 2263 [email protected] Nan Crawford, Senior Project Manager/Consultant on behalf of CCHP (714)-323-9723 [email protected] Sandra Velando, CCS Project Manager (323)-728-7232 ext. 2159 [email protected] 50 - Fin - 51