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ICD-10-CM/PCS Physician Education Hematology and Oncology 1 ICD-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will not be used on physician claims, even those for inpatient visits 2 Why ICD-10 Current ICD-9 Code Set is: – Outdated: 30 years old – Current code structure limits amount of new codes that can be created – Has obsolete groupings of disease families – Lacks specificity and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 3 Diagnosis Code Structure 4 ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code Format 5 Comparison: ICD-9 to ICD-10-CM 6 Procedure Code Structure ICD-10-PCS Code Format 8 ICD-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? 9 ICD-10-CM/PCS Documentation Tips 10 ICD-10 Provider Impact • Clinical documentation is the foundation of successful ICD10 Implementation • Golden Rule of Documentation – If it isn’t documented by the physician, it didn’t happen – If it didn’t happen, it can’t 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 11 Gold Standard Documentation Practices 1. Always document diagnoses that contributed to the reason for admission, not just the presenting symptoms 2. Document diagnoses, rather that descriptors 3. Indicate acuity/severity of all diagnoses 4. Link all diseases/diagnoses to their underlying cause 5. Indicate “suspected”, “possible”, or “likely” when treating a condition empirically 6. Use supporting documentation from the dietician / wound care to accurately document nutritional disorders and pressure ulcers 7. Clarify diagnoses that are present on admission 8. Clearly indicate what has been ruled out 9. Avoid the use of arrows and symbols 10. Clarify the significance of diagnostic tests 12 ICD-10 Provider Impact The 7 Key Documentation Elements: 1.Acuity – acute versus chronic 2.Site – be as specific as possible 3.Laterality – right, left, bilateral for paired organs and anatomic sites 4.Etiology – causative disease or contributory drug, chemical, or non-medicinal substance 5.Manifestations – any other associated conditions 6.External Cause of Injury – circumstances of the injury or accident and the place of occurrence 7.Signs & Symptoms – clarify if related to a specific condition or disease process 13 ICD-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 14 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Signs & Symptoms – document underlying cause / conditions Admit with sign / symptom Discharge with a Diagnosis Fever Underlying condition (due to) Infection type (example: pneumonia) Neutropenic fever Neutropenic sepsis Pain Underlying condition (due to) •Neoplasm •Other cause Treatments – pain pumps, intrathecal treatments, etc. Altered Mental Status Underlying cause •Encephalopathy •UTI 15 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Site and Laterality – right versus left –bilateral body parts or paired organs Stage of disease –Acute, Chronic –Intermittent, Recurrent, Transient –Primary, Secondary –Stage I, II, III, IV Disease Status –Current disease, in treatment –History of disease, treatment complete –Also include family history 16 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Neoplasm – Location • Detailed location • Left, Right, Bilateral – Morphology • • • • Malignant, Benign Primary , Secondary In situ Uncertain behavior, Unspecified behavior – Histology • Identified by cytology, histology or pathology findings – Stage / Metastatic • Different, distinct locations – Different primaries – Metastatic sites 17 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Neoplasm continued – Is patient being admitted for treatment of the neoplasm or an adverse reaction / complication? • Treatment - surgery, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, radiation • Adverse reaction of treatment – neutropenic fever secondary to chemo • Complication of the disease – anemia due to malignancy – Document if a complication is part of the disease process or an adverse effect of treatment • Anemia due to malignancy or due to chemotherapy – History of • Malignancies previously removed and no longer receiving active treatment • Clearly document for follow-up and medical surveillance 18 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Breast Neoplasm – in addition to information on previous slides, also include: – Location • Must include the quadrant of the breast – Gender • Specify clearly if patient is a male or female 19 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Leukemia – Acuity • Acute, chronic – Type • • • • Acute lymphoblastic Chronic lymphocytic Hairy cell Adult T-cell – Disease Status • Remission not achieved • In remission • In relapse 20 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Lymphoma – Classify based on histiologic type with lymph node, extranodal and solid organ involvement – Hodgkin examples • Nodular lymphocytic predominat • Mixed cellularity classical • Lymphocytic-rich classical – Follicular examples • Grade I – IIIb • Cutaneous follicle center • Diffuse follicle center – Non-follicular examples • Small B-cell • Diffuse large B-cell • Lymphoblastic – Mature T/NK-Cell • Mycosis fungoides • Anaplastic large cell, ALK- 21 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Anemia – Type • Nutritional – iron deficiency, vitamin B12 deficiency • Hemolytic – enzyme disorder, thalassemia – Acquired versus hereditary • Aplastic – drug induced, idiopathic – Cause / Underlying disease • • • • Post hemorrhagic Drug induced Malignancy Manifestation of adverse effect or poisoning – Example – neoplasm, kidney disease – Document if part of the disease process, or an adverse effect of treatment • Anemia due to malignancy or chemotherpay 22 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Sickle Cell Anemia – Type • • • • Hb-SS Thalassemia HB-C Trait – Sickle-cell crisis • Specify with or without crisis • If in crisis, document manifestations – Acute chest syndrome – Splenic sequestration 23 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Coagulation – Type • Hemorrhagic Disorder • Coagulation defect – Cause • Hereditary • Acquired – Document underlying or associated disease – Specify medications or drug use affiliated with manifestations • Hematuria due to Coumadin 24 ICD-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 patient’s reason for not taking the medication – example – financial reason – Z91.120 – Patient’s intentional underdosing of medication due to financial hardship 25 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Codes for postoperative complications have been expanded and a distinction made between intraoperative complications and postprocedural disorders •The provider must clearly document the relationship between the condition and the procedure – Example: • D78.01 –Intraoperative hemorrhage and hematoma of spleen complicating a procedure on the spleen • D78.21 –Post-procedural hemorrhage and hematoma of spleen following a procedure on the spleen 26 ICD-10 Documentation Tips Intra-operative Post-procedural Accidental puncture / laceration Timing: •Post-procedure •Late effect Same or different body system Classify as: •An expected post-procedural condition •An unexpected post-procedural condition, related to the patient’s underlying medical comorbidities •An unexpected post-procedural condition, unrelated to the procedure •An unexpected post-procedural condition related to surgical care (a complication of care) Blood product Central venous catheter Drug: •What adverse effect •Drug name •Correctly prescribed •Properly administered Encounter: •Initial •Subsequent •Sequelae 27 ICD-10 Documentation Tips ICD-10-PCS does not allow for unspecified procedures, clearly document: • Body System – general physiological system / anatomic region • Root Operation – objective of the procedure • Body Part – specific anatomical site • Approach – technique used to reach the site of the procedure • Device – Devices left at the operative site ICD-10 Documentation Tips Most Common Root Operations: Bypass – altering the route Excision – cutting out or off, of passage of the contents without replacement a of a tubular body part portion of a body part Reposition – moving to its normal location all or a portion of a body part Control – stopping or attempting to stop, postprocedural bleeding Release – freeing a body part from an abnormal physical constraint Resection – cutting out or off, without replacement, all of a body part Division – cutting into a body part without draining fluids &/or gases in order to separate or transect the body part Repair – restoring, to the extent possible, a body part to its normal anatomic structure & function Restriction – partially closing an orifice or the lumen of a tubular body part Drainage – taking or letting Replacement – putting in or on a biological or synthetic out fluids &/or gases from material that physically takes the place and/or function of all a body part or a portion of a body part 29 Summary The 7 Key Documentation Elements: 1.Acuity – acute versus chronic 2.Site – be as specific as possible 3.Laterality – right, left, bilateral for paired organs and anatomic sites 4.Etiology – causative disease or contributory drug, chemical, or non-medicinal substance 5.Manifestations – any other associated conditions 6.External Cause of Injury – circumstances of the injury or accident and the place of occurrence 7.Signs & Symptoms – clarify if related to a specific condition or disease process 30