1 / 17

Timothy N. Brundage , MD, CCDS Certified Clinical Documentation Specialist

Timothy N. Brundage , MD, CCDS Certified Clinical Documentation Specialist. Physician CDI Preparation for ICD-10. Clinical Documentation Integrity Program:.

york
Download Presentation

Timothy N. Brundage , MD, CCDS Certified Clinical Documentation Specialist

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Timothy N. Brundage, MD, CCDS Certified Clinical Documentation Specialist Physician CDI Preparation for ICD-10

  2. Clinical Documentation Integrity Program: “We do not believe there is anything inappropriate, unethical, or otherwise wrong with hospitals taking full advantage of coding opportunities to maximize Medicare payment that is supported by documentation in the medical record.” CMS 2008 IPPS Final Rule, http://www.cms.hhs.gov/AcuteInpatientPPS/downloads/CMS-1533-FC.pdf, page 208

  3. Why does CDI Matter? Utilization Quality Medical legal Reimbursement Medical Record Clinical Medicine Physician Profiles & Hospital Report Cards Data Coded Physician documentation in the medical record is an important instrument in the economics of healthcare

  4. Why does CDI Matter?Medicine Under The Microscope • Cost per patient • Resource utilization • Length of stay • Complication Rates • Morbidity Scores • Mortality Scores • Outcome Analysis • Audits

  5. In this World of Documentation • Documentation reflects severity of illness (SOI) and risk of mortality (ROM) scores. • Specificity is vital, a definitive diagnosis must be documented. • Physician profiles are developed from documented information Golden Rule: “If it is not written in coding language, it didn’t happen”

  6. ICD Versions • ICD-9 • 1977 – Worldwide use • 1979 – U.S. modification • Clinical & mortality • ICD-10 • 1994 – Release of full ICD-10 by WHO • Published in 42 languages • 1999 – Adopted for death certificates in the United States • Mortality • 2014 – U.S. modification • Clinical • ICD-11 • 2015 – Tentative rollout worldwide

  7. Differences Between ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM/PCS • ICD-9-CM diagnosis • 3–5 characters • Allows for 1 letter (1st position); otherwise numeric • ICD-9-CM procedures • 4 characters only • All characters are numeric • ICD-10-CM • 3 to 7 characters • 1st character is alpha (except U); others are either alpha or numeric • Numbers 0–9; letters A–H, J–N, P–Z • Alpha characters are not case-sensitive • ICD-10-PCS • Same as ICD-10-CM except each code must have 7 characters • Letter “Z” used as a placeholder

  8. ICD-9-CM Structure – Format Numeric or alpha (E or V) Numeric X 4 5 E V X 1 X 4 X 0 0 X . . Category Etiology, anatomic site, manifestation 3–5 characters 8

  9. ICD-10-CM Structure – Format Additional characters 2–7 numeric or alpha Alpha (except U) . . X X X A X A S M 3 X 2 X X 0 1 0 Added code extensions (7th character) for obstetrics, injuries, and external causes of injury Category Etiology, anatomic site, severity 3–7 characters

  10. Physician Buy In to CDI The most challenging aspect of CDI How do you motivate physicians to educate themselves?

  11. Teach Physicians about Quality Data • Without all diagnoses documented, profiles will inappropriately reflect higher than expected mortality • Complete documentation, reflective of the true severity of illness of patients will justify outcomes Profiles are used for both commercial and public use Future reimbursement methods will likely incorporate profiles in the formula (e.g., pay for performance) 11

  12. Physician Profiling • Hospital Report cards • Healthgrades, Delta Group, Leapfrog • Medicare Physician Data (since 2007) • Federal and state regulatory agencies (e.g. OIG) • The Joint Commission (TJC) • Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) • Quality Improvement Organizations (QIO)

  13. Healthgrades.com

  14. Physician Quality Ratings • Predicted Mortality Rates for some disease processes in this case: • Community Acquired Pneumonia = 10% • Sepsis = 30% • Septic shock = 50% • If the patient survives, quality ratings will be much higher in the public reporting data because the physician took care of a “sicker” patient. • Expected mortality will be higher than actual mortality.

  15. ICD-10 Physician Education • Don’t need to turn doctors into coders • Need good documentation habits • Need specialty specific documentation education • Begin the process of education now for ICD-9 and incorporate ICD-10 issues into the education

  16. Questions?Email DrBrundage@Gmail.com

More Related