1 / 31

Chapter 2

Chapter 2. Overview of ICD-9-CM Part 1. An Overview of the ICD-9-CM. Classification System Morbidity (illness) Mortality (death) ICD = International Classification of Diseases WHO’s ICD-9 used globally World Health Organization. Overview. (…Cont’d) 1977: US develops ICD-9-CM version

Download Presentation

Chapter 2

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. Chapter 2 Overview of ICD-9-CM Part 1

  2. An Overview of the ICD-9-CM • Classification System • Morbidity (illness) • Mortality (death) • ICD = International Classification of Diseases • WHO’s ICD-9 used globally • World Health Organization

  3. Overview (…Cont’d) • 1977: US develops ICD-9-CM version • ICD-9-CM data comparable to global data in ICD-9 • Updated October 1 of each year • Must use new codes as of October 1 • Also updates April 1 with no grace period

  4. Medicare • Medicare Catastrophic Act of 1988 • Required use of ICD-9-CM codes for diagnosis • Act later repealed, but codes still used • Effective 2003, all claims must have valid diagnosis • Excludes ambulance suppliers

  5. Uses of ICD-9-CM • Facilities track facilityuse through codes • Fiscal entities track health care costs (Cont’d…)

  6. Uses of ICD-9-CM (…Cont’d) • Research • Health care quality • Future needs • Newer cancer center built if patient use warrants

  7. Uses of ICD-9-CM • Use and results evident every day • Newscaster reference to number of AIDS cases • Newspaper article about measles epidemic

  8. ICD-9-CM Principles/Practices Four groups function together to maintain ICD-9-CM • Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), formerly known as Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) (Cont’d...)

  9. ICD-9-CM Principles/Practices (...Cont’d) • National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) • American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) • American Hospital Association (AHA)

  10. ICD-9-CM Documents Medical Necessity • Diagnoses establish medical necessity • Services and diagnoses must correlate • Correct diagnosis codes allow: • Accurate reimbursement • Fewer rejected claims • Reduced risk of sanctions/fines from audit

  11. CMS-1500 (08/05) in Blocks 21 and 24E (Outpatient) Courtesy U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

  12. UB04 in Blocks 66-74 (Inpatient) Courtesy U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

  13. Ethics • Documentation must support diagnosis • Example: • Services provided • Diagnosis justifies services • If in doubt, check it out; don’t make assumptions • Ask physician if information is missing or unclear

  14. Ethical Dilemna? • Patient phone calls requesting code change • Reasons • Service covered if preventive • Service applied to deductible • Pre-existing diagnosis not covered • DO NOT CHANGE CODE unless coded wrong originally • Called Coding for Coverage

  15. (con’t) • Unbundling • Billing for multiple individual codes instead of one combination code • In CPT procedural coding • Fraudulent Billing

  16. Out patient Services • Code only confirmed or diagnosed conditions • Symptoms • Do Not Code: • Probable • Rule out • Possible • Suspected

  17. Your Job (Coding) • Translate documentation into ICD-9-CM codes • Legionnaires’ disease = 482.84 • Assign code to highest level specificity • Medical record must substantiate diagnosis code assignment

  18. Format of the ICD-9-CM • Volume 1, Diseases, Tabular List (diagnosis) (17 chapters) • Volume 2, Diseases, Alphabetic Index (diagnosis) (3 sections) • Volume 3, Procedures, Tabular List and Alphabetic Index (inpatient)

  19. Volume 1, Diseases, Tabular List • Contains code numbers • 001.0-999.9 Diagnosis codes describe condition • V and E codes = supplemental information (Cont’d...)

  20. Volume 2, Diseases, Alphabetic Index • Appears first in book (may vary with publishers) • Terms and code numbers verified inVolume 1 • Never code directly from Index! • Read all notes and follow instructions (e.g., see also) • Tables (e.g., Drugs/Chemicals, Hypertension, Neoplasm)

  21. Volume 3, Procedures, Tabular List and Alphabetic Index • Not used for physician services • Index and Tabular List used for procedures and therapies • Inpatient settings only by hospital coders • Procedures and therapies • Maximum 4 digits • 20.41 Simple mastoidectomy

  22. V Codes (V01.0-V89.09) • Patient not ill but encounters health services • e.g., Vaccination • Patient presents for treatment • e.g., Chemotherapy • Some V codes are primary only (e.g., V22.0, supervision of normal first pregnancy) (Cont’d…)

  23. V Codes (V01.0-V89.09) (…Cont’d) • Factors that influence patient’s health status • e.g., Personal history of [PHO] malignant tumor, organ transplant • Birth status and outcome of delivery

  24. Classification of Diseases and Injuries • Main portion of ICD-9-CM • Codes from 001.0-999.9 • Most chapters are organ systems • Digestive System • Respiratory System

  25. Volume 1, Diseases, Format Figure: 2.5 Modified from Buck CJ: 2010 ICD-9-CM, Volumes 1, 2, & 3, Professional Edition, St. Louis, 2010, Saunders.

  26. Category Code • Category: Represent single disease/condition (3 digits) Figure: 2.6 Modified from Buck CJ: 2010 ICD-9-CM, Volumes 1, 2, & 3, Professional Edition, St. Louis, 2010, Saunders.

  27. Subcategory Code • Subcategory: More specific (4th digit) Figure: 2.7 Modified from Buck CJ: 2010 ICD-9-CM, Volumes 1, 2, & 3, Professional Edition, St. Louis, 2010, Saunders.

  28. Subclassification Code • Subclassification: More specific (5th digit) Referenced from Buck CJ: 2010 ICD-9-CM, Volumes 1, 2, & 3, Professional Edition, St. Louis, 2010, Saunders.

  29. Specificity in ICD-9-CM Codes • Each digit adds to the specificity (detail) Figure: 2.9

  30. Remember • Assign to the highest level possible, based on documentation • If 4-digit code exists, do not report 3-digit code • If5-digit code exists, do not report 4-digit code

  31. Chapter 2 Conclusion – Overview ICD-9-CM Part 1

More Related