PEPPER is an acronym for the Program for Evaluating Payment Patterns Electronic Report . The PEPPER was originated by the Hospital Payment Monitoring Program (HPMP) and Quality Improvement Organizations.
The following questions were answered by Shannon McCall, RHIA, CCS, CCS-P, CPC, CEMC, CRC, CCDS, HCS-D, director of HIM and coding for HCPro in Middleton, Massachusetts, and Yvette DeVay, MHA, CPC, CPMA, CIC, CPC-I, lead instructor for HCPro’s Medicare Boot Camp®—Physician Services Version.
All queries, regardless of their origin, are bound to follow the “ Guidelines for Achieving a Compliant Query Practice .” In order to ensure queries stand up to outside scrutiny and are effective, many CDI and inpatient coding leaders have put query audit practices in place for their departments as they bring on new team members.
Sepsis is a major challenge for patients, hospitals, and coders in America. Three articles first published online by the journal Critical Care Medicine give an update on trends in sepsis in the U.S. through Medicare beneficiary data collected between 2012 and 2018.
Globally, millions of people have been infected by the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) . There have been hundreds of thousands of confirmed COVID-19 cases, and many thousands of deaths, just in the United States
Why delve into psychiatric record review? For some programs, the expansion into psychiatric units or facilities may be driven by the needs of the patient population, says Rhonda Mark, RN, BS, CCDS , a CDI specialist at Cleveland Clinic Indian River Hospital in Vero Beach, Florida.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is monitoring the rapid spread of a disease caused by the 2019 novel coronavirus, formally named COVID-19 . Recently, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic.
Providence St. Joseph Health, which cared for the first U.S. novel coronavirus (COVID-19) patient, is sharing how the health system has responded to the crisis.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released an important report in November 2019 on antibiotic-resistant threats in the United States. This comprehensive look at the serious problem of antibiotic resistance has compelling individual stories, great graphics, and actions that healthcare institutions can take to help deal with the issue. The report is free to download. I recommend it for professionals who work in documentation and coding as the information can be applied immediately in your work environments.