We’ve survived the holiday feast and decided to skip the doorbusting to head out and visit the cute and fluffy animals at the Anytown Zoo. Of course, no outing would be complete without some injuries...
Tom Turkey has come in to the Stitch ‘Em Up Hospital for a little work before Thanksgiving. Dr. Carver is going to first take out Tom’s guts, then replace them with stuffing. How would we code Tom’s...
Porcelain aorta is a disease that is caused by severe and widespread hardening of the walls of the ascending aorta that reaches to the aortic arch and descending aorta. Although there are several methods used to diagnose porcelain aorta, Brandi Hutcheson, RN, MSN, CCM, CCDS, CCA, says there is not a clear consensus on how it should be diagnosed.
Q: How are stroke intervention procedures like angioplasty, transfemoral carotid artery stenting, and transcarotid arterial catheterization coded using ICD-10-PCS, and how does ICD-10-PCS handle the coding of new technology devices?
A report published by the American Cancer Society found that colorectal cancer rates among adults younger than 65 continue to increase while rates for older adults continue to decline. The study found that the increase is being driven by a higher prevalence of rectal cancer, which now makes up 32% of all colorectal cancer diagnoses, up from 27% in the mid-2000s.
At the recent public ICD-10 Coordination and Maintenance Committee Meeting, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Health Statistics discussed a draft proposal involving an expansion of sepsis diagnosis coding. Review the updates being considered for implementation on April 1, 2027. Note : To access this free article, make sure you first register if you do not have a paid subscription.
ICD-10-PCS coding for procedures performed within the cranial cavity is complicated. Terry Tropin, MSHAI, RHIA, CCS-P, describes the different body part values used for the brain and cranial cavity, root operations used, and coding for some common procedures.
The phrase “don’t reinvent the wheel” applies well to the development of an outpatient CDI program when a mature inpatient CDI foundation already exists. The challenge is not whether the wheel can be reused, but how to navigate the differences.
Q: A patient presents with acute respiratory failure with hypoxia due to an accidental heroin overdose. What is going to be sequenced first: the acute respiratory failure or the poisoning?
CMS is signaling a clear shift in how it views risk adjustment, quality performance, and documentation integrity. For coding and CDI professionals, this moment represents not a threat, but a critical inflection point.