A diagnosis of cancer becomes a pre-existing condition that will follow a patient for the rest of their life, but clinical records do not always provide the level of detail required to work within the framework set forward in the coding rules when it comes to reporting active neoplasms from personal history. Nancy Reading, BS, CPC, CPC-P, CPC-I, explores ICD-10-CM guidelines for such neoplasm scenarios.
Insurance companies are increasingly challenging the translation from the medical record to prebill coding, making the financial impact of denials and downgrades one of the most pressing issues facing health systems today. Given the wide-ranging harm occurring from delayed and reduced reimbursement, Dawn Valdez, RN, CCDS, CDIP, highlights how coders and CDI specialists can play a key role in decreasing denials and downgrades as well as successfully disputing these actions.
Review a study based on ICD-10-CM data from the National Vital Statistics System that shows life expectancy for the United States population increased to 79.0 years in 2024 while the mortality rate decreased by 3.8% to 722.1 deaths per 100,000 of the standard population in 2024. Also determined were leading causes of death.
Coders and billers may struggle to understand what the term medical necessity really means. Unfortunately, these two words can easily lead to misinterpretation and misunderstanding of what needs to be clearly communicated in a variety of healthcare areas. Learn common definitions of medical necessity, report types utilized in inpatient settings, and a query process in case more clinical detail is required. Note : To access this free article, make sure you first register if you do not have a paid subscription.
Q: Why is pediatric malnutrition frequently underdocumented, and how can collaborative workflows improve documentation and coding accuracy as well as reduce queries?
Our experts answer questions on the role of prior encounters in queries, coding neoplasms in transplanted organs, and workflows for reporting malnutrition and pathology.
Psychosis often emerges or is managed in outpatient mental health settings, but it can be coded during inpatient hospital stays due to the acute nature of the condition when it reaches a crisis point. To ensure that this mental health diagnosis receives the same diligence as medical and surgical diagnoses, Nancy Reading, RN, BS, CPC, CPC-P, CPC-I , provides coders with guidance on finding the right codes and resolving documentation conundrums.
Catherine O’Leary, RN, BSN, CCDS , suggests that those who begin with manual coding and DRGs often develop a stronger, more intuitive foundation in CDI and how integrating manual training into a modern CDI program doesn’t mean abandoning technology. Her insights may prove valuable to coders who may increasingly find themselves working at the intersection of coding and CDI.