Q: What codes should a coder consider for a patient diagnosed with an eating disorder (e.g., anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder)?
ICD-10-CM contains specific pain codes based on the type of prosthetic device, mesh, or implant. This article reviews best practices for using placeholders and selecting the correct encounter code, as well as other considerations when using diagnosis codes.
Looking to improve the speed and accuracy of your trigger point injection coding? This article will help you spot the information you need to code the services and find areas where your treating providers need extra help to improve their documentation.
Certain diagnosis-related groups (DRG) remain vulnerable to audits and denials, not only for DRG and clinical validation, but for medical necessity as well. Kim Conner, BSN, CCDS, CCDS-O , explores areas coding professionals can support when being proactive against these denials.
When an office/outpatient visit is coded based on time, think beyond face-to-face time to get full credit. This article reviews time-based coding, how to count time, which activities count toward time, and which ones don’t.
With guidance from Linda Martien, CPC, COC, CPMA, CPC-I, CRC, AAPC approved instructor, AAPC fellow , coding professionals can review arthritis codes to avoid the use of generalized codes in order to reflect a patient’s condition more accurately and ensure compliance with insurance requirements.
Whether the discussion is about reimbursement, quality metrics, patient outcomes, or CC/MCC capture rates, the whispers of risk adjustment have grown to a roar. Jennifer Brettler, DO, FACP, CHCQM-PHYADV , reveals just how much risk adjustment plays a role in documentation and coding integrity, impacting patient care.
Our experts answer questions on the new ICD-10-CM serotonin syndrome code, key takeaways for documenting and supporting malnutrition diagnoses, and appropriate circumstances for reporting codes from ICD-10-CM subcategory E66.8- (other obesity).