CMS released its 2026 Outpatient Prospective Payment System final rule on November 21. The document finalizes many proposed policies, including increasing the payment rate, expanding the agency’s method to control unnecessary increases in the volume of outpatient services, revising the Ambulatory Surgical Center Covered Procedures List criteria, and setting the payment rate for the intensive outpatient program.
Accurate provider documentation is the foundation of compliant coding, appropriate reimbursement, and defensible claims. Yet, in a rapidly changing healthcare landscape, even highly skilled clinicians can find it difficult to stay current.
Coding purpura and thrombocytopenia is often more straightforward than coders initially expect, as these diagnoses typically require minimal direction from official guidelines. The real challenge lies in correctly interpreting provider documentation and validating the terminology used. Without close attention to clarifying terms, coders risk misclassification or unnecessary queries. Note : To access this free article, make sure you first register if you do not have a paid subscription.
Transcatheter aortic valve replacement is a minimally invasive procedure developed to treat patients with severe aortic stenosis who are considered high-risk or unsuitable candidates for traditional open-heart surgery. Learn from Jane Arbogast-Schappell, CCS, CPC, CCC, CIRCC, as she walks through the procedural coding for both inpatient and outpatient settings.
Trey La Charité, MD, FACP, SFHM, CCS, CCDS, discusses how without some form of a narrative in documentation, hospital coders cannot sequence individual diagnoses. If there is no story provided, records can be rife with opportunity for a recovery auditor or payer to construct an alternative version of what happened during hospital visits, resulting in denials.
Q: What considerations should coders keep in mind when referring to problem lists for determining the principal diagnosis and proper sequencing of all documented conditions in the inpatient setting?
Review a recent OIG audit which found that Medicare improperly paid $22.7 million to suppliers for durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and supplies during inpatient stays from January 2018 to December 2024.
You’ll have to wait a while longer for National Correct Coding Initiative edits for 2026-effective codes. However, the latest quarterly NCCI update will include new medically unlikely edits for a variety of HCPCS codes that went into effect in July and October 2025.
Beginning January 1, 2026, the AMA will add a number of changes to CPT codes for two related sections: Digitally Stored Data Services/Remote Physiologic Monitoring; and Remote Physiologic Monitoring Treatment Management Services.
Our experts answer questions on bridging the gap between DSM-5 and ICD-10 for substance-related disorders; differentiating between poisoning, adverse effects, underdosing, and toxic effects; and reporting pancreatic cancer with ICD-10-CM.
Artificial intelligence has revolutionized healthcare operations, offering speed and efficiency in certain tasks, but in a field where precision drives reimbursement and compliance, speed without accuracy can turn efficiency into liability. Karen R. Lane, MSN.ed, CCDS, CCDS-O, CDIP, RN, delves deep into one critical risk of using AI: hallucinations in the context of appeals.
Transcatheter aortic valve replacement is a minimally invasive procedure developed to treat patients with severe aortic stenosis who are considered high-risk or unsuitable candidates for traditional open-heart surgery. Learn from Jane Arbogast-Schappell, CCS, CPC, CCC, CIRCC, as she walks through the procedural coding for both inpatient and outpatient settings.
Our experts answer questions about emergency transport services, the medical necessity requirements for epidurals to treat chronic pain, and medication noncompliance vs. underdosing.
In the ever-evolving world of healthcare coding, staying grounded in the fundamentals is not just best practice, it’s a necessity. As regulations shift, payer expectations tighten, and productivity pressures mount, coding professionals must continually revisit the core principles that ensure accuracy, compliance, and integrity in clinical documentation and billing.
When a woman is pregnant, relational connections between multiple organ systems can affect both mother and fetus and thereby alter, and perhaps complicate, the care they require. In addition, determining whether a condition was pre-existing or due to the pregnancy is important but can be tricky. Shelley C. Safian, PhD, MAOM/HIM/HI, RHIA, CCS-P, COC, CPC-I, provides clarifications for these types of scenarios.
Providers will have more opportunities to report +G2211, the complexity of care HCPCS add-on code. Effective January 1, 2026, providers will be able to report the code with evaluation and management encounters in more settings, CMS announced in the final 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule.
In the ever-evolving world of healthcare coding, staying grounded in the fundamentals is not just best practice, it’s a necessity. As regulations shift, payer expectations tighten, and productivity pressures mount, coding professionals must continually revisit the core principles that ensure accuracy, compliance, and integrity in clinical documentation and billing.
MDaudit, a revenue integrity software platform, recently released its annual report that examines trends in coding denials, audits, and technology based on data from the first three quarters of 2025. Note : To access this free article, make sure you first register here if you do not have a paid subscription.