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.
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.
In December 2023, the Office of the Inspector General published a toolkit for Medicare Advantage organizations who submit high-risk diagnoses, and it announced in January 2026 that an audit will be conducted on high-risk codes that the organizations submitted for 2024. Nancy Reading, BS, CPC, CPC-P, CPC-I, reviews the high-risk codes and emphasizes what to look for in the documentation to support coding practices.
Recovery auditors and payers have demonstrated an eagerness to exploit what providers routinely state in the medical record to facilitate additional DRG validation and medical necessity denials. Therefore, knowing what should not be said in a medical record is worth reviewing. To illustrate, Trey La Charité, MD, FACP, SFHM, CCS, CCDS, lists 10 things providers should never be documenting in the medical record.
Immunoglobulin G4-related disease is a chronic immune-mediated fibroinflammatory disorder that often manifests with tumor-like masses and/or painless enlargement of multiple organs. Shontia Leon-Guerrero, CPC, CEDC, CEMC, CPC-I Educator, explores the general manifestations of the disease, its signs and symptoms, as well as key documentation tips and a coding scenario.
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.
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.
Our experts answer questions on reporting postpartum hemorrhage; combining ICD-10-CM T codes for drug-related manifestations with Z, F, Y codes; and coding hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy.
From concussions and cerebral contusions to complex intracranial hemorrhages and traumatic brain injuries, major head injuries encompass a wide spectrum of clinical presentations and outcomes. Because of their complexity and potential for lasting impact, complete and compliant ICD-10-CM coding is essential to reflect the full clinical severity of these conditions. Note : To access this free article, make sure you first register if you do not have a paid subscription.
Addressing the reliability of documentation, coding, and clinical reasoning underlying PSI flags is not simply a clinical safety imperative; it is a strategic business imperative. Priscilla Marlar, MHA, CSSBB, CPHQ, and John W. Cromwell, MD, suggest that achieving high reliability in quality data integrity starts with understanding the nuances of clinical documentation language and how those nuances are translated by CDI and coding teams into hospital billing codes.
Q: What are the most common reasons postpartum hemorrhage is documented and coded inconsistently, and how can coders and clinicians help address these issues?
Collaboration can take many forms depending on the needs of an organization, but Leah Ainsworth, BSHIIM, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCDS, shows how her department is just one of many to make coding and CDI work hand in hand to create meaningful impacts and ensure accuracy.
Medicare pays for physical and occupational therapy services when the medical record and the information on the claim form accurately report covered therapy services. This article discusses Medicare’s documentation requirements to justify billed therapy services. Note : To access this free article, make sure you first register here if you do not have a paid subscription.
Just as healthcare continues to evolve and change, a successful CDI program must also evolve and change. The work of the CDI team creates a positive impact in several crucial areas, including documentation accuracy and completeness, patient safety, revenue cycle, and regulatory compliance. CDI specialists play a vital role in ensuring that medical records are accurate, complete, and a reflection of the true clinical picture, which is crucial for patient safety and accurate billing.
Our experts answer questions on sorting through problem lists for the principal diagnosis, coding poisonings with resulting manifestations, and capturing loss of consciousness status.
Social determinants of health (SDOH) are critical for the well-being of the patient and are often more important than what occurs in physician’s offices, laboratories, operating rooms, and other clinical settings. Accurately capturing SDOH and providing education on doing so are equally critical for patient care, quality reporting, and reimbursement.
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?
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.