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| | Press Release 09/22/03 | | | Field-Test Shows Benefits of New Medical Coding System |
WikipediA The free encyclopedia AnestaWeb Advanced Medical Technologies U-S-A Major modifications in the ICD 10 Codes include:
- ICD 10 Codes ability to report laterally specifying whether a medical condition occurred on the right or left side.
- Expanded sections with ICD 10 Codes including diabetes, postoperative complications, injury and substance/alcohol abuse.
- ICD 10 Codes will define standard definitions for "excludes" notes.
- ICD 10 Codes will expand identification of trimesters to obstetrical codes.
- Identification with ICD 10 Codes of initial encounter, subsequent encounter, and sequelae of injuries.
- The ICD 10 Codes offer combination diagnosis/symptoms codes.
- ICD 10 Codes offer expanded external causes of injury.
- ICD 10 Codes will drastically improve clinical detail.
- ICD 10 CM Codes include and addition of a sixth character.
- In some of the ICD 10 Codes twenty-one chapters an addition of a seventh character extension is noted (ICD 9 Codes have a maximum of five characters).
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ICD10Codes.com Your Quick Resource for ICD-10-CM Codes on the Internet!
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Adoption of the ICD-10 code sets is expected to:
• Support Medicare’s value-based purchasing initiative and antifraud and abuse activities by accurately defining services and providing specific diagnosis and treatment information;
• Provide the precision needed for a number of emerging uses such as pay-for-performance and biosurveillance. Biosurveillance is the automated monitoring of information sources that may help in detecting an emerging epidemic, whether naturally occurring or as the result of bioterrorism;
• Support comprehensive reporting of quality data;
• Ensure more accurate payments for new procedures, fewer rejected claims, improved disease management, and harmonization of disease monitoring and reporting worldwide; and
• Allow the United States to compare its data with international data to track the incidence and spread of disease and treatment outcomes because the United States is one of the few developed countries not using ICD-10.
ICD-10 will also improve claims processing and payment, and, through the use of health care technology that utilizes ICD-10, assist health care practitioners in making treatment decisions by more precisely matching diagnoses and procedures to the appropriate code. For example:
• Pressure ulcers are a common condition in elderly Medicare beneficiaries with chronic illnesses. Under the current ICD-9-CM system, health care practitioners can identify the severity or location of a pressure ulcer but the coding system cannot link those elements if the patient has more than one ulcer. Under a single ICD-10 code, a patient’s medical history will identify the severity and location of each pressure ulcer;
• ICD-9 has only one code for angioplasty, the widely used procedure for widening a narrowed or obstructed blood vessel. ICD-10 provides 1,170 coded descriptions, with a granularity that pinpoints the location of the blockage and the device used for each patient;
• ICD-9 codes do not provide sufficient detail to distinguish whether a condition occurred on a patient’s left or right side. ICD-10 will improve care by providing that basic type of information; and
• ICD-9 includes separate codes for medication errors and other external causes of injury, which are reported separately from the actual condition. Under ICD-10, information about medication errors and external causes of injury will be embedded in the code for the condition. Therefore a single, more informative code will provide a ready source of information to help medical professionals prevent medical errors and improve quality of care.dings indicated
On September 22, 2003, the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) and the American Hospital Association (AHA) concluded a field-test study of ICD 10 Codes medical code sets. These findings indicated that the ICD 10 Codes represented a significant improvement over the current ICD 9 Codes coding system. The study also added that the ICD 10 Codes can be implemented without changes in documentation practices or excessive staff training costs.
Development of ICD 10 codes
In the mid 1990's the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) found that a clinical modification of ICD 10 Codes would be a significant improvement which should be implemented in the United States. As medical knowledge has increased including emerging diseases, new concepts and the need to expand distinctions for managed care and ambulatory care, a clinical modification was needed. The clinical modification for ICD 10 Codes was created in three phases. The first phase developed with the assistance of a technical advisory panel (TAP) being a prototype. The next two phases incorporated enhancements to the prototype based on the ICD 9 Codes Coordination and Maintenance Committee and public input. The development of the ICD 10 Codes included group discussions with physicians, professional associations (e.g., American Hospital Association, or AHA) and professional licensed coders currently using ICD 9 Codes. As potential problems are identified during the field testing, future improvements are expected. Although ICD 10 Codes are in the public domain, neither the codes nor the code titles can be changed unless approved by the Coordination and Maintenance process overseen together by the Centers for Medicare and Medical Services (CMS) and the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). ICD 10 Codes consist of twenty-one chapters. The classification of factors influencing health status and contact with health services (V codes), and the classification of external causes of injury and poisoning (E codes), are incorporated within ICD 10 Codes instead of being considered supplementary classifications, as in ICD 9 Codes. |
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ICD10Codes.com
Your Quick search for ICD-10-CM Codes on WikipediA |
ICD 10 Codes, Chapters A and B: Certain infectious and parasitic diseases
ICD 10 Codes, Chapters C and D: Neoplasms, diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs, and certain isorders involving the immune mechanism
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter E: Endocrine, nutritional and metabolic diseases
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter F: Mental and behavioural disorders
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter G: Diseases of the nervous system
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter H: Diseases of the eye, adnexa, ear, and mastoid process
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter I: Diseases of the circulatory system
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter J: Diseases of the respiratory system
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter K: Diseases of the digestive system
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter L: Diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissue
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter M: Diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter N: Diseases of the genitourinary system
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter O: Pregnancy, childbirth and the puerperium
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter P: Certain conditions originating in the perinatal period
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter Q: Congenital malformations, deformations and chromosomal abnormalities
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter R: Symptoms, signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings
ICD 10 Codes, Chapters S and T: Injury, poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes
ICD 10 Codes, Chapters V, W, X, and Y: External causes of morbidity and mortality
ICD 10 Codes, Chapter Z: Factors influencing health status and contact with health services
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