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2018 CPC Practice Exam Answer Key 150 Questions With Full Rationale (HCPCS, ICD-9-CM, ICD-10, CPT Codes) Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions with Full Rationale Answers

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Click here for more sample CPC practice exam questions and answers with full rationale

Medical Malpractice New York – Fighting an Unfortunate & Tragic Situation

The medical malpractice may occur when a patient is under the supervision of a careless or a negligent doctor or a medical staff. This may involve in the delay or failure in properly treating the patient’s injury or illness or in diagnosing. This will further result in causing the aggravated or new injuries. There are very knowledgeable and highly experienced lawyers who help hundreds of the people who became the victim of medical malpractice New York.

Many of the people does not even realize that how frequently this problem of medical malpractice New York occurs that too every year. There are in fact hundreds of the people who get either injured from the medical negligence or medical malpractice, or even the result of medical malpractice is the death of the sufferer. The patients die from the illness or the injury which in reality could have been treated or been prevented by the medical professional with the appropriate medical care.

Since, the medical malpractice New York can surely occur in various different situations, the claims of the medical malpractice can also take various different forms and for various different reasons. Some of the most common claims of the medical malpractice include, firstly, the birth injury. In this situation, when the child is born which in itself is a very delicate situation and the medical malpractice problem is arise, then the sufferer’s family can make a claim against the negligent doctor. Another claim for the medical malpractice is the cerebral palsy. It is basically a medical condition which is caused due to the damage of the brain from various types of the reasons. There are many times that the cerebral palsy becomes a result of the medical malpractice like the birth injury.

One of the other claims of the medical malpractice is the failure in diagnosing. If the medical professional fails in diagnosing an illness or the injury, then they are liable for the medical malpractice. It would be their fault because they failed in prescribing the correct treatment at the correct time leading the disease to progress. The next claim can be the medication errors. If your medical professional prescribe you with the wrong type of the medication, then the consequences of this can be very dangerous. If in the prescribed medication you are allergic to that particular substance, then this can even lead to the death.

Another type of the claim is the use of the defective medical instruments. If you suffer or get injured due to the wrong medical device, then the medical professional is liable for the medical malpractice which follows as its result. If you or any of your loved one has become the victim of this dangerous act of the medical malpractice New York, then you should contact a medical malpractice lawyer New York as soon as possible. These lawyers will try to help and guide you for receiving the appropriate compensation which you deserve. These lawyers should be chosen very carefully, keeping in mind their background and experiences from the past.

George Turner gives advice to clients who are looking for attorneys to handle injury related cases. To know more about the services of medical malpractice, medical malpractice lawyer new york, medical malpractice lawyers new york, medical malpractice law firm, personal injury New York, medical malpractice New York visit www.nbrlawfirm.com .

Newsflash: The AMA is Fighting ICD-10 – is my Blog to Blame?

Okay, so it’s not really news that the American Medical Association is showing R45.4 (Irritability and anger) and R45.5 (Hostility) when it comes to ICD-10.  But are their R45.82 (worries) really worth all the R45.83 (Excessive crying of child, adolescent, or adult)?

Okay, all kidding aside, I hate to admit that blogs like mine might be partly to blame for the backlash, but are they?  In learning ICD-10-CM, it’s just not fun to write blogs and articles about how the ICD-9-CM code for unspecified hypertension will be I10 in ICD-10.  Okay, bad example.  ICD-10 gives us I10 (hypertension).  Oh wait, you’ve heard that one? 

I’ll go out on a limb here and just say it.  Coding is boring.  But I love it anyway and find it fascinating and go out of my way to try to make learning coding fun and enjoyable.  And since in my day job I don’t get to spend a lot of time reflecting on the fun and entertaining external cause codes, I have decided to take to my blog to explore some of the more entertaining ICD-10 codes and inject some humor where I can.  And it’s hard.  Because, as I mentioned, coding is boring.

But with all of the hype on ICD-10 we’ve managed to fool a lot of people into thinking that it’s not really boring no-nonsense work and that what we do is actually very trivial and unimportant.  In an April interview on Fox News, Congressman Ted Poe (R-TX) gave several arguments against ICD-10-CM implementation in the United States and several examples of why the new coding system is ridiculous and unnecessary, including the various codes for injuries by turkeys and dog bites by specific breeds of dogs (BTW – dog bites by breed codes do not exist). 

Indeed, there are some very silly external cause codes, but in an article by the American Health Information Management Association, which wasn’t as well publicized as Congressman Poe’s interview, AHIMA states that there is no national mandate to report external cause codes in ICD-10-CM.  In fact, if providers are not reporting E codes in ICD-9-CM, they won’t be required to report external cause codes in ICD-10-CM.  And since the 1500 billing form, which is used by physicians to report codes to Medicare, only has space for four diagnosis codes, the external cause codes are not likely to play a large role in pro-fee coding and billing.  And then all that’s left is those boring codes in the remaining ICD-10 chapters.

But why isn’t anyone pointing that out?  Well, I suppose it’s just more fun to talk about a code for being pecked by a chicken.  Or struck by a chicken (is that a live chicken or, say, a frozen chicken from the supermarket?!).  But in reality, we are training coders on the important enhancements that ICD-10 coding brings.  Here are a couple of important “for instances” for you:

  • Somewhat simplified sepsis coding (okay, so they couldn’t do it all, but we’ll take somewhat simplified over super confusing any day)
  • One diagnosis code for admission for vaccination (the procedure code indicates the specific vaccine given)
  • OB codes that actually make sense – most of them classify conditions by trimester rather than that “delivered with antepartum complication” nonsense
  • New and specific codes for subsequent acute myocardial infarction (AMI) that occurs within the timeframe of an initial AMI
  • Codes for blood alcohol level (here in Colorado we’re waiting for the blood marijuana content codes – I’m pretty sure Washington is interested too)
  • Bye-bye to encounter for therapy codes (talk about administrative burden – insurance companies hate those V codes for admission for physical/occupational/speech therapy codes; the new code system has a way of denoting that an injury is in the healing phase)
  • Combination codes for diabetic complications (because half the time coders forget to code the second code anyway)

Now don’t get me wrong.  I am not saying that physicians won’t be impacted at all because they will.  We will be asking them to document more clearly but in general we want documentation that really should already be there.  It’s nice to know whether the left or right femur is broken.  I’m pretty sure that it’s not just the coders who are interested.  And even though physicians won’t have to code ICD-10-PCS procedure codes, we will be prompting them for more specific documentation within operative reports. 

And while we’re at it, let’s talk about the volume of codes.  Yes, there are a lot more ICD-10-CM codes than ICD-9-CM codes.  That’s to be expected when they create codes for left, right, bilateral, and unspecified where applicable.  And my favorite quote regarding this issue came from Don Asmonga of AHIMA at a conference last spring: “There are a lot of words in the dictionary, but that doesn’t mean you use all of them.”  Indeed.  There are many codes that we will never use.  And coders aren’t supposed to memorize codes anyway.  In the training I’ve done thus far, coders have actually expressed that having more codes is better – they are able to better drill down to what’s really going on with the patient instead of sticking a junky nonspecific code on the case.

So if you come across a physician who is arguing against ICD-10 implementation, I would suggest that you put the kibosh on the fun code talk and get straight to the boring benefits.  Will ICD-10 impact patient care?  Probably not as directly as nurse finding a medication error before meds are administered.  But the data that is collected on the back end will have implications for future quality initiatives; in fact many of the quality initiatives coming up depend on ICD-10 data.  Besides, even the boring ICD-10-CM codes are more exciting than the same old boring ICD-9-CM codes that no other industrialized nation in the WORLD uses anymore.  I mean, I hate to play the peer pressure card, but seriously, we should be leaders in in medicine – and in collecting medical data.  Who else is on board?
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