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The Importance and Power of Language

The words and narratives we use in healthcare have a significant impact on our patients and our work culture. When you hear the term “health equity” what do you think of? It may sound like just another buzzword, but the concept is one whose time has come. For decades the words we’ve drawn on in […]

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Coding Clinic gives direction on heart failure, obstetrics, and linking language

Coding Clinic gives direction on heart failure, obstetrics, and linking language

by Laurie L. Prescott, MSN, RN, CCDS, CDIP

We are more than six months into the transition to ICD-10-CM/PCS, and at times it appears there are more questions than answers.

The last few weeks have brought us some direction, though, including the release of approximately 1,900 new ICD-10-CM codes for 2017. (The list can be found on CMS’ website.) We also have a list of approximately 3,600 new ICD-10-PCS codes for 2017. (This is also available on CMS’ site.) Of course, we will also be looking for changes in DRG mappings and the CC/MCC lists, which will likely appear later this summer.

The transition to ICD-10 was not a one-time process that ended on October 1, 2015?it will continue for quite some time. As CDI specialists, we must keep informed of the new information, including the latest guidance offered by AHA Coding Clinic for ICD-10-CM/PCS®.

The latest release, First Quarter 2016, focused on ICD- 10-CM diagnosis codes, in comparison to 2015, which focused more on the procedure side. One thing remains constant, though: It seems like every Coding Clinic offers some guidance that makes me think, "Finally, it’s about time!" yet also contains other pieces of advice that simply prompt more questions.

 

Heart failure differentiation

Let’s start with the long-awaited direction related to differentiation of heart failure. Coding Clinic heeded the American College of Cardiology and will now allow the more current descriptions of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) to be coded as systolic and diastolic heart failure, respectively. This guidance is highly welcomed.

 

Obstetrics admission

For those who review obstetrical cases, there is guidance related to selection of principal diagnoses related to an obstetrics admission. The condition prompting the admission should be sequenced as the principal diagnosis for an obstetrical patient. If there is a complication of the delivery, the appropriate code would be assigned as a secondary diagnosis. Coding Clinic provides the example of an admission for premature rupture of membranes with a laceration complicating a delivery. In such a scenario, the principal diagnosis is pregnancy complicated by premature rupture of the membranes, and a secondary diagnosis of laceration would be assigned.

There is also guidance related to ICD-10-PCS code assignment for the repair of obstetrical lacerations; it instructs us to code the body part as related to the degree of the laceration or the deepest level of the repair as described (perineum, perineal muscle, rectal mucosa, and anal sphincter, for example).

 

Linking language

ICD-10-CM provides many opportunities to assign combination codes, especially those related to diabetes and the many complications associated with this condition. CDI specialists at your facility no doubt have worked diligently with providers to document the relationship using "linking language."

The question posed in this latest Coding Clinic asks if the provider must document the relationship between the two diagnoses or whether the coder can assume the relationship and assign the appropriate combination code. The answer provided (on p. 11 of Coding Clinic) actually left me more perplexed. It states:

The classification assumes a cause-and-effect relationship between diabetes and certain diseases of the kidneys, nerves and circulatory system. Assumed cause and effect relationships in the classification are not necessarily the same in ICD-9-CM as ICD-10-CM.

 

Several examples provided seem to infer that the relationship between diabetes and conditions such as polyneuropathy and ESRD can be assumed, unless of course there is documentation that indicates another identified cause.

Coding Clinic also reinforced the existing understanding that there is no assumed relationship between osteomyelitis and diabetes, as previously stated in Coding Clinic, Fourth Quarter 2013, p. 114.

So, although the direction related to osteomyelitis reinforces previous instruction, the direction related to diabetes and other conditions of the kidneys and nervous/ circulatory systems is brand-new and not particularly clear. What conditions are assumed and what are not? Where is "linking" required in documentation? I hope to receive further guidance related to these examples.

Review the latest Coding Clinic guidance related to diabetes and its manifestations to make sure that your CDI specialist team interprets these pieces of advice consistently. When you discover one of these "shades of gray" areas within the guidance, submit your questions to the Coding Clinic editorial board for clarification (they can be submitted at www.ahacentraloffice.org). The only way to learn is to ask questions.

 

Editor’s note: Prescott is the CDI education director at HCPro in Middleton, Massachusetts, and a lead instructor for its CDI-related Boot Camps. Contact her at [email protected]. The article originally appeared in CDI Journal.

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