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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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5 Trends Shaping the Health Insurance Market

What does the cost of rising health insurance mean for you? By Wendy Dressler Image via Pexels There are a lot of changes coming to the world of healthcare and health insurance. It’s no secret that the cost of health coverage is rising, and this has led to one of the most profitable years for […]

The post 5 Trends Shaping the Health Insurance Market appeared first on AAPC Knowledge Center.

AAPC Knowledge Center

Find Current Industry Trends and Code Changes

It’s essential and surprisingly easy when you know who to trust. New regulations, code updates, final rules, technology — ugh! Sometimes, it just seems like too much to manage, doesn’t it? The trick is to filter out all the white noise and hone in on just the information you need. At AAPC, we do this […]
AAPC Knowledge Center

Telemedicine Trends in Brief

Telemedicine allows patients who otherwise may not have access to specialized care to receive necessary services. Payers have begun to embrace telehealth services as a positive benefit for these patients, but providers must learn the telehealth coverage and billing requirements for their insurer and locale. Telemedicine Is Gaining Acceptance Many states have approved of, or […]
AAPC Knowledge Center

Medical malpractice New York – Some facts and trends

Medical malpractice is an act which is attempted by a doctor in which he diagnosed the patient improperly that ultimately leads to the wrong treatment of the patient. So to avoid such harmful acts you must be familiar with some facts and trends of present scenario which are being discussed below as-

Fact related to the medical malpractice act in New York-
Patients generally sue the doctors and hospitals in the court of New York as they have to sacrifice a lot due to the improper treatment given by the professional and just because of committing this act of medical malpractice; victim has to suffer from a permanent injury. That is a fact but the trend going on these days appears to be completely different from the fact.

Another fact which would be quite strange to know that various victims of medical malpractice New York are not even aware of this as they have not been told about this type of practice.

In spite of the fact, trend provides a unique picture-
As there are ample of people in New York who are suffering because of the negligent act committed by a doctor but only few of them are able to identify that they are the victim of medical malpractice act and hence they are not compensated for the act due to their unawareness about the fact that it is the result of doctor’s ignorance in treating the patient.

Fact about the result of a lawsuit-
Even when the victims realize that they should file a lawsuit against the negligent party i.e. the doctors, most of the cases filed for medical malpractice New York are being settled out of court before the turn of its trial in the court.

Trend of these cases are quite different from the described facts-
As the victims of medical malpractice case have the authority of suing the concerned doctors and hospitals in court to get the justice in terms of compensation. Among all the cases which go for trial in New York, majority of the cases filed results in to the defeat of victims of around 66% to 80%. As the doctors manipulate the juries by proving that the case occurred due to the normal complications faced by the patient. There are some more reasons which compels the judges to give final decision in favor of doctors as-

· Doctors have a reputed image in the mind of juries as compared to the victims.
· As the jury trust the doctors and nurses for their treatment so they cannot suspect on their profession easily until the misdeed is correctly proved in the court by the lawyer.
· Insurance companies have manipulated the opinion of juries by saying that all the cases are being filed on false information to grab the compensation from the doctors.
· The last but not the least reason is that sometimes jury is not in favor of providing compensation amount to the victim as they believe that by giving this amount their insurance rates would be raised.

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, visit www.nbrlawfirm.com

Find More Medical Coding Articles

Trends Impacting Medical Transcription Companies

With the goal of ensuring industry-wide guidelines to ensure that clinical data is accessible, shareable, secure, and translates across different languages, applications, and locations, the HL7 Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) is being embraced as the standard of choice. However full interoperability is still challenged by lack of commitment on the type and structure of such standards, and the breadth of interoperability. A common framework and leadership is essential to deliver the efficiencies anticipated by the use of this currency.

The HITECH Act, which includes $ 17 billion of the ARRA, is earmarked to support widespread adoption and utilization of interoperable health information technology, including electronic health records (EHRs).

Clinical data capture, dictation and transcription help ensure that physician narrative is fully preserved to satisfy meaningful use criteria. Simple point-and-click templates can not achieve these requirements.

It is patent that transcription vendors will face a challenge with the rollout of EMRs, but few will argue that they are essential quality gatekeepers of physician notes before being pushed through EMRs for safekeeping, compliance, coding and billing.

Transcription services must diligently monitor HIPAA guidelines. This requires that they invest in dedicated personnel and establish formal processes to ensure that they are in compliance with HIPAA and the ARRA. Similarly, healthcare providers need to make sure that their transcription services are following these guidelines and have the appropriate support mechanisms in place.

Transcription companies must comply with increasingly stringent privacy and security rules. This in fact has had the unlikely consequence of undermining the offshoring of transcription work to foreign enterprises. U.S. Based transcription companies are highly valued.

In trying to satisfy meaningful use criteria new roles can be played by medical transcription companies in the areas of data abstraction, data mining, accuracy and quality and compliance.
Even with the adoption of EMRs, dictation will remain the preferred method for physicians to document their clinical notes. background speech recognition will be increasingly utilized with the support of transcriptionists as editors.

A recent study produced by Physician Practice 2010 Physicians Practice Technology Survey, revealed that seventy eight percent (78%0 of physicians are not using voice recognition software while twenty two percent (22%) are incorporating it into their daily practice. The Physician Practice survey further revealed that of the respondents who said they were using voice recognition software, fifty two percent (52%) said the technology generated some savings and 48 percent said they have stopped using a transcriptionist altogether.

This article was written by Larry Edward who follows medical workflow trends. He invites you to consider
Oracle Transcription www.oracletranscription.com which provides the most advanced digital dictation services with the highly experienced medical transcriptionists who are exclusively 100% American-based .

One year of ICD-10: First half 2016 data shows coding trends and impacts

One year of ICD-10: First half 2016 data shows coding trends and impacts

by Eileen Dano Tkacik

One year following the official implementation of ICD-10, the coding industry is beginning to report valid results regarding accuracy, productivity, and denial trends. While some of these facts and figures are self-reported by HIM directors and anecdotal in nature, other findings are grounded in hard, fast coding performance data. Such is the case with the results from Central Learning (www.centrallearning.com), a web-based system that electronically assesses coder knowledge using real medical record cases and expert-verified answer keys.

This article summarizes coder performance data as measured across 50 health systems and 300 coders as of June 30, 2016. It compares these findings with other industry reports and extrapolates key findings for HIM directors and revenue cycle executives. Since coding and diagnosis-related group (DRG) assignment are the major drivers behind health system revenue streams, consistent data analysis helps to ensure accurate coding and reimbursement.

 

ICD-10 coding accuracy on the rise

According to Central Learning data, coding accuracy is slightly increasing after nine months under ICD-10 for both experienced coders and coders-in-training. While the industry overall still lags behind the 95% accuracy benchmark achieved in ICD-9, we’re getting closer in all three major patient types: inpatient, outpatient, and emergency services.

Fifty health systems are represented in the data, providing a broad-based assessment. We compared coder accuracy from Q1 (January 1?March 31) with Q2 (April 1?June 30) to identify recent, timely trends in code quality. The figure on p. 13 lists the most current benchmark of our status through June 30, 2016.

We expect the uptick in coder accuracy to continue as coders and health systems engage in more targeted education and training for ICD-10. Actively monitoring code quality through monthly coding audits, combined with coder knowledge assessments, helps prevent denials and mitigates compliance risk. This two-pronged approach to coding management is critical, as payer denials and Recovery Auditor audits are expected to increase later in 2016.

Education and communication are the keys to making continued improvements in coder accuracy over time. This is especially true for the five identified areas of coding accuracy concern.

Five areas of coding accuracy concern

A closer look at Central Learning data from June 30, 2016, identified five coding categories where accuracy remains below acceptable levels (ranging between 65%?75% accuracy). With concentrated training efforts in these specific areas, coders can see a marked improvement in the quality of their work. For example, the coding of injury, poisoning, and other external causes ranked third lowest in Q1, but only sixth worst for coding quality in Q2 with a 12.6% improvement in coding quality following focused educational efforts.

HIM directors and coding managers can use these nationwide benchmarks to compare coding quality across internal teams and identify specific areas for coding risk.

 

Other ICD-10 coding quality data results

Alongside these specific Central Learning data reports, AHIMA recently conducted interviews to benchmark coding accuracy and productivity in ICD-10. The survey was conducted by the AHIMA Foundation in May 2016 (http://journal.ahima.org/2016/06/13/survey-coding-productivity-dipped-after-icd-10-implementation). In the self-reported survey results, "respondents noted they experienced a 14.15% decrease in productivity, yet only a 0.65% decrease in accuracy."

With such a dramatic variation between AHIMA’s self-reported results and system-generated data from Central Learning, it is evident that continued coder assessments and monitoring are essential. Solid coding data drives performance transparency?a critical component of revenue cycle preparation and denial prevention in ICD-10.

Putting ICD-10 coding data to work

Practices and health systems are smart to flag specific areas of coding concern based on their areas of challenge to introduce targeted education and training. This is especially true for specific diagnoses and procedures frequently used by providers.

Coding performance data analysis is also a first step to develop follow-up performance measures for coding teams, coding audits, and coding compliance programs. Positive trends in high coding quality should be accelerated, while poor performance areas should be targeted for risk mitigation.

A great starting place is to identify your coding team’s top five most and least accurate code categories during coding audits or coder knowledge assessments. This will bring your strengths and weaknesses to the forefront so you can conduct appropriate training.

Once you’ve identified these categories, use your data to answer these five important questions:

1.How accurate is the code assignment methodology used for high-risk service lines within these code categories?

2.What are the specific coder knowledge gaps by diagnosis, procedure, and coder?

3.Is clinical documentation accurate, complete, and as specific as possible?

4.Are payers paying high-risk service lines correctly?

5.How much revenue, if any, is lost due to incorrect coding?

 

Coders are using training tools, such as AHIMA seminars and the Central Learning training tool, to enhance their knowledge and experience with ICD-10. The result should be continual improvement in coding accuracy. The impact of accurate coding on the revenue cycle, compliance, and accurate reimbursement becomes more obvious as we get further down the ICD-10 road.

 

Correlation between coding and revenue stream

High levels of coding accuracy are essential in both fee-for-service and value-based reimbursement models. So far, the payment trends under ICD-10, to the surprise of many, have been positive. There has been a steady decrease in claims processing and payment velocity. Also, the deluge of claims denials has not yet happened?but may occur after October 2016 when the one-year grace period for code specificity concludes.

The following data was collected in a recent year-over-year six-month period (October 1, 2015?March 31, 2016), compared to the same six-month period from a year ago (October 1, 2014?March 31, 2015) according to RemitDATA, a healthcare claims clearinghouse company:

  • Average staff processing time has shown a steady decrease during the year, with average staff processing time of 17 days in January to an average of eight days in May
  • Average payer processing time has decreased throughout the year, with an average of 15 days in January to 12 days in May
  • Total claims processing time was reduced by nearly 60%, with total processing time of 32 days in January to 12 days in June

 

Coding certainly has played a big role in this trend. Precise coder accuracy measurement and analysis of coding data are the first steps to making this transition.

 

Editor’s note

With over 30 years of combined expertise in audit, information technology, and revenue cycle operations, Tkacik is the director of operations and information of Aviance Suite, Inc. She last served as the Interim Director, Revenue Cycle at Lehigh Valley Physicians Group (LVPG). Prior to LVPG, she served as the Vice President of Information Technology and Patient Accounting. It was Tkacik’s combination of revenue cycle operations and information technology that led her to Aviance Suite. Aviance Suite is an integrated platform of web-based software applications that helps hospitals and health systems make better revenue cycle and clinical coding decisions.

HCPro.com – HIM Briefings

Eight Trends in Coder Training | Originally Posted in “For the Record”

Eight Trends in Coder Training
By Julia Scott, RMC
For The Record
Vol. 28 No. 5 P. 8

 

In the world of coding, the only constant is change. Codes change, regulations change, technologies change. The list goes on. Virtually nothing stays the same for too long. 

As a result, coder certification and education programs must evolve commensurate with these changes to ensure graduates are well prepared for a demanding—and dynamic—work environment. Programs that remain stagnant do a disservice to the next generation of coders who must be prepared to wear many hats and accomplish multiple tasks in the brave new world of ICD-10. 

The continued spotlight on the coding profession has inspired many coder training and certification providers to reevaluate priorities, supplement content, and offer varying methods of delivery. This article explores eight trends in coder education that will play a prominent role throughout the remainder of 2016 and beyond to meet the challenging demands of today’s health care environment.

More Stringent Competency Requirements
As compliance regulations continue to intensify and evolve, coder training must include regular touch points to assess competency. Doing so ensures coders maintain accuracy standards and are fully prepared for continual industry changes.

For example, coder training provider The Medical Management Institute (MMI) requires an annual retest to ensure ongoing competence. The retest measures coders’ knowledge of important CPT, HCPCS, and ICD-10-CM code changes across all specialty areas. In addition to maintaining 12 CEUs annually, those with MMI’s registered medical coder (RMC) credential must also obtain a passing score of 76% or higher on the initial and annual certification exams. 

“Being held accountable yearly with the annual recertification exam helps coders stay current on changes,” says Trish Creech, RMC, RMA, RMM, RMB, CAC, CPT, an MMI student and insurance reimbursement coordinator at a university teaching facility in Kentucky.

Increased Focus on Anatomy and Physiology
Given the anatomical specificity inherent in ICD-10, many coder training providers have ramped up content in this area—going above and beyond what was offered in the past. Coders must have an in-depth clinical knowledge to be successful with ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS, in particular.

Comprehensive Front-to-Back Approach
Today’s coders must possess a big-picture view of the revenue cycle, including its front end (ie, documentation creation/input) as well as its back end (ie, denials and appeals). When coders possess a front-to-back understanding of the revenue cycle, they can articulate the implications of the codes they assign—and know how to improve compliance prospectively.

To achieve this goal, additional coursework content may now include the following:

• auditing;
• billing;
• clinical documentation improvement (CDI);
• coding, including carrier-specific coding;
• credentialing;
• data analytics;
• EMR navigation, code validation, and template construction;
• hierarchical condition category coding;
• physician education;
• practice management; 
• proactive denial mitigation and accounts receivable management;
• process improvement;
• quality measure abstraction;
• registration; and
• telemedicine coding and billing. 

More Virtual/Online Training Options
In this fast-paced era of technology, students can obtain a quality education from virtually anywhere in the world, including from the comfort of their own home. Online training modules have become increasingly popular because learning is often self-paced, providing students with more flexibility. In addition, many coders already work remotely, making it easier to create a learning environment within their home. Also, the online medium is familiar thanks to coders’ comfort levels working with EHRs. 

“With onsite training classes, there is a lot of downtime that gets away from the lesson,” Creech says. “I prefer online training because it takes less time to complete, you can work the course around your schedule, and you don’t need to worry about missing a class or catching up. The online course makes all the material available to you with the click of a mouse.”

For these reasons, self-paced and interactive online coding courses that prepare coders for the RMC credential are among the most popular among students. 

Cost savings is perhaps the biggest advantage of online training. With online courses, there are no travel concerns or hidden costs associated with lost productivity. Consider the following three reasons why sending coders offsite has become cost prohibitive for many practices and hospitals:

• Travel costs sometimes exceed registration costs for the actual training event.
• When coders are out of the office, there is a lag in coding and billing, causing accounts receivable backlogs. Backlogged coding disrupts cash flow during a time when all providers are vulnerable to ICD-10 denials and delayed payments.

 

In addition to coding, many CDI courses also are moving online. As with coding courses that reflect evolving industry topics, many online CDI courses are moving beyond complications and comorbidities (CCs) and major CCs capture to cover legal matters, physician report cards, external monitoring, and evidence-based clinical documentation.

As online courses become more prevalent, educators will compete to provide a learning management system that offers a superior training experience, including the following:

• a mirroring of a live classroom environment;
• a functional and elegant user interface; and
• constant feedback mechanisms regarding grades and/or progress.

 

24/7 Educator Support
As students progress through online programs, many education providers have realized that students want—and need—ongoing support via phone or e-mail as questions arise. This “beyond the classroom” support is a critical part of ensuring students have the best opportunity to succeed.

Marketing to Second-Career Professionals
As the national coder shortage continues, training providers have begun reaching out to and assisting second-career professionals, many of whom have a health care background, so they can make the transition into coding and other HIM roles. This unique population requires training that capitalizes on the skills these individuals already possess. To help new graduates gain work experience, AHIMA has launched a registered apprenticeship program that reflects new federal investments in skills and job training. This trend is likely to grow as industry demand for qualified coders continues to outweigh supply.

Specialty-Specific Training and Certification
As providers become more specialized, many are seeking coders with a similar specialization in coding. This is particularly true given the complexity of ICD-10-PCS, which requires a specialized knowledge of anatomy and physiology. More specialty certifications are likely to emerge, along with specific competency requirements for those specialties.

Catering to an Increasingly Diverse Workforce
In addition to being sensitive to the needs of second-career professionals, many training providers have also become aware of cultural needs. Many courses are now offered in a variety of languages. When providing education to offshore coders, trainers must be particularly aware of cultural differences and barriers that could affect the learning experience. These nuances are a critical part of ensuring a dynamic and effective training experience.

Taking It to the Next Level
Hospitals and physician practices rely on certified coders to ensure revenue accuracy, mitigate denials, and enhance specificity—particularly as the industry heads into the last phase of the ICD-10 grace period that concludes October 1, 2016. Without the help and guidance of trained and certified coders, all providers may see an increase in denials for medical necessity and nonspecific codes. 

The pressure is on to recruit and train individuals who will bring the coding profession to the next level and beyond. Many training providers welcome this challenge and are well on their way toward preparing the workforce of the future.

 

— Julia Scott, RMC, is the director of educational support for The Medical Management Institute, a premier educational organization that provides online medical billing and coding, auditing, management, and ICD-10-CM training and certification.

The Medical Management Institute – MMI – Medical Coding News & MMI Updates