ICD AND CPT CODEBOOKS
ICD-9-CM was sponsored in 1979 as the official system for assigning codes to diagnoses. It is updated annually. There are three volumes though publishers may vary in the order presented.
Volume 1: Tabular List – numeric order list
Volume 2: Index to Diseases – alpha list
Volume 3: Index to Procedures and Tabular List - Consists of procedures, with both a tabular and alphabetic index.
CPT (Current Procedural Terminology now copyrighted by the American Medical Association) is a listing of descriptive terms and identifying codes (using time and risk factors calculated by units) for reporting medical services and procedures performed by providers. The purpose was to provide a uniform language, which accurately designated medical, surgical, and diagnostic services, and thus establish effective means for reliable nationwide communication among providers, patients and third party payers (i.e., insurance companies – or government entities such as Medicare and Medicaid).
CODER RESPONSIBILITY
The coder reviews medical information and derives the procedure and diagnosis codes. These codes are then input to computer systems and are billed to payers.
Coding Policies (CCPs) have been developed consistent with the coding systems devised. The coder’s job is to comply with the CCP (Correct Coding Policy). CMS ultimately implemented a policy for returning claims to medical offices if codes were incorrect. Under this policy, they designated several dozen items, which must be present and valid for a claim to be processed. If any of the information required was missing or invalid, the claim was to be kicked out of the system as unprocessable. Unprocessable is not the same as a denial or a rejection. It means “we’re not even looking at this claim until you give us the information we asked for.” Most of the guidelines set up dealt with CPT (procedure codes) codes; however, because ICD is such a vital part of any claim form, the ICD accuracy has been mandated as well.
Medical necessity is a key factor in determining payment criteria. The coder has to demonstrate the medical necessity for the services provided. Thus ICD coding is one of the items that must be present and valid on the claim form for the claim to be processed. The ICD diagnostic code tells the payer why the encounter occurred.
One of the biggest reasons claims come back is because providers fail to properly describe using specific up to date ICD codes as to why certain procedures were performed. When insurance companies send these claims back, doctors really feel the economic crunch. Even if a claim makes it through this initial editing process, it can still be denied or downcoded if the wrong code is used. In addition to checking claims for missing information, all carriers also have a software editor in their claims processing systems, which will check for incompatible coding combinations. If the diagnosis codes do not justify the procedure and supply codes, the claim is likely rejected even if “processed.” Typically, as the system developed and refined, the government rarely provided sufficient instructions to providers as to how to properly use the coding system guidelines and only enforced the guidelines sporadically and leniently. That has all changed with the perfection of the process. Now they are telling the doctors: “Get it right the first time or suffer the consequences.”
UNDERSTANDING WHAT YOU CODE
Understanding what you code is the most fundamental part of coding. This doesn’t include being able to diagnose patients or practice medicine, but you need to understand the diagnoses you choose sufficient to be comfortable. All too frequently the diagnosis the physician has written cannot be found exactly that way in the codebooks. In such a case, it is helpful to have the reference books you need for the terminology, e.g., a good medical dictionary and some physiologic references.
Remember, that as a coder, your job is to accurately reflect what occurred in a medical encounter and show through the coding process the reasons (medical necessity) for any procedure, and address the complexity of evaluation and management codes (E&M CPT codes) utilizing the proper coding.
Part of the evolutionary process of coding now requires you to match the ICD-9 codes with the procedure codes. If you don’t fully understand what the medical problem, test, exam or treatment may be how will you know the answers?
MEDICAL NECESSITY
Medical necessity is a determination (by third party payers) that items or services furnished are reasonable and medically necessary for the treatment provided. Part of that determination is discovered with the diagnoses submitted. CPT codes show what service was performed and the ICDs provide the information that determines whether or not a payment will be made.
For years, CMS (Center for Medicare-Medicaid Services) has warned the physician to be specific and file correctly; this means document records fully, be unfailingly accurate with code assignments, use the required number of digits and link the diagnosis and procedure code. The grace period is now over. You do it Medicare’s way or suffer the consequences (lowered reimbursement, claims rejection or complete denial).
DOCUMENTATION
When the physician does not provide enough information for the coder, the coder cannot provide enough information to the insurance carrier. The physician has to clearly and carefully document all diagnoses in detail sufficient for the coder to translate that information into specific and accurate codes reflecting as much detail and precision as the documentation provided and the ICD system allows. Here are some responsibilities the physician has in order for the coder to able to assign correct codes.
- Write legibly or dictate the information.
- Describe the patient’s condition using terminology including specific diagnoses as well as symptoms, problems or reasons for the encounter.
- Remember you are submitting only numbers not narrative descriptions. Somewhere in the patient record must be specific and explicit information about what diagnoses were treated and what services were provided. The notes should be clear and detailed, noting any sites, type, cause that specifies the exact diagnosis.
- All conditions or problems need to be documented which were present at the time of the visit that would impact the treatment or management of the patient. The coder must be able to adequately convey the patient encounter information to the carrier to justify the services provided.
- Each diagnosis must be related to a specific procedure(s). The coder links these.
ETHICAL STANDARDS FOR CODING
In this era of payment based on diagnostic and procedural coding, the professional ethics of health information continue to be reviewed and often challenged. The ethics were developed by American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA). They include:
- Diagnoses that are present on admission or diagnoses and procedures that occur during the current encounter are to be abstracted after a thorough review of the entire medical record. Those diagnoses not applicable to the current record encounter should not be abstracted.
- For inpatient settings, the selection of the principal diagnosis and procedure, along with other diagnoses and procedures, must meet the definitions of the Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set (UHDDS). The hospital will have a profile for you to review for those data.
- Assessment must be made of the documentation in the chart to ensure it is adequate and appropriate to support the diagnoses and procedures selected.
- Medical record coders should use their skills and knowledge of ICD-9-CM and CPT, and any available resources to select diagnostic and procedural codes.
- Medical record coders should not change codes or narratives of codes so that the meanings are misrepresented, nor should diagnoses or procedures be included or excluded because the payment will be affected. Statistical clinical data is an important result of coding and maintaining quality databases should be a goal.
- Physicians should be consulted for clarification when they enter conflicting or ambiguous information in the chart.
- The medical record coder is a member of the health care team and, as such, should assist physicians who are unfamiliar with ICD-9 or DRG methodology by suggesting resequencing or inclusion of diagnoses or procedures when needed to more accurately reflect the occurrence of events during an encounter.
- The medical coder is expected to strive for the optimal payment to which the facility or doctor is legally entitled, but it is unethical and illegal to maximize payment by means that contradict regulatory guidelines.
- In outpatient settings, the reason for the encounter is coded first. If the major work or effort is directed at another diagnosis, that diagnosis may become primary.
Coders have become an integral part of the medical reimbursement process. In addition, the data obtained through the codes themselves provide the major resource for healthcare planning, budgets, peer review, and statistical demographic disease and outcome information. It is a very interesting occupation and the need for coders increases steadily.
Cross-Training Essentials
Expanding Opportunity and Income through Cross-Training:
The more skills learned, the greater the opportunities for employment, advancement, supervision and management, or setting up a home business as a contractor, or as a consultant. Meditec.com and Coding-Training.com have combined some very logical programs based upon our review of what employers seek. Each program has been discounted both for the program cost and for the printed course companion books compared to enrollment in an individual course.
Through Meditec's related Coding-Training.com website, we have also provided a self-paced eBook, which includes 900+ pages in 5 volumes to provide Medical Terminology, Medical Coding, and Medical Health Insurance Claims training.
So, whether you choose a full on-line interactive course or combination of courses, or you opt for the less expensive eBook self-paced study material, please consider the following, and ask yourself this questions:
- If you were a doctor looking to hire for a position in medical coding, and you had your choice between someone who had coding skills, and someone who had coding skills and training in medical billing and/or health insurance claims processing, who would hire?
BOTTOM LINE: The more crossover skills you can bring to the table, the better your chances of landing that job!
The latest offerings in cross-training opportunities from Meditec.com include a new Medical Transcription, Coding & Billing combination [MTCB], a new Medical Office Specialist combination [MOSC], a new Legal Transcription and Paralegal/Legal Assistant combination [LTPL], and finally, an updated Medical Coding and Billing combination, which now includes Medical Terminology and Health Insurance Specialist modules [MBMC]. And during the month of May ('06), we are offering an additional discount on the Medical Billing and Coding Combo, when you use the coupon at the bottom of this newsletter.
However, if you would like to focus strictly on Medical Coding, but you would also like to have some cross-training expertise in a more affordable self-paced book course, please consider the Coding-Training.com Medical Coding eBook [Which includes: Medical Terminology, Medical Coding, & Health Insurance Specialist], Click Here...
Together, these combination courses provide the skills needed to CROSSOVER between two or more industry specialities. Having expertise in one or more of these areas, represents a significant bonus to employers looking to hire!
We understand how valuable your time is, so if you are in a hurry, just give us a call. No high pressure sales people will answer, just friendly counselors, 877-335-4072, or fill out this form for an enrollment coordinator to contact you - it only takes a minute or two more.
