What the survey responses revealed is that home health care professionals are unprepared for ICD-10 conversion in October 2013. 76 percent of respondents revealed they have either not begun planning for ICD-10 conversion or are in preliminary stages of planning. Just 3% said they have developed a formal plan and are beginning to implement.
Our survey also revealed 70% have not begun to train employees on ICD-10. Twenty five percent have begun to train just a few key staff members and only 2% have had mass training.
We think these results illustrate that many are either underestimating the significance of ICD-10 conversion or perhaps don’t have the necessary resources to take action. We’re at a time where it’s critical for home care organizations to be in full planning and preparing mode so they can combat the negative effects conversion will likely bring.
Other key findings of the survey include:
· 59% of respondents feel converting to ICD-10 will be more problematic than converting to OASIS-C. 55% of those respondents think it will be extremely more problematic.
· 57% of respondents feel ICD-10 will cause a decrease in productivity for both clinician and administrative staff. The average response for how long this decrease in productivity lasting was 7 months.
· 46% of respondents were either not sure or do not think their vendors are appropriately preparing for ICD-10 conversion.
The biggest challenge of conversion revealed by respondents was educating clinicians and providers on the needs for more specific documentation (46%), followed by learning and implementing ICD-10 sets (28%). The biggest benefit of ICD-10 revealed was more-accurate payment (56%), followed by improved disease management (39%).
Ken Hooper, a principal of HC Healthcare Consulting, commented on the results, saying, “These findings are not surprising nor inconsistent with hospitals, but they are worrisome because people are behind the power curve. I’d also be interested to see what respondents are considering ‘preliminary planning,’ which may only consist of reading something about ICD-10.”
Over the coming weeks, we will take a deeper dive into the results of each question, revealing the implications for the industry right here on our blog. We also plan to conduct future ICD-10 surveys to measure the progress of preparations leading up to conversion in 2013. Thanks for everyone who participated! We hope ICD-10 conversion is as pain-free as possible for everyone. Contact us to discuss how we can help.
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Medical Coding