Thursday, November 10, 2011

Many Clinicians Still Doing the Coding

In our recent survey of home care professionals about ICD-10 conversion, we asked who at your organization was doing the medical coding. Results showed that 23 percent of home care agencies still have clinicians assigning and sequencing diagnosis.

While this number seems to be slowly declining, it is still far too high. The problem with clinicians doing coding is that their main focus should be on patient care. They are dealing with compliance issues that relate to patient care, and shouldn’t be worried about coding compliance issues as well. Clinicians are also not certified and typically receive little orientation training on how to properly assign codes. This means more room for error and potential for inaccurate payments.

Coding in the home health arena is complex. Home health care coders must gather information for coding from multiple sources, be familiar with inpatient procedure codes, late effect codes, and know how to read discharge information, rehab reports and more. Home health coders are also responsible for coding both acute and post-acute diagnoses. On top of everything a clinician is doing every day to care for patients, this can be overwhelming and detrimental to agencies.

On top of these current challenges, these clinicians will have to learn a whole set of new codes for ICD-10 conversion. Significant time and costs will need to be allocated to get these clinicians properly educated on the new system. There is also a greater chance of decreased productivity if clinicians are wearing both hats. Our ICD-10 survey revealed 57% of people thought conversion would cause a decrease in productivity, with an average decrease lasting seven months. With clinicians doing coding, this could significantly increase the length of decreased productivity.

The benefits of lifting the burden off of clinicians and hiring coders or a remote coding firm are plenty. More accurate payments. Better patient care. Improved compliance. Less burn out on employees. Peace of mind.

And with ICD-10 approaching, what better time to make the switch?

2 comments:

  1. No surprise! Every clinics certified that this is totally effective for their productivity… :D
    NationalCodingCenter.com

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    Medical Coding

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