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ICD-10-CM FY2026 · A–Z Chapters · Conventions · HIV · Sepsis · Diabetes · HTN Combos · Wounds · OASIS · PDGM · 8 Interview Q&As

🏥 What is Medical Coding & Types

Medical coding converts healthcare diagnoses, procedures, and services into universal alphanumeric codes used for billing, insurance claims, and statistical tracking.

Code Systems Used
  • ICD-10-CM — Diagnosis codes (what the patient has)
  • CPT — Procedure codes (what was done)
  • HCPCS Level II — Supplies, equipment, drugs
  • ICD-10-PCS — Inpatient procedures only
  • OASIS — Home health patient assessment
Specialisations
  • Inpatient (Hospital)
  • Outpatient / Physician Office
  • Home Health ← our focus
  • Hospice
  • Radiology
  • Oncology
  • Emergency Department
  • Orthopaedic / Cardiology

Medicare Coverage Basics

Medicare PartCovers
Part AInpatient, long-term care, critical care, home health (also covered)
Part BDoctor services, outpatient, follow-up annual visits
Part CMedicare Advantage — includes all of A and B
Part DPrescription drug coverage
Medicare eligibility: Age 65+, ESRD (End Stage Renal Disease), ALS, or disability for 2+ years. Medicaid = poverty-based, monthly plan. Hospice = patient terminally ill, expected to die within 6 months.

Home Health Clinicians

Clinicians who fill OASIS
  • SN — Skilled Nurse (RN/LPN)
  • ST/SLP — Speech Therapist
  • PT — Physiotherapist
  • OT — Occupational Therapist (cannot fill OASIS)
Home Health Episode
  • 60-day episode per SOC
  • Patient must be homebound to receive home health services
  • OASIS filled at SOC and Discharge
  • Each episode = one OASIS to next OASIS

📋 OASIS Assessment Types — SOC, REC, ROC, SCIC

TypeFull NameWhenWhat Happens
SOCStart of CareWithin 5 days of first visitOpens the 60-day episode. OASIS filled by SN/ST/PT.
RECRecertification of CareWhen HH goals not met in 60 daysExtends episode for more 60 days. REC OASIS → discharge OASIS.
ROCResumption of CarePatient hospitalised within episode then returnsWithin 24hrs of return. Resume OASIS then discharge OASIS.
SCICSignificant Change in ConditionWithin 60 days of SOC, acute condition, no hospitalisationSCIC OASIS done when condition changes significantly.
🏠 SOC OASIS 60 days REC OASIS Another 60 days 🏠 Discharge OASIS
🏠 Home 🏥 Hospital (<24hrs) Resume OASIS (ROC) 🏠 Discharge OASIS ↑ This whole cycle is within 60 days of SOC
⚠️ OT (Occupational Therapist) cannot fill the OASIS. Only SN, ST/SLP, and PT can fill OASIS.

🔤 ICD-10-CM A to Z — Complete Chapter Guide

Every ICD-10-CM code starts with a letter that tells you the category. Memorise this A-Z map — it is the foundation of coding speed.

A–B
Infection codes
Cellulitis, UTI, sepsis, HIV (B20), wound infections
C
Malignant neoplasm — cancer
Primary cancer, secondary cancer, metastasis
D
Benign neoplasm + blood conditions
D63 anaemia with malignancy, D64 drug-induced anaemia
E
Endocrine conditions
Diabetes (E08–E13), thyroid, adrenal, vitamin deficiency, hyperlipidaemia
F
Psychological / mental health
Dementia (F01–F03), depression, anxiety, substance use
G
Nervous system + pain management
Neuropathy, Parkinson's, MS, pain — G89
H
Eye and ear diseases
Post-cataract, glaucoma, hearing loss, vertigo
I
Circulatory system
HTN (I10), CHF, CAD, CVA/stroke, MI — very common in HH
J
Respiratory system
COPD (J44), pneumonia (J18), asthma, respiratory failure
K
Gastrointestinal system
GERD, colostomy care, Crohn's, bowel obstruction
L
Skin and tissue
Pressure ulcers (L89), cellulitis, non-pressure ulcers (L97)
M
Musculoskeletal
Arthritis, fracture aftercare, back pain, osteoporosis — very common HH
N
Genitourinary
UTI, CKD (N18), urinary incontinence, nephropathy
O
Pregnancy codes
Complications, childbirth, puerperal — OB codes
P
Newborn conditions
Neonatal sepsis (P36), prematurity, newborn conditions
Q
Congenital malformations
Genetic problems, birth defects
R
Signs and symptoms
Use when no definitive diagnosis — R52 pain, SOB, weakness
S
Traumatic fractures + injuries
Require 7th character: A=initial, D=subsequent, S=sequela
T
Poisoning, adverse effect, underdose
Drug-induced conditions, overdose, underdose, adverse effect
U
COVID-19
U07.1 COVID confirmed, U07.2 COVID unconfirmed
V–Y
External cause codes
Cause of injury — falls, accidents, place of occurrence, abuse
Z
Encounter, history, status codes
Aftercare (Z48), long-term meds (Z79), history codes, artificial joints (Z96)
💡 Home Health most common chapters: I (circulatory), M (musculoskeletal), E (endocrine/DM), G (nervous), L (skin/wounds), Z (aftercare/status)

📖 ICD-10-CM Conventions — Rules Every Coder Must Know

Abbreviations

NEC — Not Elsewhere Classified
  • More information about disease is given but NOT in a specific code
  • The condition IS classified somewhere else
  • Example: DM due to HLD → E11.69, E78.5
  • Example: Chemo-induced anaemia → D64.81
NOS — Not Otherwise Specified
  • LESS information given — unspecified
  • Specific codes exist but documentation is vague
  • Example: Pneumonia → J18.9
  • Example: Pain → G89.9
  • Example: Anaemia → D64.9

Symbols and Punctuation

SymbolMeaningExample
( ) ParenthesesNon-essential modifiers — words in brackets do NOT change the code. Code remains same with or without them.Htn (essential) — "essential" is non-essential modifier, I10 same
[ ] Square BracketsManifestation code — must be coded WITH the disease (etiology)Alzheimer's with dementia — Alzheimer's should be coded with dementia [F02]
: ColonAfter incomplete term — needs one or more of the modifiers to assign codeBronchitis: acute / chronic / etc

Instructional Notes — MANDATORY to follow

Includes
  • Conditions given under 'includes' note have same code as the parent code
  • Example: Acute bronchitis J20 includes — acute and subacute bronchitis
  • COPD J44 includes — asthma and COPD J44.89
  • Influenza J10 includes — Influenza A, B, C
Excludes 1 — NOT coded here
  • Two same/related conditions CANNOT occur together
  • Only code B, NOT A when Excludes1 listed
  • Example: J45.909 asthma Excludes1 — J30.9 allergic rhinitis
  • Example: J44.9 COPD Excludes1 — J42 bronchitis
  • Example: I12.9 Excludes1 — I15.0 renal HTN
  • Rule: A does NOT mention that B should not be coded — B instead of A
Excludes 2 — Not included here
  • Two conditions are NOT part of each other BUT can coexist
  • Code from Excludes2 list SHOULD be coded together
  • Example: F02 Dementia Excludes2 — F01 vascular dementia (can code both)
  • Example: I42 cardiomyopathy Excludes2 — I25.5 ischemic CM (can code both)
  • Example: J18 Pneumonia Excludes2 — J69.0 aspiration pneumonia
Code First / Use Additional Code
  • Etiology → Manifestation rule
  • Etiology (underlying condition) coded FIRST
  • Manifestation coded SECOND
  • Example: CKD due to DM → E11.22 (DM) first, N18.x second
  • Example: Alzheimer's dementia — G30 first, [F02] second

Etiology and Manifestation Convention

Etiology (cause) coded FIRST Manifestation (result) coded SECOND

Etiology is the CAUSE. Manifestation is the RESULTED condition. Cause is first, then manifestation. Common examples: DM → CKD, DM → neuropathy, Alzheimer's → dementia, HTN → CHF.

Additional Conventions

ConventionMeaningExample
And"And" or "or" — code two different codes for bothTB bone and joint — two separate codes
WithRelationship between two conditions = combination codeHTN with CHF — combination code I11.0
SeeMain term must be referenced from another main termAortic valve — See Regurgitation
See alsoIf specificity not found, check the alternative word givenIntervertebral disc — See also
Default codeIf type not mentioned, default to Type 2 DMJust "DM" written → E11.9 (Type 2)
Code alsoTwo codes needed to fully describe the conditionI50.814 — code also I50.2-, I50.3-, I50.4-
$PPrimary code in PDGMMain diagnosis driving the episode
IQQuestionable encounter — cannot be coded firstCannot use as primary diagnosis

7th Character Rules in Home Health

7th CharMeaningWhen to Use in Home Health
AInitial encounter — active treatmentInfection of surgical wound (taking active antibiotics), Wound VAC present
DSubsequent encounter — routine care during recoveryMost home health fracture aftercare, wound healing without complication, NOT taking antibiotics
SSequela — late effect after active phaseCVA residual deficits (G81, I69 series), adverse effect medication stopped
⚠️ Most fractures in home health use D (subsequent). Use A only when actively treating (wound vac, active antibiotics). Use S for sequela/late effects.
Placeholder X: If code requires 7th character but is less than 6 characters, use X to fill position. Example: T14.90XA

Sequela (Late Effect)

Sequela = residual effect — a condition produced after the original injury/illness healed. Code the sequela condition first, then the original cause code with S character. Examples: CVA → hemiparesis (I69.354), CVA → dementia, fracture → deformity.

Acute vs Chronic

Acute Conditions
  • Short-term disease
  • Pneumonia, fever, cold, UTI
  • In PMH: Acute conditions do NOT need to be coded
  • Only code active or relevant conditions
Chronic Conditions
  • Long-term disease — always code
  • DM, HTN, CKD, COPD
  • In home health: code ALL chronic conditions
  • They affect PDGM comorbidity adjustment

🦠 Chapter 1 — Infectious & Parasitic Diseases (A/B codes)

HIV Coding Rules

SituationPrimary (1°)Secondary (2°)3rd
Patient admitted for HIV-related conditionB20 (HIV disease)HIV-related condition
Patient with HIV admitted for UNRELATED conditionInjury/unrelated codeB20HIV-related condition
Asymptomatic HIV (HIV+, no disease)Z21
HIV infection in pregnancy/childbirthO98.7-B20 or Z21Related condition
Encounter for HIV testingZ11.4+ve→Z21 / -ve→Z17.7
❌ "AIDS" and "HIV Disease" should NOT be coded with Z21. They are coded with B20. Z21 = asymptomatic only (HIV positive, test positive, known positive, no manifestation).
Patient with inconclusive HIV serology (R75) → with no definitive diagnosis or manifestation

Sepsis — Coding Rules

Sepsis= Blood stream infection+ Organism directly present in blood
TypeCode Sequence
Sepsis only1° A41.9 (sepsis)
Severe sepsis (organ dysfunction)1° A41.9, 2° R65.20 (without septic shock)
Septic shock1° A41.9, 2° R65.21, 3° organ failure (N17.9)
Sepsis MRSAA41.02
Sepsis MSSAA41.01
Sepsis E.coliA41.51
Sepsis = also equals organ dysfunction. R65.21 should be coded ONLY when mentioned.

Post-Procedural Sepsis

When patient gets blood stream infection (sepsis) after any procedure/surgery or due to infected surgical wound:

1° T81.4- (infection following procedure) 2° T81.44 (sepsis following procedure) 3° A41.9 sepsis

Obstetric Post-Procedural Sepsis (C-section wound)

1° O86.0 (infection following OB surgical wound) 2° O86.04 (sepsis following OB procedure) 3° A41.0 sepsis

Puerperal Sepsis

Sepsis + septic shock complicating abortion, pregnancy, childbirth, puerperium. NOT due to C-section wound.

TypeCodes
Puerperal sepsisO85, B96.89
Puerperal severe sepsisO85, B96.89, R65.20
Puerperal septic shockO85, B96.89, R65.21

Newborn Sepsis (younger than 90 days)

TypeCodes
Newborn sepsisP36, B96.89
Newborn severe sepsisP36, B96.89, R65.20
Newborn septic shockP36, B96.89, R65.21
A codes should NOT be used for puerperal or newborn sepsis.

Long-term Antibiotic Treatment

Sepsis (or any infection) cannot be coded with active antibiotics if antibiotics are for more than 10 days: Oral antibiotics → Z79.2 | IV antibiotics → Z45.2, Z79.2 | Hospital antibiotics → cannot be coded

💉 Chapter 4 — Diabetes & Endocrine (E codes)

Diabetes Types

CodeTypeNote
E08DM due to underlying conditionCode underlying condition first, then E08
E09Drug/medication-induced DMCode E09, then adverse effect code
E10Type 1 DMDo NOT code insulin separately (E10 implies insulin)
E11Type 2 DM (default)Add Z79.84 (oral antidiabetic), Z79.85 (injectable), Z79.4 (insulin)
E13Post-pancreatectomy DME89.1 + E13 + Z90.4
Default: If "DM" written without type → always E11.9 (Type 2). DM = Type 2 by default.

DM Complication Codes (EXX = E10/E11/E13)

Kidney (EXX.2-)
  • EXX.21 — Nephropathy
  • EXX.22 — CKD
  • EXX.29 — Other kidney complication
Eye (EXX.3-)
  • EXX.36 — Cataract
  • EXX.319 — Neuropathy (eye)
  • EXX.39 — Other ophthalmology
Neuropathy (EXX.4-)
  • EXX.40 — Neuropathy unspecified
  • EXX.41 — Mononeuropathy
  • EXX.42 — Peripheral neuropathy
  • EXX.43 — Gastroparesis
Circulatory (EXX.5-)
  • EXX.51 — PVD (peripheral vascular disease)
  • EXX.52 — Gangrene
  • EXX.59 — Other circulatory
Skin/Other (EXX.6-)
  • EXX.621 — Foot ulcer
  • EXX.622 — Skin ulcer
  • EXX.65 — Hyperglycaemia
  • EXX.649 — Hypoglycaemia
  • EXX.69 — Osteomyelitis, other
Insulin Issues
  • Underdose insulin → T85.6, T38.3X6, EXX
  • Overdose insulin → T85.6, T38.3X1, EXX

Hyperlipidaemia

CodeType
E78.5Hyperlipidaemia unspecified
E78.00Pure hypercholesterolaemia
E78.1Pure hypertriglyceridaemia
E78.2Mixed hyperlipidaemia (severity)

❤️ Chapter 9 — Circulatory System (I codes)

HTN Combination Codes

HTN (I10) almost always has combination codes with CKD and CHF. Never code them separately when combination code exists.
ConditionCode(s)
HTN aloneI10
HTN + Heart Disease (without HF)I11.9
HTN + CHFI11.0 + I50.-
HTN + CKD stage 1–4/unspecifiedI12.9 + N18.1–N18.4/N18.9
HTN + CKD stage 5 or 6I12.0 + N18.5/N18.6 + Z99.2 (dialysis)
HTN + CKD + DM + AnaemiaI12.9 + E11.22 + N18.x + D63.1
HTN + CHF + CKD stage 1–4I13.0 + I50.- + N18.x
HTN + CHF + CKD stage 5/6I13.2 + I50.- + N18.5/6 + Z99.2
HTN + HD without HF + CKD 1–4I13.10 + N18.1–4
HTN + HD without HF + CKD 5/6I13.11 + N18.5/6 + Z99.2
Full combo HTN + CHF + DM + CKD 5/6 + AnaemiaI13.2 + I50.9 + E11.22 + N18.5/6 + D63.1 + Z99.2
❌ I51 should NOT be coded with HTN heart disease (I11). If CKD surgery done, still give unspecified CKD code — CKD does not resolve.

Heart Failure Types

TypeAcuteChronicAcute on Chronic
HFrEF / Systolic HFI50.21I50.22I50.23
HFpEF / Diastolic HFI50.31I50.32I50.33
HFrEF + HFpEF combinedI50.41I50.42I50.43

Atrial Fibrillation

AFib Types — code based on severity
  • Paroxysmal (Proximal) — less than 7 days
  • Persistent — more than 7 days
  • Long-standing persistent — 12 months
  • Permanent — 1 year+

Myocardial Infarction (MI)

SituationNew MISubsequent MI
Within 28 days, 2nd MI occurredNew MI codeI22.9 (STEMI) or I22.2 (NSTEMI)
After 28 days, new MINew MI code onlyOld MI = I25.2 (PMH)
TypeNewSubsequent
STEMI Type 1I21.3I22.9
NSTEMI Type 1I21.4I22.2
Type 2 MII21.A1
Types 3/4/5I21.A9
Old MI (PMH)I25.2

Cerebrovascular Disease — CVA Coding in Home Health

❌ Do NOT code active haemorrhage/infarction (I60-, I61-, I62-, I63-) in home health. These are acute hospital codes.
✅ In home health — code the SEQUELA (late effect): Sub-arachnoid haemorrhage → I69.0 | Cerebral infarction (CVA) → I69.3 series | Intracranial infraction → I69.2
Residual DeficitMeaning
DiplegiaBoth legs paralysed
HemiplegiaOne side of body affected
QuadriplegiaTotal body paralysis
MonoplegiaOnly one limb (hand or leg)

📌 Chapter 21 — Z Codes (Status, Aftercare, History, Long-term Meds)

Long-term Medication Z Codes

Diabetes Medications
  • Z79.4 — Insulin
  • Z79.84 — Oral antidiabetic
  • Z79.85 — Non-insulin injectable antidiabetic
Cardiac / Blood
  • Z79.82 — Aspirin
  • Z79.01 — Anticoagulant
  • Z79.02 — Antiplatelet / antithrombotic
  • Z79.1 — NSAID (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory)
Other Medications
  • Z79.2 — Antibiotic (oral, more than 10 days)
  • Z79.51 — Contraceptive
  • Z79.52 — System steroids
  • Z79.899 — Other drugs
Cardiac Status Codes
  • Z95.0 — Pacemaker
  • Z95.1 — CABG status
  • Z95.2 — Prosthetic heart valve
  • Z95.5 — Coronary stent
  • Z95.810 — Defibrillator

Artificial Joint Replacement Status Codes (Z96)

CodeJoint
Z96.61Shoulder replacement
Z96.62Elbow replacement
Z96.63Wrist replacement
Z96.64Hip replacement (Right/Left/Bilateral → 1/2/0)
Z96.65Knee replacement (Right/Left/Bilateral)
Z96.66Ankle replacement (Right/Left)
Z96.69Finger replacement

Ostomy / Artificial Opening Codes

History (Z93)Ostomy typeSN Teaching/Attention (Z43)
Z93.0TracheostomyZ43.0
Z93.1GastrostomyZ43.1
Z93.2IleostomyZ43.2
Z93.3ColostomyZ43.3
Z93.5CystostomyZ43.5

Surgical Wound Aftercare Codes

SystemCode
Nervous systemZ48.811
Circulatory systemZ48.812
Respiratory systemZ48.813
Digestive systemZ48.815
Genitourinary systemZ48.816
Orthopaedic surgeryZ47.89
Joint replacementZ47.1
Surgical amputationZ47.81
Cancer aftercareZ48.3
Foley catheterZ46.6

History Codes — When to Use Z85/Z86/Z87

History Coding Rule
  • Active condition → code the disease itself
  • Resolved but relevant → use history code
  • Implant/device in place → add status code (Z95–Z96)
  • After 30 days of surgery → give aftercare code
  • After 6 months — no need to code fracture
  • Acute conditions in PMH → not coded
  • Chronic conditions → always code
Common History Codes
  • Z85.xx — History of malignant neoplasm
  • Z86.73 — History of stroke (CVA) without residuals
  • Z86.79 — History of circulatory disease
  • I25.2 — Old MI (>4 weeks)
  • Z87.01 — History of pneumonia
  • Z87.440 — History of UTI
  • Z98.89 — History of surgery

🩹 Wounds, Ulcers & Fractures

Fracture Coding

Traumatic Fracture (S codes)
  • Due to fall or accident
  • 7th character D = subsequent (most home health)
  • 7th character A = initial (active treatment)
  • 7th character S = sequela
Non-traumatic Fractures
  • Neoplasm → M84.5 + C79.51
  • Osteoporosis → M80.-
  • Periprosthetic → M97.-
After 6 months, no need to code fracture. In home health, most fractures → 7th character D.

Surgical Wound Categories

Wound TypeCode7th Char
Non-complication surgical wound (well-healing)Z48.- / Z47.-
Disruption/dehiscence (wound opened)T81.3-A (wound vac present) / D (no wound vac)
Infection of surgical wound (taking antibiotics)T81.4-A (taking antibiotics) / D (not taking)
Sepsis following procedureT81.44 → A41.9

Pressure Ulcers (L89)

Pressure Ulcer Stages
  • Stage 1 — skin intact, colour change only
  • Stage 2 — skin open, epidermis + dermis level
  • Stage 3 — open to fat tissue level
  • Stage 4 — open to bone level
  • Unstageable — covered with eschar/pus, depth unknown
  • Deep Tissue Injury (DTI) — skin intact but pressure to bone/muscle → if skin opens, code Stage 3 or 4 directly
Pressure Ulcer Sites (L89)
  • L89.0 — Elbow
  • L89.1 — Back
  • L89.2 — Hip
  • L89.3 — Buttock
  • L89.4 — Back/buttock/hip
  • L89.5 — Ankle
  • L89.6 — Heel
  • PARTIAL thickness → last code -1
  • FULL thickness → last code -2
Code structure: L89 → I (site) → II (laterality) → III (severity/stage)

Non-Pressure Ulcers (L97)

Etiology: DM, PVD, gangrene, venous stasis, post-thrombotic, post-phlebitic, arteriosclerosis of leg. Must assign TWO codes: 1° Etiology code, 2° L97 site code.

SiteCode
ThighL97.1-
CalfL97.2-
AnkleL97.3-
Heel/midfootL97.4-
Other footL97.5-
Other lower legL97.8-

🫁 Chapter 10 — Respiratory System (J codes)

COPD — Umbrella Term

COPD is an umbrella term that includes many respiratory diseases: asthma, COPD, emphysema, bronchitis, chronic bronchiolitis. Code based on the specific combination documented.

CombinationCode
COPD + unspecified asthmaJ44.89
COPD + emphysemaJ43.9
COPD + specified asthmaJ44.9 + J45.-
COPD + pneumonia/bronchitis + exacerbationJ44.1 + J44.0 + J18.9

Pneumonia Types

Bacterial / Viral / Fungal
  • Needs antibiotics
  • J18.9 — unspecified organism
  • Specific organism codes under J12–J16
Aspiration Pneumonia
  • Due to food particles in trachea
  • Does NOT need antibiotics
  • J69.0
VAP — Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
  • Due to ventilator mask
  • J95.851

Respiratory Failure

TypeCode
UnspecifiedJ96.9
AcuteJ96.0-
ChronicJ96.1-
Acute on chronicJ96.2-

🎯 Interview Questions — Medical Coding

Medical Coding · BEGINNER
What are the main A–B code types used in home health infection coding?
A codes = infection codes (bacterial, parasitic). B codes = infection codes (viral, other organisms). Chapter 1 covers Certain Infectious and Parasitic Diseases. In home health most common: cellulitis (L03), UTI (N39.0), wound infections (T81.4-), sepsis (A41.9). B codes are also used for organism identification — if patient has localised infection and there is a causal organism, code: 1° localised infection, 2° B code for organism. Common B organism codes: B96.89 (other specified bacterial agents), used with puerperal sepsis.
Medical Coding · BEGINNER
What is the difference between NEC and NOS in ICD-10-CM?
NEC = Not Elsewhere Classified. More information about the disease IS given, but there is no specific code for it. The condition is classified elsewhere in the code book. Example: DM due to HLD → E11.69, E78.5. Chemo-induced anaemia → D64.81. NOS = Not Otherwise Specified. LESS information is given — documentation is vague or unspecified. Specific codes exist in the book but the documentation does not support using them. Example: Pneumonia NOS → J18.9. Pain unspecified → G89.9. Anaemia unspecified → D64.9. Memory tip: NEC = more info, not enough specificity in code. NOS = not enough info in the documentation.
Medical Coding · ENGINEER
Explain the Excludes1 vs Excludes2 rule with examples.
Excludes1 = "NOT coded here." Two same or related conditions CANNOT occur together at the same encounter. If condition A has Excludes1 listing condition B, you code B INSTEAD of A — not both together. The note means A does not mention that B should not be coded — but you code B instead. Examples: J45.909 asthma Excludes1 J30.9 allergic rhinitis — code rhinitis separately, not asthma if rhinitis is the issue. J44.9 COPD Excludes1 J42 bronchitis — cannot code together. I12.9 Excludes1 I15.0 — hypertensive CKD excludes renal HTN. Excludes2 = "Not included here." The two conditions are NOT part of each other but CAN exist together. Code from Excludes2 list SHOULD be coded when the patient has both conditions. Examples: F02 Dementia Excludes2 F01 vascular dementia — can code both if patient has both. I42 cardiomyopathy Excludes2 I25.5 ischemic CM — can code both. J18 pneumonia Excludes2 J69.0 aspiration pneumonia — can code both.
Medical Coding · ENGINEER
What is the PDGM and how does primary diagnosis affect payment?
PDGM = Patient-Driven Groupings Model. Replaced PPS in January 2020. Payment is per 30-day period (not 60-day episode). Each period classified by 5 factors: (1) Timing — early (1st period) or late, (2) Admission source — community or institutional (hospital discharge), (3) Clinical grouping — 12 groups based on primary diagnosis, (4) Functional level — low/medium/high from OASIS items, (5) Comorbidity adjustment — none/low/high from secondary diagnoses. Primary diagnosis determines clinical grouping. 12 clinical groups: Musculoskeletal Rehab, Neuro/Stroke Rehab, Wound Care, Complex Medical/Surgical, Respiratory, Endocrine, Infectious Disease, Cardiac, Medication Management, Behavioural Health, Immobility, MMTA. Getting wrong primary Dx = wrong clinical group = wrong reimbursement. Always code to the highest specificity for maximum appropriate payment.
Medical Coding · ENGINEER
How do you code HTN with CHF and CKD stage 3 together?
This is a combination code situation. Never code HTN, CHF, and CKD as separate I10 codes when combination codes exist. Step 1: Identify: HTN + HF + CKD (what stage?). Stage 3 = stages 1 to 4 group. Step 2: Apply combination: I13.0 (HTN with CHF and CKD stage 1-4) + I50.- (specify HF type — I50.9 unspecified or I50.22 chronic systolic) + N18.3 (CKD stage 3). If patient also has DM type 2 with CKD and anaemia: add E11.22 (DM with CKD) + D63.1 (anaemia of CKD). If CKD stage 6 (dialysis): add Z99.2 for dialysis status. Rule: According to CKD stage, the HTN combination code changes.
Medical Coding · ARCHITECT
Patient on home health for CHF monitoring also has type 2 DM on insulin, CKD stage 3, and anaemia of CKD. Code the full primary and secondary diagnoses.
Primary diagnosis: I13.0 (Hypertensive heart and chronic kidney disease with HF, CKD 1-4). This is the combination code for HTN + CHF + CKD stage 3. Heart failure type: I50.22 (chronic systolic CHF) — if documented as systolic. Otherwise I50.9. Diabetes with CKD: E11.22 (Type 2 DM with diabetic chronic kidney disease). CKD stage: N18.3 (CKD stage 3). Anaemia: D63.1 (anaemia in CKD). Insulin use: Z79.4 (long-term insulin use). Do NOT code I10 separately — I13.0 already includes the hypertension. Do NOT code N18.3 with I13.0 alone — both needed to specify stage. Full code list: I13.0, I50.22, E11.22, N18.3, D63.1, Z79.4.
Medical Coding · PRODUCTION
A home health patient has a surgical wound dehiscence with wound VAC in place but no infection. What codes do you assign and which 7th character?
Wound dehiscence = disruption of surgical wound (opening of wound). Code: T81.31XA (disruption of external operation wound, not elsewhere classified). 7th character: A because wound VAC is present = active wound care/treatment. If wound VAC NOT present: use D (subsequent encounter). The wound VAC changes the 7th character because it represents active wound management. Secondary codes: Add Z47.89 (aftercare following orthopaedic surgery) or Z48.89 (aftercare following surgery) depending on original surgery type. If wound is infected: T81.4- with A (taking antibiotics) or D (not taking). Key rule: Active wound treatment (wound VAC, active antibiotics) = A. Routine care without active treatment = D.
Medical Coding · SENIOR
How do you handle coding for CVA in home health when the patient had the stroke 3 months ago and has left-sided hemiplegia and aphasia?
Three-month-old CVA = sequela phase in home health. DO NOT code the acute CVA (I60-I63). Code the RESIDUAL DEFICITS as sequela. Step 1: Identify residuals — hemiplegia (left side) and aphasia. Step 2: Determine dominance — if not documented, use non-dominant as default. Step 3: Code the sequela codes from I69.3 series (following cerebral infarction). Hemiplegia left non-dominant: I69.354. Aphasia following cerebral infarction: I69.320. These are the PRIMARY and additional diagnoses for home health. Do NOT add the original stroke code (I63-) — sequela codes already indicate it was post-infarction. If patient had haemorrhagic stroke, use I69.1- (following non-traumatic subarachnoid) or I69.2- (following intracranial) series.
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