Home Health ICD-9/ICD-10 Alert

Documentation:

Does Your Intake Process Need Updating?

Prepare now or risk ICD-10 nightmares. 

Your intake department is the front line in gathering the documentation you need to assign diagnosis codes for your patients. Try these expert techniques to make certain you’re not missing out on the information you need to select the most accurate codes.

When it comes to diagnosis coding, “the more information the better, especially with an eye toward more specific diagnosis codes in ICD-10,” says Michelle Mantel, MSN, GNP-BC, RN, BCHH-C, COS-C, HCS-D, quality assurance manager with Gentiva Home Health in West Palm Beach, Fla. “Thorough documentation provided in advance not only prepares the field clinician for the first visit, but also helps the coder find the most specific code for each of the patient’s diagnoses.”

An intake department that gathers the information you need up front benefits your agency in a variety of ways, Mantel points out.

1. It saves time for the coder who doesn’t have to “track down the clinician or call a physician for clarification before coding the record and forwarding it for RAP release”.

2. It improves quality of care because “the field clinicians will have important data to provide the best care possible to the patient.”

3. It enhances compliance and reimbursement by promoting adherence to coding guidelines and maximizing PPS reimbursement through specific codes as opposed to NOS codes, which are rarely case-mix weighted.

When little to no clinical information is available at referral/intake, coders aren’t the only ones who face a more difficult job, says Lisa Selman-Holman, JD, BSN, RN, COS-C, HCS-D, HCS-O, AHIMA Approved ICD-10-CM Trainer/Ambassador of Selman-Holman & Associates, LLC, CoDR—Coding Done Right and Code Pro University in Denton, Texas. Lack of clinical information also makes it more difficult to:

  • Identify patient issues; 
  • Develop a plan of care meaningful to the patient; and 
  • Provide skilled care that will withstand the scrutiny of all the medical review home health agencies face.

‘Evaluate and Treat’ isn’t Enough 

Nurses who have been in intake for years, may have grown accustomed to taking a phone or fax referral that states “home health to evaluate and treat,” says Delaine Henry, COS-C, HCS-D, with Health Care Management and Billing Services in Lafayette, La. As a result, “it’s very difficult to get everyone to understand that we need more information, and it must be specific to each patient’s current diagnoses, condition, and home bound status.”

Provide Training

Your intake staff is responsible for training referral sources regarding the level of documentation your agency needs. But before they can educate others, the intake staff must be educated themselves, Henry says. 

Mistake: “With a flurry of activity surrounding preparation for ICD-10, some agencies have left intake out of the equation when it comes to ICD-10 training,” Henry says. For the greatest efficiency, intake staff “need to know more than just the fact that we need more documentation, they need to know at least the basics of diagnosis coding,” she says. 

It’s not too late. Your intake department should have known the basics of ICD-9 coding, but many agencies are just now realizing the seriousness of issues with lacking referral documentation as they prepare for ICD-10, Henry says. “Not that everyone needs to be a certified coder, but everyone should attend basic training.”

Ask the Right Questions

With good training, intake staff will become better able to determine when you need more information from a referral source. And they’ll also know what questions to ask to clarify the diagnoses.

For example: The intake department should know when to ask for more information about the patient, says Judy Adams, RN, BSN, HCS-D, HCS-O, with Adams Home Care Consulting in Asheville, N.C. “If the referral source is a hospital, ask for copies of the admission history and physical, the discharge summary would be fantastic, any operative reports or consulting specialists notes/reports, any culture reports or biopsy reports would also be helpful,” she says.

Intake staff should be sure to get a copy of the face-to-face or a report of what arrangements are being made to obtain face-to-face documentation, as well as a list of current medications, Adams says. And, “if the patient has been receiving therapy services, a copy of the therapist’s assessments or status of the patient would also be helpful.”