Pain Management Coding Alert

Documentation:

Meet These 7 Criteria to Prepare for ICD-10 Documentation Changes

Hint: Experts recommend quick turn-arounds for completing records.

With ICD-10 implementation mere months away, it’s time to ensure that your providers are doing everything they can to stay on track with their documentation. 

Here’s why: If the clinical record doesn’t support the codes you report, you run the risk of down coding, focused medical review, and even fraud investigations. 

Clinicians will need to beef up their documentation under ICD-10, says Arlene Maxim, RN, founder of A.D. Maxim Consulting, A.D. Maxim Seminars, and The National Coding Center, in Troy, Mich. 

“Documentation will make or break this process,” Maxim says. ICD-10 will require a higher degree of specificity. Assessing documentation practices now allows your practice to begin improvement efforts before the added pressure of the ICD-10 deadline arrives.

Clinical documentation is the foundation of every health record, adds Dorothy D. Steed, CPC-H, CHCC, CPUM, CPUR, CPHM, ACS-OP, CCS-P, RCC, CPMA, RMC, CEMC, CPC-I, CFPC, PCS, FCS, CPAR, AHIMA Approved ICD-10 Trainer, an independent healthcare consultant and educator in Atlanta, Ga. Clinicians may collect documentation only once, but others will use it many times so it’s important to make every effort to prevent it from being misunderstood.

Fix Your Focus on 7 Chart Details

Clinicians need to think about how often others will use and access their documentation in the future, Steed said during the recent audio conference “Clinical Documentation Improvement.” This critical information is needed for patient care and to help determine coding quality and accuracy.

During the audio conference, Steed outlined seven criteria for quality clinical documentation. Consider how your clinicians’ documentation stacks up in each area and provide help in making the changes needed to better support coding choice.

1. Legibility: Documentation should be readable and easily deciphered. A lot of handwritten documentation isn’t legible or decipherable, Steed cautioned. Rushed or careless documentation may cause other problems.

Legibility includes being able to read the name and title of the clinician completing the documentation, Maxim adds.

This is an especially important aspect of good documentation, Steed said. Complete and legible entries provide protection for providers. But illegible entries in a medical record may cause:

  • Misunderstanding of a patient’s condition.
  • Jeopardized reimbursement.
  • Denied payment.
  • Loss of legal appeals.
  • Serious patient injury.

2. Reliability: Is the documentation trustworthy? Based on the diagnoses, is the documentation reliable? Does it support the rationale for the diagnoses and for medical necessity?

The reliability is related to every single visit note. Most denials and down coding occur when visit notes don’t support the codes you report based on the original assessment, Maxim cautions.

3. Precision: Clinical documentation must be accurate, exact, and strictly defined. Increased detail generally means greater accuracy in documentation, Steed said.

The degree of specificity in documentation that will be necessary with ICD-10 will challenge even the most experienced clinician, Maxim says. Take the musculoskeletal system, for example. There are eight codes for pathologic fractures in ICD-9, but in ICD-10 there are more than 150 codes.

4. Completeness: Good documentation fully addresses all concerns in the record, and includes appropriate validation.

5. Consistency: Documentation shouldn’t be contradictory. Are there conflicting statements in the record? Are there conflicting opinions between providers that have not been clarified? Make sure any inconsistencies are addressed.

This is where the coordination of services comes into play, Maxim says. Many times a contradiction occurs when there is a lack of communication between the disciplines. “Get everyone on the same page,” she stresses.

6. Clarity: Documentation should be unambiguous. Vague documentation that does not totally describe a patient’s condition won’t support the services your agency provides.

7. Timeliness: Documentation must be up-to-date to help ensure optimal patient treatment.

Important: Clinicians should never be tempted to put off documentation until a more convenient time. Every hour away from the visit, a large percent of information is lost. 

“Our memory for specific information fades quickly,” Maxim says. Therefore, implementing deadlines or goals for when a visit should be completely documented might help providers be more accurate in their records – which can lead to even better coding. 

Other Articles in this issue of

Pain Management Coding Alert

View All