I had the opportunity to sit in on some preliminary ICD-10 training being given by the Practice Management Institute (www.pmiMD.com) last week. It was their goal to inspire confidence and a “we can do this” attitude, but honestly, the reactions I witnessed (or had myself), looked more like despair that would soon be mixed with alcohol and anti-anxiety meds. I was a bit disheartened. I came out of that meeting thinking “ICD-10 coding is coming- Run NOW!”
Chicken Little
I do so hate to sound like Chicken Little shouting that “the sky is falling”. I was also seeing some benefits to updating the codes and coding. I mean, yeah, with new technology, new procedures, and new techniques, there needed to be new codes and new code availability to cover them. It also simplifies some things to have one CPT code, rather than a CPT code plus some DX codes. The specificity of the codes will also make the data more valuable because you are giving more information. Disease and treatment patterns can be studied more accurately. The spread of disease can be studied and possibly better contained. However, this is a beast with many tentacles, on par with the biggest of government programs and endeavors ever conceived. Have no doubt, it is going to change the way you document patient encounters and bill out, forever.
Let’s start with the easy stuff and work our way along the ICD-10 trail.