More Facts About ICD-10
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) recently published some additional facts about ICD-10 intended to address common questions about the transition to ICD-10:
- Practices that do not prepare for ICD-10 will not be able to submit claims for services performed on or after October 1, 2015 - Unless your practice is able to submit ICD-10 claims, your claims will not be accepted by NCTracks or any other health insurance payer, public or private. Only claims coded with ICD-10 can be accepted for services provided on or after October 1, 2015.
- Reimbursement for outpatient and physician office procedures will not be determined by ICD-10 codes - Outpatient and physician office claims are not paid based on ICD-10 diagnosis codes but on CPT and HCPCS procedure codes, which are not changing. However, ICD-10-PCS codes will be used for hospital inpatient procedures, just as ICD-9 codes are used for such procedures today. Also, ICD diagnosis codes are sometimes used to determine medical necessity, regardless of care setting.
- Costs could be substantially lower than projected earlier - Recent studies by 3M and the Professional Association of Health Care Office Management have found many EHR vendors are including ICD-10 in their systems or upgrades—at little or no cost to their customers. As a result, software and systems costs for ICD-10 could be minimal for many providers.
- It’s time to transition to ICD-10 - ICD-10 is foundational to modernizing health care and improving quality. ICD-10 serves as a building block that allows for greater specificity and standardized data that can:
- Improve coordination of a patient’s care across providers over time
- Advance public health research, public health surveillance, and emergency response through detection of disease outbreaks and adverse drug events
- Support innovative payment models that drive quality of care
- Enhance fraud detection efforts
The secret to success will be to learn and understand what is changing so that your practice will be ready come October 1.