The ICD-9 Coordination and Maintenance Committee will implement a partial breeze of the ICD-9-CM and ICD-10 codes before transitioning to ICD-10. On October 1 this year, the last regular, annual updates to both ICD-10 and ICD-9-CM code sets will be made. As such, you need to brush up on the latest code choices now.
Now you will have more choices for lip neoplasm and glaucoma
This year, you need to pay special attention to expanded lip neoplasm and glaucoma choices in addition to new codes for acute respiratory failure and other complications after surgery. In other words, when ICD-9-CM codes go into effect, you will be able to locate some neoplasms and glaucoma stages more specifically:
Neoplasm codes 173.0-173.9 will take the exit path and be replaced by just-in fifth-digit choices 173.00-173.99 while glaucoma codes will expand to the fifth-digit level in order to differentiate the different stages. The just-in codes will be 365.70-365.74.
Fifth digit expansions to codes: This will help coders and physicians start thinking in terms of more detailed diagnoses.
Apart from this, you also need to get familiar with diagnosis changes for surgical procedures since anesthesiologists can find themselves covering all surgical areas. Just-in ICD 9 procedure codes (surgical) choices include:
New codes: ICD-9 2012 ( Source "http://www.supercoder.com/icd9-codes/") will provide you with five V codes to help your physician better indicate conditions a patient might have as part of her personal or family medical history. The new options will include V12.21, V12.29, V12.55, V13.81 and V13.89.
Revised codes: As far as the revised codes are concerned, there are many migraine diagnoses listed. The descriptors are the same, but then the punctuation changes to some extent. Revised descriptors add a comma after the ‘so stated’ phrase in the fifth-digit ‘1’ subclassification descriptor for each type of migraine noted
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