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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

4 debatable points on the delay of ICD-10 from HealthIT.com

Fighting words were heard from both sides of the ICD-10 debate after the AMA called for a delay of the Oct. 1, 2013 deadline for conversion. LinkedIn and Twitter were bustling with yea or nay responses, which is why we asked Steve Sisko, IT consultant and avid ICD-10 blogger, and Rob Tennant, senior policy advisor at the MGMA, to weigh in.

1. The effect ICD-10 implementation will have on physician practices.

Sisko:

It won’t be as bad as they think. According to Sisko, some practices will be burdened more than others with the switch to ICD-10. “But specialists only need to learn a subset [of codes],” he added. “They say ’70,000 ICD codes we’ll have to know,’ well, that’s BS because if you’re an orthopedic surgeon, there are subsets you don’t need to know; you don’t need to learn about other specialties’ codes.” He added, though, facilities will be impacted to a greater extent than professionals, due to the fact institutions have to collect, “Present on Admission and discharge diagnosis that professionals do not have to collect. They’ll have to lean on existing resources or hire external assistance.”

For the full article please go here.

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