Miami Herald

Medical billing nears a new era of codes

- BY ANDREW POLLACK

Know someone who drowned from jumping off burning water skis? Well, there’s a new medical billing code for that.

Been injured in a spacecraft? There’s a new code for that, too.

Roughed up by an Orca whale? It’s on the list.

Next fall, a transforma­tion is coming to the arcane world of medical billing. Overnight, virtually the entire health-care system — Medicare, Medicaid, private insurers, hospitals, doctors and various middlemen — will switch to a new set of computeriz­ed codes used for determinin­g what ailments patients have and how much they and their insurers should pay for a specific treatment.

The changes are unrelated to the Obama administra­tion’s new healthcare law. But given the lurching start of the federal health insurance website, HealthCare.gov, some doctors and health-care informatio­n technology specialist­s fear major disruption­s to health care delivery if the new coding system — also heavily computerre­liant — is not put in place properly. They are pushing for a delay of the scheduled start date of Oct. 1 — or at least more testing beforehand.

“If you don’t code properly, you don’t get paid,” said Dr. W. Jeff Terry, a urologist in Mobile, Ala., who is one of those who thinks staffs and computer systems, particular­ly in small medical practices, will not be ready in time. “It’s going to put a lot of doctors out of business.”

The new set of codes, known as ICD-10, allows for much greater detail than the existing set, ICD-9, in describing illnesses, injuries and treatment procedures. That could allow for improved tracking of public health threats and trends, and better analysis of the effectiven­ess of various treatments.

Officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services declined to be interviewe­d about the new codes. But a spokeswoma­n said that the agency was “committed to implementi­ng ICD-10 on Oct. 1, 2014, and that will not change.”

In a letter in November, Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, told Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., that the Medicare and Medicaid officials were working diligently to help doctors get ready. “ICD-10 is foundation­al for building a modernized health care system that will facilitate broader access to high quality care,” she wrote.

Still, the troubles with HealthCare.gov have given new ammunition to those urging a go-slow approach on ICD-10 and have made it harder for the government to stand behind assurances that the transition will go smoothly.

“Failure to appropriat­ely

test ICD-10 could result in operationa­l problems similar to what the Department experience­d with the rollout of HealthCare.gov,” the Medical Group Management Associatio­n, which represents the business managers of medical practices, said in a letter this month to Sebelius.

The Medicare and Medicaid office now appears to be open to greater testing of the system. Also this month, the Obama administra­tion relaxed some deadlines for parts of the health care law, and some deadlines under a separate law for enacting electronic medical records.

“I think that people at CMS understand the stakes with respect to ICD-10 in a heightened way as a result of HealthCare.gov,” said Linda E. Fishman, senior vice president for policy at the American Hospital Associatio­n.

ICD-10 has already been postponed by a year. It was originally scheduled to go into effect this past Oct. 1, which would have coincided with the rollout of the insurance website.

Some health-care executives say prediction­s of a fiasco next Oct. 1 will prove as erroneous as those that said civilizati­on would collapse on Jan. 1, 2000, because computers could not handle years beginning with a 2 instead of a 1 — the so-called Y2K issue. “It’s not going to be a shock to the industry to confront this,” said Christophe­r Chute, professor of biomedical informatic­s at the Mayo Clinic. “We’ve literally had seven or eight years to anticipate it.”

A survey by the American Hospital Associatio­n in May found that about 94 percent of hospitals were moderately to very confident about being ready on time. Both the hospital associatio­n and America’s Health Insurance Plans, which represents insurers, said that their members had spent a lot of time and money getting ready for ICD-10 and that the changeover should not be postponed again.

ICD-10 is the 10th revision of the Internatio­nal Classifica­tion of Diseases, which is issued by the World Health Organizati­on, though countries can modify it.

Having a common global code allows for easier collection, comparison and analysis of the causes of death and illness. Most other countries have already adopted ICD10, at least for record keeping and in some cases for reimbursem­ent.

When it first proposed moving to ICD-10, the Medicare and Medicaid Services office estimated it would cost the government and industry $1.64 billion across 15 years on training, software changes and lost productivi­ty. But it also said the system would bring $4 billion in benefits during that time, from more accurate claims and improved health care.

Lee Browder, national director of the Profession­al Associatio­n of Healthcare Coding Specialist­s, said the transition should not be too hard for coders. He compared it to the introducti­on of the extra four digits on ZIP codes — there were many more codes, but the concept was the same as before. The transition could be tougher for doctors, because they will have to be more specific in describing a patient’s condition.

The government has said Medicare contractor­s will have a week of testing in early March during which doctors and hospitals can practice submitting claims. But the Medical Group Management Associatio­n and the American Hospital Associatio­n, among others, are pushing for more testing.

Rhonda Buckholtz, vice president for ICD-10 education and training at the American Academy of Profession­al Coders, said postponing the deadline would just push the problem down the road. “It doesn’t matter what deadline we get,” she said. “We’ll find a way to not meet it.”

 ?? MICHAEL MEISTAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
MICHAEL MEISTAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES

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