Question regarding choking
Hi everyone.
I need some help figuring this one out please.
Patient was eating breakfast and had some choking spells and stopped responding. Large amount of emesis suctioned from mouth by paramedic. Desaturated on non-rebreather mask and was intubated in ER and admitted. MD documented Resp failure, aspiration pneumonia, Non-Stemi, COPD exacerbation and acute renal failure all as POA. MD consistently documents 'Acute resp failure due to COPD exacerbation and aspiration pna'. What would the DRG be in a case like this? I thought it would be Aspiration PNA, DRG 177, but coder states it has to be DRG 154 (T17220A - Food in pharynx causing asphyxiation)because "the aspiration of the food, which blocked his airway, caused all the other acute conditions". It never crossed my mind to use DRG 154 and I'm not sure that I agree. Any thoughts on this would be very helpful.
Thanks!
Renee Meyer, RN, CCDS
I need some help figuring this one out please.
Patient was eating breakfast and had some choking spells and stopped responding. Large amount of emesis suctioned from mouth by paramedic. Desaturated on non-rebreather mask and was intubated in ER and admitted. MD documented Resp failure, aspiration pneumonia, Non-Stemi, COPD exacerbation and acute renal failure all as POA. MD consistently documents 'Acute resp failure due to COPD exacerbation and aspiration pna'. What would the DRG be in a case like this? I thought it would be Aspiration PNA, DRG 177, but coder states it has to be DRG 154 (T17220A - Food in pharynx causing asphyxiation)because "the aspiration of the food, which blocked his airway, caused all the other acute conditions". It never crossed my mind to use DRG 154 and I'm not sure that I agree. Any thoughts on this would be very helpful.
Thanks!
Renee Meyer, RN, CCDS
Comments
Katy Good, RN, BSN, CCDS, CCS
Clinical Documentation Program Coordinator
AHIMA Approved ICD-10CM/PCS Trainer
Flagstaff Medical Center
Kathryn.Good@nahealth.com
Cell: 928.814.9404
[cid:image001.png@01D14DDE.A1268630]
[cid:image002.png@01D14DDE.A1268630]
Paul Evans, RHIA, CCS, CCS-P, CCDS
Manager, Regional Clinical Documentation & Coding Integrity
Sutter West Bay
633 Folsom St., 7th Floor, Office 7-044
San Francisco, CA 94107
Cell: 415.412.9421
evanspx@sutterhealth.org
Principal diagnosis is the condition that caused admission to inpatient care. The patient came into the ER for choking episode. However at the point of admission to inpatient status, the choking episode had been resolved. If it had just been choking/emesis with no further harm, the patient would have been sent home.
The condition which necessitated admission to inpatient was one of the diagnoses listed below, not the choking episode. I can't say for sure which I would choose as principal diagnosis without more detail in length of intubation and ventilation, etc. and but I would probably go with the aspiration pneumonia as well.
Just my thoughts on how to perhaps approach the coder regarding this.
Sharon Salinas, CCS
Health Information Management
Barlow Respiratory Hospital
2000 Stadium Way, Los Angeles CA 90026
Tel: 213-250-4200 ext 3336
FAX: 213-202-6490
ssalinas@barlow2000.org
Vanessa Falkoff RN
Clinical Documentation Improvement Coordinator
University Medical Center of Southern Nevada
1800 W Charleston Blvd
Las Vegas, NV
vanessa.falkoff@umcsn.com
office 702-383-7322
Compassion * Accountability * Respect * Integrity
I will send it for a secondary review.
Renee, RN, CCDS