Heading to Surgical Unit
I am heading to the Surgical Unit as part of a rotation and I need your input! Besides Sepsis, Acute Blood Loss Anemia, Bowel Obstruction, or perforation, what other dx or conditions do you frequently query for? Are there any specific things that you look for in the record that stand out. Please any information will be greatly appreciated.. Thank you
Regina McCroskey BSN
Munroe Regional Medical Center
Ocala, Fl. 34478
351-401-8422
Regina McCroskey BSN
Munroe Regional Medical Center
Ocala, Fl. 34478
351-401-8422
Comments
We query for Comorbids - especially Heart Failure. Be prepared to defend your query- most physicians do not understand why we query for something that is not exacerbated or not "treated" within the admission.
I explain to them that this captures the SOI/ROM of that patient which looks good for their report cards.
We also look for HypoNa+.
And the BIG one: Excisional Debridement.
I also try to get clear underlying cause of those wound patients ( Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy, Diabetic Peripheral Vascular, etc.) It really helps your coders out.
If your hospital performs Gastric Bypass you need to look into BMI/malabsorption.
NBrunson, RHIA, CCDS
Ileus - look for the institution of treatment or a prolonged LOS. NG inserted or re-inserted? Meds started to promote return of bowel function. When I am not sure, I have found the surgeons approachable about what they expect to see for ileus with the surgery they performed.
Sometimes surgeons are more accepting if you include guidance on and expected outcome. For instance, some surgeons will more readily write "expected acute blood loss anemia".
Don't forget to review ANESTHESIA NOTES. They often note co-morbids, EBL, etc.
Debridements also might be a more common issue -- depends on who does them most often and where those patients are found for your organization.
There were a couple of very good presentations at the 2011 conference -- look in the forms and tools library for those ppt presentations. As I recall, there are also several blog posts and I believe Journal articles that are relevant -- focus both on specific conditions as well as more broadly on surgical complications. Unfortunately, don't remember the specifics to point you toward.
Don
Tracy M Peyton RN, CCDS
Case Management
Bradford Regional Medical Center
Upper Allegany Health Systems
116 Interstate Parkway
Bradford, PA 16701
814-558-0406
moving towards Malnutrition!
Claudine Hutchinson RN
Clinical Documentation Improvement Specialist
Children's Hospital at Saint Francis
Email: chutchinson@saintfrancis.com
Office: (918) 502-6603
Pager: 98-1001
To carry this discussion further, which diagnoses are folks getting when querying for a diagnosis for the low BMI?
Mark Dominesey, RN/BSN, MBA
Clinical Documentation Specialist
Martha Jefferson Hospital
Charlottesville, VA
The response to the query was "underweight". Ha! thanks doc!
Take advantage of the AHIMA query guidance and offer a menu of choices that are clinically reasonable (malnourished, cachexia, underweight) and be sure to include Other___________ and clinically indeterminable. Could even add an option for this did not affect clinical care (though would not if there was dietary consult, special nutrition supplied, etc.).
Don
Tracy M Peyton RN, CCDS
Case Management
Bradford Regional Medical Center
Upper Allegany Health Systems
116 Interstate Parkway
Bradford, PA 16701
814-558-0406
Robert
Robert S. Hodges, BSN, MSN, RN, CCDS
Clinical Documentation Improvement Specialist
Aleda E. Lutz VAMC
Mail Code 136
1500 Weiss Street
Saginaw MI 48602
is a wonderful way to use the power of an EMR.
It seems to me that one of the issues in being able to capture and code
the BMI falls under this definition of a reportable other diagnosis.
Per the coding guidelines, one needs to have evidence of
For reporting purposes the definition for “other diagnoses” is
interpreted as additional conditions that affect patient care in terms
of requiring:
clinical evaluation; or
therapeutic treatment; or
diagnostic procedures; or
extended length of hospital stay; or
increased nursing care and/or monitoring
The documented evidence to support one of the conditions above seems
often to be the issue of concern often times when considering reporting
the BMI, in addition to having the related diagnosis.
Don
We don't have too many issues with the obesity diagnosis being documented except that sometimes the physician's idea of "morbid" and the BMI do not match.
Malnutrition is another case altogether. Our Nephros are all over the Malnutrition documentation but our other physiciians struggle with this diagnosis.
NBrunson, RHIA, CCDS
Our nephrologists also freely document malnutrition but fail to add specificity. So queries are placed for type and severity.
Charlene
Mark Dominesey, RN/BSN, MBA
Clinical Documentation Improvement Specialist
Health Information Management Services
Martha Jefferson Hospital
459 Locust Ave
Charlottesville, VA 22902
Mark.Dominesey@mjh.org
chronic as well as the clinical diagnosis. If there an amputation is
documented or if there are any other questions I look for the
dietician's notes for an accurate BMI.
Robert
Robert S. Hodges, BSN, MSN, RN, CCDS
Clinical Documentation Improvement Specialist
Aleda E. Lutz VAMC
Mail Code 136
1500 Weiss Street
Saginaw MI 48602
P: 989-497-2500 x13101
F: 989-321-4912
E: Robert.Hodges2@va.gov
"The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the
difference between lightning and the lightning bug." Samuel "Mark Twain"
Clemens
Mark