MedAbbrev, now by innoviHealth, has been the industry standard for medical abbreviations and acronyms since 1983. Quick and easy access for hospitals, providers, coders, transcriptionists, students and researchers to over 75,000 entries. With clear and accurate standardization that is always current, medical professionals can reduce the chance of error stemming from misunderstood abbreviations.
tci ED Coding & Reimbursement Alert - 2009 Issue 14
READER QUESTIONS: Careful: 10060 Won't Wash for Some I&Ds
Question: A patient presents to the ED reporting pain in her spine. During the exam portion of a level-three E/M, the physician discovers that the painful area is red, and slightly warm to the touch. The patient also has a low-grade fever that she says she noticed about two days ago. The physician makes a shallow incision with a scalpel at the base of the patient's spine and drains the pus from the area. I reported 10060 and received a denial. Why? Kentucky Subscriber Answer: You chose a standard incision and drainage (I&D) code when you should have...
To read the full article, sign in and subscribe to tci ED Coding & Reimbursement Alert.
You have ED coding questions, and we deliver money-in-the-bank answers to help you defeat your claim issues and secure optimal reimbursement.
Stay in the know and avoid federal reproach with your subscription to TCI’s ED Coding and Reimbursement Alert.
Current newsletters added each month
Fully searchable archives - over 2100 articles
ALL years/issues back to 1998 organized by year and issue
Codes mentioned in articles are linked to Code Information pages
Code Information pages link back to related articles
Access to this feature is available in the following products: