Scenario: When a snowboarder falls, know how to deploy ICD-10

by Richard Scott on Aug 3, 2016
Don't get bogged down by confusing ICD-10 characters-- especially the ones you find at the end of the line. With terminology that tends to run counter to intuition at times, selecting the correct seventh-character under ICD-10 can be a challenge, as we reported this week

Here's a hard-and-fast rule for wound care and surgical procedures: Go with character "A," which refers to an initial encounter, for any active treatment, even if it's the 10th or hundredth time you've seen the patient.

Otherwise, choose seventh-character "D" when the treatment is no longer active.

Check out this example, provided by Angie Comfort, senior director of health information management practice excellence for AHIMA in Chicago.

Scenario: A snowboarder crashed at a ski resort and fractured his right wrist. He had surgery to repair the fracture with an external fixation device.
  • ICD-10-CM code: S62.101A (Fracture, unspecified carpal bone, right wrist, initial encounter for closed fracture)
  • CPT codes: 25635 (Closed treatment of carpal bone fracture with manipulation), 20692 (Application of a multiplane, unilateral, external fixation device)
Return visit: The same patient comes in six weeks later to have the external hardware and fixation device removed.
  • ICD-10-CM code: S62.101D (Fracture, unspecified carpal bone, right wrist, subsequent encounter for fracture with routine healing)
  • CPT code: 20694 (Removal, under anesthesia, of external fixation device)
Because the removal of the fixation device is considered aftercare, the correct choice is character D for the fracture code.
Blog Tags: ICD-10
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