Admit Diagnosis: Difference between revisions
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'''Admit diagnoses''' are what led to the patient's admission to your unit. An Acquired Diagnosis / Complication is coded by setting the [[Dx_Type]] to "admit". We make special use of the [[Primary Admit Diagnosis]], so make sure you consider the content there. | '''Admit diagnoses''' are what led to the patient's admission to your unit. An Acquired Diagnosis / Complication is coded by setting the [[Dx_Type]] to "admit". We make special use of the [[Primary Admit Diagnosis]], so make sure you consider the content there. | ||
== Collection Instructions == | |||
{{ICD10 Guideline Como vs Admit}} | {{ICD10 Guideline Como vs Admit}} | ||
Revision as of 17:01, 6 August 2018
For other diagnoses, see Comorbid Diagnosis and Acquired Diagnosis / Complication.
Admit diagnoses are what led to the patient's admission to your unit. An Acquired Diagnosis / Complication is coded by setting the Dx_Type to "admit". We make special use of the Primary Admit Diagnosis, so make sure you consider the content there.
Collection Instructions
When to use Comorbid Diagnosis vs Admit Diagnosis or neither
When not to code a dx at all
- Dx was present in the past but that problem is resolved AND does not fit into one of the Category: Past medical history codes
- To be clear on this -- do NOT code past problems that are fully resolved unless they are one of the Category: Past medical history codes
- Do not code diagnoses that occur during this admission as a comorbid diagnoses. If they have completely resolved then do not code as a comorbid diagnosis until the next admission if applicable. ie. surgical ward had a COVID pneumonia resolved prior to ICU admission. Do not code Past history of Covid-19 infection until the next hospital admission.
Regular comorbid rules exception: Strokes (of any sort, ischemic or hemorrhagic) -- code even resolved strokes with no current sequelae as comorbid diagnoses. If a patient has a past history of stroke, use the regular stroke codes to identify this, even if the patient does not have any residual deficits we will now capture ANY past history of stroke. This is contrary to the usual rules about Comorbid_Diagnosis#When_not_to_code_a_dx_at_all.
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Some diagnoses can/should be coded as BOTH Admit Diagnosis and Comorbid Diagnosis
If a dx is chronic but also actively treated during this admission, code it as both Admit Diagnosis and Comorbid Diagnosis.
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Recurrent conditions
- Do not code a recurrent condition that is NOT currently present -- if currently active, include as Admit Diagnosis, otherwise don't code it
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- Do code conditions that by nature have intermittent rather than continuous symptoms, but where the underlying condition doesn't go away.
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Past medical history
Past medical history codes
Past medical history codes should only be captured as Comorbid Diagnoses that represent previous procedures or medical situations. Their names usually follow the pattern "Past history of X" or "X, has one". See Category:Past medical history for a list.
Controlling Dx Type for ICD10 codes
This wiki page talks about which ICD10 codes are allowed to be Comorbid Diagnosis vs. Admit Diagnosis vs. Acquired Diagnosis Dx Type. See Controlling Dx Type for ICD10 codes for a discussion about cross-checks for these.
Legacy - did not use to code Comorbid Diagnoses only discovered during this admission
see how this used to be coded... |
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Data Structure
Admit Diagnoses are drawn from S_ICD10 table and stored in L_ICD10 table.
Legacy Information
Maximum Number of Admit Diagnoses |
Until we started to use Centralized data.mdb we were limited to 6 admit diagnoses. For some time CCMDB.mdb had been able to record any number of admit diagnoses. However, only the six (6) with the highest priority were appended to TMSX. |