There will always be a delay between an actual infection and the time at which the infection is confirmed by the lab, or manifests so it can be determined without lab clarification (for diagnoses where we allow that). Some of our reports "attribute" infections to units on which they happen if they are an Acquired Diagnosis.
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- I finally figured out how to ask this at task: I was worried that we might apply the delay at the data entry end and also at the reporting end (i.e. the delay might be included twice or not at all, so we need to phrase and then link this correctly so it's clear whether the delay is considered at collection or at reporting. Ttenbergen 21:37, 2020 August 27 (CDT)
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Is the following correct, then:
This means that an infection discovered shortly after admission should not generally be coded as an Acquired Diagnosis, since it likely happened before the patient arrived on the current ward, and should instead be coded as an Admit Diagnosis. To be consistent, we have rules on how long after admission to a unit an infection needs to be discovered before we would call it an Acquired Diagnosis instead of an Admit Diagnosis.
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Diagnoses with specific attribution rules
We have specific attribution rules as documented in their pages for the following diagnoses:
Attribution for all other infections
- A chronic-type infection (e.g. TB) which is first discovered in hospital BUT presumably was actually present on admission is governed by the rules of Template:ICD10 Guideline Como vs Admit -- i.e. coded as an admit dx.
- But rarely, a person can acquire such a chronic-type infection in hospital, and if THAT is thought to have happened, then code it as an acquired dx.
- For an acute-type infection (e.g. bacterial cellulitis) first identified after admission (the start of the current database record) to choose admit vs. comorbid dx, you should try to figure out whether it was actually present at admission or actually began after admission.
- Typically there will be at least a guess by the team about this. If not, then you can default to the guideline that if it was firstdiscovered within the first 48 hrs after admission to code it as an Admit Diagnosis, and if discovered >48 hrs after admission to code it as as an Acquired Diagnosis.
Attribution doesn't apply to colonization
See Colonized with organism (not infected)#Colonizations are not attributed to any units
Cleanup
Related articles
Related articles:
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- Admit Diagnosis (← links)
- Acquired Diagnosis / Complication (← links)
- Combined ICD10 codes (← links)
- Hepatitis B, acute (← links)
- Hepatitis C, acute (← links)
- Viral hepatitis, acute, NOS (← links)
- Hepatitis B, chronic (← links)
- Hepatitis C, chronic (← links)
- Viral hepatitis, chronic, NOS (← links)
- AIDS (disease due to HIV) (← links)
- Mumps (← links)
- Infectious mononucleosis (usually due to Epstein-Barr virus) (← links)
- Viral carditis (← links)
- Hantavirus infection (← links)
- Dermatophytosis (tineas, cutaneous fungal infection) (← links)
- Thrush (Candida infection of mouth) (← links)
- Fungemia, NOS (← links)
- Malaria (due to Plasmodia, any type) (← links)
- African trypanosomiasis (← links)
- Chagas' disease (due to American trypanosomiasis) (← links)
- Toxoplasmosis OR for buglist Toxoplama gondii (← links)
- Helminthic (parasitic worm) infection, any organ(s) (← links)
- Parasitic infection, NOS (← links)
- Infectious disease NOS (← links)
- Disorder of spleen, NOS (← links)
- Thyroiditis, acute (← links)
- Cholera (due to Vibrio cholerae) (← links)
- Typhoid fever or Paratyphoid fever (due to Salmonella typhi or Salmonella enterica) (← links)
- Salmonella enteritis (← links)
- Salmonella species (← links)
- Shigellosis (dysentery due to Shigella species) (← links)
- Clostridium difficile infection (C. diff) (← links)
- Gastrointestinal infection (gastroenteritis, colitis), bacterial, NOS (← links)
- Botulism (due to Clostridium botulinum toxin) (← links)
- Food poisoning (due to foodborne bacterial toxin), NOS (← links)
- Amoebiasis (amoebic dysentery due to Entamoeba histolytica) (← links)
- Entamoeba histolytica (amoebic infection of non-intestinal sites) (← links)
- Gastrointestinal infection (gastroenteritis, colitis), protozoal, NOS (← links)
- Gastrointestinal infection (gastroenteritis, colitis), viral (← links)
- Gastrointestinal infection (gastroenteritis, colitis), bug NOS (← links)
- Tuberculosis of the respiratory system, confirmed (← links)
- Observation for SUSPECTED tuberculosis (← links)
- Tuberculosis of the nervous system (← links)
- Zoonotic bacterial disease (directly transmitted from animal) (← links)
- Leprosy (due to Mycobacterium leprae) (Hansen's disease) (← links)
- Tetanus infection (due to toxoid of Clostridium tetani) (← links)
- Diptheria (due to Corynebacterium diphtheriae toxin) (← links)
- Whooping cough (Pertussis) (due to Bordetella pertussis) (← links)
- Scarlet fever (← links)
- Actinomyces (actinomycosis) (← links)
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