I can’t express confidence in this new system at all. As far as I can tell, they cover most things for the first or second incidents but not for the subsequent ones. What about when my pet chinchilla bites me for the 5th or 6th time? Does that mean the tip of my fingernail cannot be restored by a specialist? My insurance would hopefully cover a really qualified Vietnamese manicurist because they are the best. I wouldn’t ever want to lose that option for healthcare service providers.
I’m imagining ICD-10: The Game, where the player attempts to dodge falling alligators, attacking chickens, exploding wheelbarrows, and other such menaces.
Is there even a feasible way for a critter to give rabies to a porcupine?
Also, I did not know until just now: Porcupines are rodents. Huh.
Thanks for sharing this! They also publish a similar book about Meaningful Use, which has been almost as much of a bane of my existence as ICD10. (I work for an EMR software company.)
Here’s one I used for a test case (Rhaegar Targaryen was the patient…)
Y37.450A- Military operations involving combat using blunt or piercing object, military personnel, initial encounter
A lot of these are circumstance codes, not actual diagnoses. For example, this was the circumstance, but you’d have to find some kind of ICD-10 code for crushed sternum or whatever actually would have put Rhaegar in the ER after the Trident.
Try using the W53.81XS: Bitten by other rodent, sequela. (You’ll have to get the chinchilla breeders’ league to petition WHO for a more specific code.)
You can pay your $25 copay on the way out.
Please develop this game! You’d have a lot of geeky coders playing that while drunk.
Well, I can think of a dozen geeky people who’d play it, laughing manically the entire time.
No, but they do have one for “Just a flesh wound.”
Errors in billing will cause the insurance carrier to fart in your general direction.
I’m sorry, all. I thought I had searched for it but obviously not well enough.
The movie and game are excellent ideas. Being of a melancholic turn of mind, I was thinking of a tragic novel or poem. You ideas are much better.
“Your water skis caught on fire. Miss a turn.”
“Your behavior is strange and inexplicable. Proceed to swimming-pool of prison.”
“Choose a player. That player is sucked into a jet engine and must roll a D20 to calculate damage and a D6 for cost of treatment.”
“You are suffering from the toxic effect of tobacco cigarettes, intentional self-harm after having smoked a pack a day for thirty years. Roll a D6 to find out what kind of cancer you have.”
“You find an agricultural transport vehicle in stationary use in the middle of a field. Draw an Incident card to find out what happens.”
“You complained about an unspecified problem related to medical facilities and other health care and are now subject to social exclusion & rejection. Pay 500 coins to a reputation improvement specialist.”
“You walked into a lamppost while ruminating over problems in your relationship with your in-laws. Draw a Billing card.”
That would be a great game. We could extend the classification as well, to involve fantasy incidents. Maybe they could be listed under Greek letters or something:
Σ23.43Z: Backblast from fire spell, sequelae.
Δ1.655F: Accidentally turned into toad, first incident.
Π3.141S: Improper circularization, first incident.
I am so looking forward to ICD-10 because of this very issue. I spend a good 3 hours out of every day talking to billing providers who had claims denied, despite using appropriate modifiers, because our prehistoric computer system keeps seeing the same code billed twice and flagging it as a potential duplicate and requiring medical notes be submitted for review or other simple problems that shouldn’t require assistance. If ICD-10 will allow you to bill something down to such a specific level that it will no longer trigger a duplicate denial for left vs right knee surgery or for physical therapy that is coded specifically as not related to an accident so they don’t force you to try and coordinate benefits unnecessarily I will do a dance of glee right there in my cubical.