As the burden of the ICD-10 transition wears on, CMS reminds providers of the new code set's importance to medicine.
Here are four reasons why ICD-10 matters.
1. It advances healthcare and eHealth initiatives. ICD-10, along with other federal programs, aims to provide greater interoperability, data sharing, quality measurements and clinical outcomes.
2. It captures medical advances.
3. It improves data for quality reporting. The more detailed code set naturally provides better data to measure outcomes and quality.
4. It improves public health research, reporting and surveillance.
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Here are four reasons why ICD-10 matters.
1. It advances healthcare and eHealth initiatives. ICD-10, along with other federal programs, aims to provide greater interoperability, data sharing, quality measurements and clinical outcomes.
2. It captures medical advances.
3. It improves data for quality reporting. The more detailed code set naturally provides better data to measure outcomes and quality.
4. It improves public health research, reporting and surveillance.
More Articles on Coding, Billing and Collections:
Is Your A/R Costing You More Than You Realize?
Healthcare Providers Not Incentivized to Provide Superior Care
Healthcare Billing & Management Association Works to Make Billing Processes Less Burdensome