CDI Queries Work Best if the Recipient is Kept in Mind

CDI Queries Work Best if the Recipient is Kept in Mind

I had an epiphany the other day while discussing compliant query composition with a very knowledgeable clinical documentation integrity specialist (CDIS). It will be easiest to explain if I share the original query first:

The following clinical indicators were noted in this patient’s medical record:

A 70-year-old female was admitted with sepsis, pyelonephritis, urinary tract infection, and documented “worsening altered mental status.” There was an infectious disease consult. The urine culture grew Klebsiella. The patient was treated with IV antibiotics. 

Please clarify the patient’s altered mental status.

Based on these clinical indicators and your professional judgment, please document in the medical record whether you believe any of the following conditions are present:

  • Acute metabolic encephalopathy
  • Septic encephalopathy
  • Confusion only
  • AMS with no further specificity
  • Delirium
  • Other (specify)
  • Unable to determine

When a CDIS composes a query, they should be providing the provider with the clinical indicators they need to make a thoughtful, informed decision. The CDIS can pick and choose which clinical indicators to offer, but they should give both clinical indicators that support the condition they might be hoping to get in response AND clinical indicators that might not be consistent. The intent is to get the right answer, meaning the condition that is clinically valid and significant. The fact that a blood culture grew out streptococcus might be very pertinent in a clinical validation query regarding “probable gram-negative pneumonia.”

This was a made-up scenario, but other clinical indicators that might have been relevant could have been the results of blood cultures, information from a neurology consult, and whether the final mental status returned to baseline. And what did the discharge summary say?

Next, ensure that the question being asked is the question you want answered. In this case, the CDIS wants to know if the “altered mental status” could be categorized as some comorbid condition (not used in this context here as a CC or MCC), as opposed to a sign/symptom.

(As an aside, a symptom is a manifestation of a condition subjectively reported by the patient, whereas a sign is a manifestation which the provider objectively perceives, e.g., “felt feverish” versus T 39° Celsius)

The questions asked were: “Please clarify patient’s altered mental status” and do you “believe any of the following conditions were present?” The provider may think to himself/herself: saying “altered mental status” is pretty clear. The reader may disagree. Altered mental status could mean lots of things, including lethargy, confusion, or difficulty understanding or expressing oneself.

An alternate way to pose the query could have been, “Based on your clinical judgment, is there a more specific diagnosis that clarifies the patient’s altered mental status?”

We then honed in on the offered choices. My colleague felt we could eliminate “septic encephalopathy,” since it gets coded as metabolic encephalopathy anyway. This was emblematic of one of the key points of this article. Doctors don’t really do their documentation for coding. They do it for clinical communication. In fact, they probably don’t even know (or would particularly care) that “septic encephalopathy” is compliantly coded as “metabolic encephalopathy.”

But I wouldn’t remove that choice, because there may be providers who do use that terminology, and would feel it clarified the altered mental status. It also might serve as support for acute sepsis-related organ dysfunction (establishing sepsis). So, I would leave two choices that get coded the same way. I want the verbiage to feel authentic, in their voice.

I would also remove the “acute” from “acute metabolic encephalopathy.” I don’t want to leave words in choices that might make a clinician hesitate or scratch their head. What if they felt it had developed over two or three days and they really thought it was “subacute.” Would offering a choice with “acute” in it stymie them?

If the provider had described the altered mental status as “confusion” somewhere, then “confusion only” would be acceptable (even if it is undesirable!). If they had not, I would not potentially put those words in the provider’s mouth.

I also wouldn’t use “AMS” in a choice because I can’t compliantly index that to R41.82, Altered mental status, unspecified. I wouldn’t use an initialism here; I would type out “altered mental status.”

Another aside (from the CDC):

  • Abbreviation: truncated word; e.g., “min” for minutes
  • Acronym: made up of parts of phrases it stands for and pronounced as a word; e.g., SIRS for Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome
  • Initialism: Similar to acronym, but pronounced by enunciating each letter; e.g., SOB for shortness of breath

What about delirium? Should we introduce a new condition that wasn’t mentioned in the record? It depends. Is it consistent with the clinical indicators? If the nurses or different providers mentioned waxing and waning attention or a fluctuating course, I would present that in my clinical indicators and then offer that a selection of “delirium” would not be inappropriate.

Lastly, I HATE “unable to determine” as a choice in multiple-choice queries. If you give an “other” or free-text option, you don’t need to use “unable to determine.” It is appropriate and “required” in POA and yes/no queries, per the Compliant Query Practice Brief. I don’t like setting myself up for the provider choosing an option that is uncodable, sets up more questions, or is not clarifying.

My advice is to make sure that every query is for a purpose (to clarify the record and make it as accurate and specific as possible) and ensure that it is understandable by the clinician. It doesn’t help the CDIS’s metrics and productivity to generate a query if it just confounds the provider and doesn’t result in a useful response.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Erica Remer, MD, FACEP, CCDS, ACPA-C

Erica Remer, MD, FACEP, CCDS, ACPA-C has a unique perspective as a practicing emergency physician for 25 years, with extensive coding, CDI, and ICD-10 expertise. As physician advisor for University Hospitals Health System in Cleveland, Ohio for four years, she trained 2,700 providers in ICD-10, closed hundreds of queries, fought numerous DRG clinical determination and medical necessity denials, and educated CDI specialists and healthcare providers with engaging, case-based presentations. She transitioned to independent consulting in July 2016. Dr. Remer is a member of the ICD10monitor editorial board and is the co-host on the popular Talk Ten Tuesdays weekly, live Internet radio broadcasts.

Related Stories

Autism Diagnosis and ICD-10-CM

Autism Diagnosis and ICD-10-CM

A recent report from US News was published regarding an October article in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) about the increase in

Read More

Leave a Reply

Please log in to your account to comment on this article.

Featured Webcasts

Enhancing Outcomes with CDI-Coding-Quality Collaboration in Acute Care Hospitals

Enhancing Outcomes with CDI-Coding-Quality Collaboration in Acute Care Hospitals

Join Angela Comfort, DBA, MBA, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCS-P, as she presents effective strategies to strengthen collaboration between CDI, coding, and quality departments in acute care hospitals. Angela will also share guidance on implementing cross-departmental meetings, using shared KPIs, and engaging leadership to foster a culture of collaboration. Attendees will gain actionable tools to optimize documentation accuracy, elevate quality metrics, and drive a unified approach to healthcare goals, ultimately enhancing both patient outcomes and organizational performance.

November 21, 2024
Comprehensive Inpatient Clinical Documentation Integrity: From Foundations to Advanced Strategies

Comprehensive Outpatient Clinical Documentation Integrity: From Foundations to Advanced Strategies

Optimize your outpatient clinical documentation and gain comprehensive knowledge from foundational practices to advanced technologies, ensuring improved patient care and organizational and financial success. This webcast bundle provides a holistic approach to outpatient CDI, empowering you to implement best practices from the ground up and leverage advanced strategies for superior results. You will gain actionable insights to improve documentation quality, patient care, compliance, and financial outcomes.

September 5, 2024
Advanced Outpatient Clinical Documentation Integrity: Mastering Complex Narratives and Compliance

Advanced Outpatient Clinical Documentation Integrity: Mastering Complex Narratives and Compliance

Enhancing outpatient clinical documentation is crucial for maintaining accuracy, compliance, and proper reimbursement in today’s complex healthcare environment. This webcast, presented by industry expert Angela Comfort, DBA, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCS-P, will provide you with actionable strategies to tackle complex challenges in outpatient documentation. You’ll learn how to craft detailed clinical narratives, utilize advanced EHR features, and implement accurate risk adjustment and HCC coding. The session also covers essential regulatory updates to keep your documentation practices compliant. Join us to gain the tools you need to improve documentation quality, support better patient care, and ensure financial integrity.

September 12, 2024

Trending News

Featured Webcasts

Patient Notifications and Rights: What You Need to Know

Patient Notifications and Rights: What You Need to Know

Dr. Ronald Hirsch provides critical details on the new Medicare Appeal Process for Status Changes for patients whose status changes during their hospital stay. He also delves into other scenarios of hospital patients receiving custodial care or medically unnecessary services where patient notifications may be needed along with the processes necessary to ensure compliance with state and federal guidance.

December 5, 2024
Navigating the No Surprises Act & Price Transparency: Essential Insights for Compliance

Navigating the No Surprises Act & Price Transparency: Essential Insights for Compliance

Healthcare organizations face complex regulatory requirements under the No Surprises Act and Price Transparency rules. These policies mandate extensive fee disclosures across settings, and confusion is widespread—many hospitals remain unaware they must post every contracted rate. Non-compliance could lead to costly penalties, financial loss, and legal risks.  Join David M. Glaser Esq. as he shows you how to navigate these regulations effectively.

November 19, 2024
Post Operative Pain Blocks: Guidelines, Documentation, and Billing to Protect Your Facility

Post Operative Pain Blocks: Guidelines, Documentation, and Billing to Protect Your Facility

Protect your facility from unwanted audits! Join Becky Jacobsen, BSN, RN, MBS, CCS-P, CPC, CPEDC, CBCS, CEMC, and take a deep dive into both the CMS and AMA guidelines for reporting post operative pain blocks. You’ll learn how to determine if the nerve block is separately codable with real life examples for better understanding. Becky will also cover how to evaluate whether documentation supports medical necessity, offer recommendations for stronger documentation practices, and provide guidance on educating providers about documentation requirements. She’ll include a discussion of appropriate modifier and diagnosis coding assignment so that you can be confident that your billing of post operative pain blocks is fully supported and compliant.

October 24, 2024
The OIG Update: Targets and Tools to Stay in Compliance

The OIG Update: Targets and Tools to Stay in Compliance

During this RACmonitor webcast Dr. Ronald Hirsch spotlights the areas of the OIG’s Work Plan and the findings of their most recent audits that impact utilization review, case management, and audit staff. He also provides his common-sense interpretation of the prevailing regulations related to those target issues. You’ll walk away better equipped with strategies to put in place immediately to reduce your risk of paybacks, increased scrutiny, and criminal penalties.

September 19, 2024

Trending News

Prepare for the 2025 CMS IPPS Final Rule with ICD10monitor’s IPPSPalooza! Click HERE to learn more

Get 15% OFF on all educational webcasts at ICD10monitor with code JULYFOURTH24 until July 4, 2024—start learning today!