B. General Coding Guidelines: 1. Locating A Code in The ICD-10-CM
B. General Coding Guidelines: 1. Locating A Code in The ICD-10-CM
It is essential to use both the Alphabetic Index and Tabular List when
locating and assigning a code. The Alphabetic Index does not always
provide the full code. Selection of the full code, including laterality and any
applicable 7th character can only be done in the Tabular List. A dash (-) at
the end of an Alphabetic Index entry indicates that additional characters are
required. Even if a dash is not included at the Alphabetic Index entry, it is
necessary to refer to the Tabular List to verify that no 7th character is
required.
For example, for bacterial infections that are not included in chapter 1, a
secondary code from category B95, Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, and
Enterococcus, as the cause of diseases classified elsewhere, or B96, Other
bacterial agents as the cause of diseases classified elsewhere, may be required
to identify the bacterial organism causing the infection. A “use additional
code” note will normally be found at the infectious disease code, indicating a
need for the organism code to be added as a secondary code.
“Code first” notes are also under certain codes that are not specifically
manifestation codes but may be due to an underlying cause. When there is a
“code first” note and an underlying condition is present, the underlying
condition should be sequenced first.
“Code, if applicable, any causal condition first”, notes indicate that this code
may be assigned as a principal diagnosis when the causal condition is
unknown or not applicable. If a causal condition is known, then the code for
that condition should be sequenced as the principal or first-listed diagnosis.
Multiple codes may be needed for late effects, complication codes and
obstetric codes to more fully describe a condition. See the specific guidelines
for these conditions for further instruction.
Assign only the combination code when that code fully identifies the
diagnostic conditions involved or when the Alphabetic Index so directs.
Multiple coding should not be used when the classification provides a
combination code that clearly identifies all of the elements documented in the
diagnosis. When the combination code lacks necessary specificity in
describing the manifestation or complication, an additional code should be
used as a secondary code.
An exception to the above guidelines are those instances where the code for
late effect is followed by a manifestation code identified in the Tabular List
and title, or the late effect code has been expanded (at the fourth, fifth or sixth
character levels) to include the manifestation(s). The code for the acute phase
of an illness or injury that led to the late effect is never used with a code for
the late effect.
13. Laterality
For bilateral sites, the final character of the codes in the ICD-10-CM indicates
laterality. An unspecified side code is also provided should the side not be
identified in the medical record. If no bilateral code is provided and the
condition is bilateral, assign separate codes for both the left and right side.
The BMI codes should only be reported as secondary diagnoses. As with all
other secondary diagnosis codes, the BMI codes should only be assigned
when they meet the definition of a reportable additional diagnosis (see Section
III, Reporting Additional Diagnoses).