1. Myth: The documentation required by ICD-10 will make the medical record a mess. A lot of emphasis is being placed on increased, burdensome documentation, but Mr. Ormondroyd said in most cases, only a few extra words per condition will be necessary.
2. Myth: All codes in ICD-10-CM will be “complex, seven-character codes.” Mr. Ormondroyd wrote the most common code length in ICD-10-CM is four characters, meaning many entries in ICD-10-CM “will actually be shorter than its ICD-9-CM counterpart.”
3. Myth: Unknown and unnecessary details of a patient’s condition are required knowledge in ICD-10. While ICD-10 will expand a hospital’s code base, every coder will not have to memorize every code. Mr. Ormondroyd said CMS officials compared ICD-10 to a phone book: “All the numbers are in there. Are you going to call all of the numbers? No. But the numbers you need are in there,” according to the article.
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