The Coding Corner
Date Posted: Saturday, August 01, 2015Q. We are hearing that there is more specificity required in ICD-10. Can you explain how this will affect coding for fractures?
A. There is much more specificity required in ICD-10. The documentation for fractures will need to support:
- Open vs. closed
- Displaced vs. nondisplaced
- Name of bone and specific part of bone that is fractured
- Laterality – right or left
- Orientation of fractures (eg. transverse, oblique, spiral, comminuted and segmental for fractures of the shaft of the bone)
- Open fracture type using the Gustilo classification
- Growth plate fracture type using the Salter-Harris classification
- Sacral fracture type or zone
- Initial encounter, subsequent encounter or sequela (late effects)
- Traumatic fracture vs. pathologic fracture. The ICD-10 guidelines state that a fracture is considered pathological if a patient with known osteoporosis suffers a fracture from a minor fall or trauma that would not usually break a healthy bone.
- Types of healing: routine healing, delayed healing, nonunion, and malunion