Description
Facility coding (hospital coding) is one of the best-paying sectors of the coding profession. If you're already performing some aspect of facility coding, the Advanced Hospital Coding (AHC) Program will fill in the gaps, making you a more marketable employee. These skills are essential to your successful completion of the American Health Information Management Association's (AHIMA) mastery-level credentialing exam, the Certified Coding Specialist (CCS).
If you're currently working in a physician’s office or billing service, this program will give you the edge you need to advance in the workplace. Most hospitals will only hire coders with previous exposure to facility coding or who are already certified. Training on-the-job is a luxury most hospitals are unable to offer. Coders of all levels must undergo continuing education to stay current with the constantly changing regulations.
The AHC program covers advanced, hospital-specific coding and billing procedures and is designed to help students meet the challenge of today's changing standards. This program will utilize your existing knowledge of medical terminology and healthcare sciences. Your coding skills will be heightened and focused, preparing you for employment testing and successful completion of the CCS exam.
Upon registering, you are given an initial six months to complete the program. Should you need more time, you may request a six-month extension at no additional charge.
Contact
Gatlin Education at 877.221.5151
Objectives
When you've successfully completed this program, you'll:
- Understand how health information travels within departments of a facility
- Be able to define the roles and responsibilities of a coder in both in- and out-patient facilities
- Know how to interpret health-record documentation using your knowledge of anatomy, physiology, clinical disease processes, and medical terminology
- Accurately assign codes for diagnoses, conditions, problems, or other reasons for patient encounters
- Select codes according to Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Sets (UHDDS) definitions and official coding guidelines
- Evaluate the effect of code selection on Diagnosis Related Group (DRG) assignment, and verify DRG assignment based on Prospective Payment System (PPS) definitions
- Determine proper use of Modifiers, CPT vs. HCPCS Level II codes, and Medical Necessity (linking diagnosis to procedure or service)
- Understand reimbursement methodologies and documentation rules and regulations
- Identify the Charge Master and its components
- Understand the CPT guidelines, with special emphasis on Evaluation and Management (E & M) and surgery coding
This program will help you become competent in these hospital-based coding areas:
Data Identification
- Read and interpret health-record documentation to identify diagnoses and procedures
- Apply your knowledge of anatomy and physiology, clinical disease processes, pharmacology, and diagnostic and procedural terminology to assign accurate codes
- Apply knowledge of disease processes and surgical procedures to assign non-indexed medical terms to the appropriate class
Coding Guidelines
- Use current approved coding guidelines to assign and sequence the correct diagnosis and procedure codes for hospital inpatient services
- Apply knowledge of CPT format, guidelines, and notes to locate the correct codes or correctly use an unlisted procedure code for a patient encounter, and sequence the codes correctly
Regulatory Guidelines
- Apply Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set (UHDDS) definitions to select accurate codes
- Determine the appropriate principal diagnosis for patients who have more than one ailment
- Use the Prospective Payment System to confirm a DRG assignment
- Prevent fraud by maintaining approved coding principles and guidelines, including the National Correct Coding Initiative (CCI)
- Use the Ambulatory Surgery Center (ASC) Payment Groups to confirm ASC assignment and ensure appropriate reimbursement
- Use the HCFA Common Procedural Coding System (HCPCS) to appropriately assign HCPCS codes for outpatient Medicare reimbursement
Coding
- Understand which diagnoses, conditions, and procedures to exclude from coding
- Apply your knowledge of ICD-9-CM instructional notations and conventions to locate, assign, and correctly sequence codes
- Facilitate data retrieval by recognizing when more than one code is required to adequately classify a given condition
Data Quality
- Clarify conflicting, ambiguous, or nonspecific information appearing in a health record by consulting the appropriate physician
- Participate in quality assessment to ensure continuous improvement in ICD-9-CM and CPT coding and collection of accurate health data
- Demonstrate ability to recognize potential coding-quality issues from an array of data
- Apply policies and procedures on health-record documentation and coding that are consistent with official coding guidelines
- Contribute to the development of facility-specific coding policies and procedures
Contact
Gatlin Education at 877.221.5151
Prerequisites
The Advanced Hospital Coding program is not an entry-level program. This program is designed specifically for students with previous coding experience or education, and for students who have completed the ed2go Administrative Medical Specialist program.
Advanced Hospital Coding students should have:
- High school diploma/GED
- Minimum two years of experience with medical terminology, anatomy, physiology, pathology
- ICD-9-CM coding experience
- CPT-4 coding experience
This program is for you if you're seeking preparation for national certification, or if you want to enhance your coding skills and become more marketable in the workplace.
Contact
Gatlin Education at 877.221.5151
Requirements
This program is compatible with the Windows XP and later operating systems and IE 7 and later browsers. It can be taken on either a Mac or a PC; however, most medical offices currently use PCs.
Adobe Flash Player and Adobe Acrobat Reader are required for this program.
Click here to download the Acrobat Reader.
Click here to download the Flash Player.
The following textbooks and CD will be provided by ed2go:
- Understanding Hospital Coding and Billing: A Worktext
- Professional Review Guide for the CCS Certification Examination
Student must provide:
- Current-year ICD-9-CM, Volumes 1, ,2 and 3 (any publisher)
- Current-year Current Procedural Terminology (CPT)
- Optional: current-year HealthCare Procedural Coding System (HCPCS)
NOTE: Send questions regarding your textbooks to the Support Team at ed2go at gatlin.support@cengage.com.
Contact
Gatlin Education at 877.221.5151
Instructor Bio
Ms. Dalgleish has worked in medical office administration, including billing and coding, for over 30 years. She holds a bachelor's degree in Business Information Systems and a master's degree in Leadership. She is an AHIMA Approved ICD-10-CM/PCS Trainer and is a member of the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) and the American Association of Healthcare Administrative Management (AAHAM). She owns her own consulting firm, AnnGrant Education Services, Inc. She is currently completing a textbook on the new ICD-10 coding system and is completing a bachelor’s degree in Health Information Management with a Registered Health Information Administrator (RHIA) certification.
Bunny Reeves is the senior ambulatory surgery coder at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, NY. She ensures that all charges are captured using appropriate CPT, ICD-9 codes, and modifiers.
Bunny has trained and supervised entry-level coders at St. Vincent Medical Center in Staten Island and currently trains student coders at Maimonides Medical Center. She has many years of experience in inpatient and professional coding.
In 2007, Ms. Reeves became a Certified Coding Specialist (CCS) through the nationally known organization, American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA).
Bunny is married with two children.
Contact
Gatlin Education at 877.221.5151