Good Grief!
After all the pressure to get compliant and ready for the new ICD-10, it looks like it will be delayed for another year. Again.
According to a report issued by the AHIMA (American Health Information Management Association):
“On behalf of our more than 72,000 members who have prepared for ICD-10 in good faith, AHIMA will seek immediate clarification on a number of technical issues such as the exact length of the delay,” said AHIMA CEO Lynne Thomas Gordon, MBA, RHIA, CAE, FACHE, FAHIMA
Please note the number of capital letters behind Thomas Gordon’s name. This should give us all an idea of how convoluted this process is and will continue to be.
The same article, issued on March 31, 2014 states:
CMS (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid) has estimated that another one-year delay of ICD-10 would likely cost the industry an additional $1 billion to $6.6 billion on top of the costs already incurred from the previous one-year delay. This does not include the lost opportunity costs of failing to move to a more effective code set, AHIMA said.
Many coding education programs had switched to teaching only ICD-10 codes to students, hospitals and physician offices had begun moving into the final stages of costly and comprehensive transitions to the new code set—even the CMS and NCHS committee responsible for officially updating the current code set changed the group’s name to the ICD-10-CM/PCS Coordination and Maintenance Committee.
The delay directly impacts at least 25,000 students who have learned to code exclusively in ICD-10 in health information management (HIM) associate and baccalaureate educational programs, AHIMA said in a statement.
The United States remains one of the only developed countries that has not made the transition to ICD-10 or a clinical modification. ICD-10 proponents have called the new code set a more modern, robust, and precise coding system that is essential to fully realizing the benefits of recent investments in electronic health records and maximizing health information exchange. (AHIMA article)
ICD-10 is not going away. But for those of you who felt that you weren’t going to be ready by the deadline… looks like you have more time to get everyone trained and the systems worked out.
Which is nice!
Stay tuned for more info from your state associations, carriers, and CMS. We will do our best as well to keep you up to date.