Division of Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Texas Medical Branch, School of Health Professions, 301 University Blvd., Galveston, TX, 77555, USA.
Physical Therapy Department, University of Texas Medical Branch, School of Health Professions, 301 University Blvd., Galveston, TX, 77555, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2020 Jul 8;20(1):628. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-05484-z.
Ocular conditions are common following stroke and frequently occur in combination with pre-existing ophthalmologic disease. The Medicare International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10) coding system for identifying vision related health conditions provides a much higher level of detail for coding these complex scenarios than the previous ICD-9 system. While this new coding system has advantages for clinical care and billing, the degree to which providers and researchers are utilizing the expanded code structure is unknown. The purpose of this study was to describe the use of ICD-10 vision codes in a large cohort of stroke survivors.
Retrospective cohort design to study national 100% Medicare claims files from 2015 through 2017. Descriptive data analyses were conducted using all available ICD-10 vision codes for beneficiaries who had an acute care stay because of a new stroke. The outcome of interest was ≥1 ICD-10 visual code recorded in the claims chart.
The cohort (n = 269,314) was mostly female (57.1%) with ischemic stroke (87.8%). Approximately 15% were coded as having one or more ocular condition. Unspecified glaucoma was the most frequently used code among men (2.83%), those over 85+ (4.80%) and black beneficiaries (4.12%). Multiple vision codes were used in few patients (0.6%). Less than 3% of those in the oldest group (85+ years) had two or more vision codes in their claims.
Ocular comorbidity was present in a portion of this cohort of stroke survivors, however the vision codes used to describe impairments in this population were few and lacked specificity. Future studies should compare ophthalmic examination results with billing codes to characterize the type and frequency of ocular comorbidity. It important to understand how the use of ICD-10 vision codes impacts clinical decision making, recovery, and outcomes.
眼部疾病在中风后很常见,且常与先前存在的眼科疾病同时发生。用于识别与视力相关的健康状况的医疗保险国际疾病分类(ICD-10)编码系统为这些复杂情况的编码提供了比以前的 ICD-9 系统更高的详细程度。虽然新的编码系统在临床护理和计费方面具有优势,但提供者和研究人员利用扩展代码结构的程度尚不清楚。本研究的目的是描述在大量中风幸存者中使用 ICD-10 视力代码的情况。
回顾性队列设计,研究了 2015 年至 2017 年的全国 100%医疗保险索赔文件。对因新发中风而接受急性护理的受益人使用所有可用的 ICD-10 视力代码进行描述性数据分析。感兴趣的结果是索赔表中记录了≥1 个 ICD-10 视觉代码。
队列(n=269314)主要为女性(57.1%),患有缺血性中风(87.8%)。约 15%的人被编码为患有一种或多种眼部疾病。未特指的青光眼是男性(2.83%)、85 岁以上(4.80%)和黑人受益人的最常用代码(4.12%)。少数患者(0.6%)使用了多个视力代码。在最年长组(85 岁以上)中,不到 3%的人在其索赔中有两个或更多的视力代码。
在该队列的一部分中风幸存者中存在眼部合并症,但是用于描述该人群视力障碍的视力代码很少且缺乏特异性。未来的研究应将眼科检查结果与计费代码进行比较,以描述眼部合并症的类型和频率。了解 ICD-10 视力代码的使用如何影响临床决策、康复和结果非常重要。