News: AHIMA releases CDI Toolkit
CDI Strategies, April 29, 2010
Want to receive articles like this one in your inbox? Subscribe to CDI Strategies!
The American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) published its Clinical Documentation Improvement Toolkit earlier this month. The 41-page document offers sample job descriptions for CDI specialists and physician advisers to CDI, provides definitions for documentation clarifications and sample queries, and provides guidance for how to measure CDI success.
In terms of who the association considers qualified for the role, the toolkit suggests that HIM professionals, physicians, nurses, and others with clinical or coding background make good candidates. It says that depending on the needs of the organization CDI programs can employ all RNs, all coders, or a mixture of both.
The AHIMA CDI Toolkit highlights the skill-set for CDI as knowledge of payment systems and methodologies, ICD-9-CM coding concepts and guidelines, and healthcare regulatory compliance. But the Toolkit also points to the need for CDI professionals to exhibit strong communication skills, both written and verbal, to ensure program success.
The Toolkit includes six sample policies and procedures to help provide some structure to CDI programs and offers an example of how a CDI team may chose to organize its day-to-day processes.
The Toolkit is the result of more than a year’s worth of work by a collaboration of some two dozen professionals, including ACDIS advisory board members Gloryanne Bryant, RHIA, CCS, CCDS, Bill Haik, MD, FCC, Robin Holmes, MSN, RN, CCDS, and Gail Marini, MM, RN, CCS, CCDS.
Read an interview regarding the release with Bryant and ACDIS Director Brian Murphy in the CDI Strategies archives. ACDIS will examine implications of the AHIMA toolkit and its related releases in the July edition of the CDI Journal and during sessions at the upcoming ACDIS National Conference in Chicago in June.
The AHIMA Clinical Documentation Improvement Toolkit is available free, and can be downloaded at the AHIMA Web site www.ahima.org, under the HIM Resources tab, Practice Briefs/Toolkits, and scroll to the bottom of the page.
Want to receive articles like this one in your inbox? Subscribe to CDI Strategies!
Related Products
Most Popular
- Articles
-
- Q/A: Volume requirement for reporting hydration services
- Featured blog post: Nurses face felony charges after reporting physician to the Texas Medical Board
- Catch up on what's new with injections and infusions
- Identify potential Medicaid RAC target areas
- HIPAA Q&A: Level of encryption needed for email
- Topic: CMS, OESS post new security compliance review information, checklist
- Capturing all necessary codes for IUD insertion and removal can be challenging
- What does case-mix index mean to you?
- OB services: Coding inside and outside of the package
- QA:Coding multiple initial infusions
- E-mailed
-
- Q/A: Volume requirement for reporting hydration services
- Featured blog post: Nurses face felony charges after reporting physician to the Texas Medical Board
- HIPAA Q&A: Level of encryption needed for email
- Q&A: Follow CMS' coding guidelines when using modifier -25
- What does case-mix index mean to you?
- Catch up on what's new with injections and infusions
- CMS has reformulated payments for some bilateral procedures
- New conflicts of interest create new challenges
- Q/A. One injection code or two?
- ED-to-inpatient transfers are flawed with safety gaps
- Searched