Government  Health IT
TwitterFacebookLinkedIn
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Cloud Computing
    • Election 2012
    • Electronic Health Record
    • ePrescribing
    • Health Information Exchange (HIE)
    • Meaningful Use
    • Medicaid
    • Medicare
    • Military Health
    • Mobile/ Wireless
    • NHIN
    • Policy & Legislation
    • Population Health
    • Privacy and Security
    • Quality and Safety
    • Telehealth
    • Workforce Management
  • Issues
    • Sept/Oct 2011
    • July/August 2011
    • May/June 2011
    • March/April 2011
    • Jan/Feb 2011
    • Nov/Dec 2010
  • Webinars
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • On Demand Webinars
  • White Papers
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Jobs
  • RSS
  • Slideshows
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletters
  • Advertise
  • LOGIN
  • REGISTER
  • SUBSCRIBE
Home » News » Policy & Legislation
Receive News
By Email

  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • RSS Icon
  

Tweet

If HHS delays ICD-10 long enough, could the U.S. adopt ICD-11 instead?

February 16, 2012 | Tom Sullivan, Editor

Suggested Content

  • HHS invites states to participate in medical home demos

Related Resources

  • Are You Truly ACA Compliant? Incorporating the Correct Public Records Data Into Your Workflow
  • Beyond the EHR: Seamlessly Connecting Nurses and Physicians Using an EHR-Extender (EHR-e)
  • Case Study: Blood Systems Expands Remote Access Connectivity to Prepare for Disaster
  • Proactive Security and Privacy Monitoring for Modern Healthcare Networks
  • Best Practices to Deploy ECM Technologies: Ensure Decisions are Made Based on all the Information, not a Portion of it

The case for leapfrogging ICD-10 and holding out for ICD-11 just got a lot more curious. And though it’s not here yet, when ICD-11 is ready, it will be something ICD-10 cannot: A 21st Century classification system.

Now that HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has thrown her department’s hat in the ring, saying late Wednesday that HHS intends to delay ICD-10, the most pertinent question is how long will HHS push back compliance?

“My opinion is that CMS won't be able to announce three months or six months of delay for ICD-10,” says Mike Arrigo, CEO of consultancy No World Borders (pictured at left). “They will need to announce a delay from October 1, 2013 to at least October 1, 2014 because of CMS fiscal planning calendars.”

Others in the industry are suggesting that even one year is not enough to lighten the burden on physicians, providers and payers enough to make the transition smoother.

“I have a gut feeling they’ll go for two years, who knows?” speculates Steve Sisko, an analyst and technology consultant focused on payers and ICD-10. “Maybe January 2015?”

No more mixed signals
There it is on the Department of Health and Human Services Web site, a crystal-clear headline atop a brief explanatory statement: HHS announces intent to delay ICD-10 compliance date.

“We have heard from many in the provider community who have concerns about the administrative burdens they face in the years ahead,” Sebelius said in the statement. “We are committing to work through the rulemaking process, with the provider community, to reexamine the pace at which HHS and the nation implement these important improvements to our healthcare system.”

Whereas acting CMS administrator Marilynn Tavenner was perhaps politically vague when speaking at an AMA meeting on Tuesday by saying that CMS would reexamine the timing of ICD-10 compliance, Sebelius’ statement was careful to erase any doubt about HSS’s plans.

“HHS will announce a new compliance date in forthcoming rulemaking,” the statement explains.

Neither Tavenner nor Sebelius clearly outlined “the rulemaking process” to which each referred. But any kind of rulemaking by the federal government tends to take a while, and there’s no reason to suggest that this instance will differ.

A formal process could take as long as a year, while the informal, conducted through the Federal Register, typically calls for a 180-day response period, after which the comments are taken into consideration to shape a new proposed rule. That, in turn, must be evaluated, eating up more clicks of the clock.

“The fact that [Tavenner] mentioned going through a ‘rule making process’ implies to us that this will take a long time,” Wendy Whittington, MD, CMO of Anthelio Healthcare Solutions told Government Health IT in an interview. “A short delay would be much more tolerable than a long one.”

If HHS has a tack for fast-tracking the rulemaking process for ICD-10, thus far it has not explained that. But if the agency intends only to change the compliance deadline then perhaps there is a way to abridge that cycle.

A time to question the value of ICD-10
Prior to HHS statement, the AMA praised and AHIMA panned Tavenner’s commitment to reexamine the timing.

In an increasingly heated industry-association Civil War, both groups have fired shots, with the AMA calling on Sebelius and House Speaker John Boehner to block ICD-10 entirely, and AHIMA urging the industry to continue apace toward the new code sets.

Any delay, according to Dan Rode, AHIMA vice president of advocacy and policy, would increase costs while diminishing the value of ICD-10 and other health IT projects, including, of course, meaningful use.

HHS acknowledged the need for ICD-10. “ICD-10 codes are important to many positive improvements in our healthcare system,” says Sebelius.

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • next ›
  • last »
Related Topics:
  • Online Only
  • Policy & Legislation
  • AHIMA
  • Anthelio Healthcare Solutions
  • As Blue and Co.
  • Blue and Co.
  • CMS
  • Revision Steering Group
  • Person Career
  • Quotation
  • Mayo Clinic
  • healthcare
  • bioinformatics
  • Chris Chute
  • Dan Rode
  • Deb Grider
  • Department of Health and Human Services
  • Human Genome
  • John Boehner
  • Kathleen Sebelius
  • Marilynn Tavenner
  • Mike Arrigo
  • Steve Sisko
  • U.S.
  • Wendy Whittington
  • World Health Organization

Reader Comments (2)Login to Post a Comment

marrigo says: ICD-11 vs ICD-10 - follow up comment
February 20, 2012 | 12:54PM GMT
Some things about ICD-11 – The base version from WHO is expected in May 2015. After that, the United States will probably need another two years for development of the US version. The earliest it would be available for study would be 2017, and we would need another 4 years to implement it – so that brings us out to 2021, way too far in the future. Second and most importantly, we do not favor penalizing the companies that have started work on time on ICD-10. The health care industry has spent hundreds of $millions already on ICD-10 education, assessments, etc. It would be best for health plans, hospitals, and physicians to use the extra time to implement ICD-10 correctly. There are consortiums that have sprung up to help with this effort. We’ll be discussing this more at HIMSS 12 this week in Las Vegas, NV. Discussion has been that ICD-10 is a steppingstone to ICD-11, so it is probably a good thing to do. Also, ICD-9 has about had it, so we can’t see keeping it around another 10 years. Note that ICD-10 procedure codes have nothing to do with the diagnosis codes or ICD-11, so that is a non- factor. The ICD-10 procedure codes for use in hospitals are a significant improvement. http://www.noworldborders.com/blog/2012/02/20/icd-10-postponement-opens-...
rkmoore says: ICD-11 needs to be in the 6020 x12 format
February 17, 2012 | 11:42AM GMT
If ICD-11 is a possibility we need to add placeholder coding in the 6020 x12 format.

Most Popular

Latest Headlines
Most Popular
  • Deloitte: Docs underutilize various health technologies
  • Commentary: How data sharing between AHLTA and VistA is possible
  • NYeC PHR design winners to shape public portal
  • First HIE launching in greater Philadelphia
  • Why modernizing state IT infrastructures is crucial for HIX
  • 10 health reform benefits at risk in the election
  • Would Romney kill meaningful use?
  • CMS circulates final 2014 MU clinical quality measures
  • HIE is critical public utility in Sandy disaster
  • HIMSS: The intangibles of HIT employee retention
more news

WEBINARS AND WHITE PAPERS

  • WHITE PAPERS
    Beyond the EHR: Seamlessly Connecting Nurses and Physicians Using an EHR-Extender (EHR-e)
  • WHITE PAPERS
    Shadow IT's Impact on the Federal Government
  • WHITE PAPERS
    The First Federal Private Cloud: Learn to Shape, Transform & Manage Applications
  • WHITE PAPERS
    Your Cloud in Healthcare - How to Use the Cloud to Achieve Greater Business Agility
  • WHITE PAPERS
    The VNA Strategy: Balancing Workflow and Enterprise Imaging Management
More Resources
Syndicate content

HIMSS JOBMINE

  • Director of Clinical Applications - MidMichigan Health - Midland, MI
  • Information Services Director - Central Peninsula Hospital - Soldotna, AK
  • Director, Marketing and Business Development - Vermont Information Technology Leaders, Inc. - Burlington, VT
  • CIO - Bend Memorial Clinic - Bend, Oregon
  • Director of Clinical Transformation - Agnesian Healthcare - Fond du Lac, WI
more jobs
receive news by email

Marketplace

  • Home
  • Resource Central
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Jobs
  • Mobile Site
  • Advertise
  • RSS
  • About
  • Site map
  • Privacy Policy
Follow Government Health IT on TwitterLike Government Health IT on FacebookJoin Government Health IT on LinkedInRSS Subscriptions
BlogEvents
JobsMobile SiteMobile App
 
Healthcare IT NewsHealthcare Finance NewsHealthcare Payer NewsHIEWatch ICD10Watch mHIMSS PhysBizTech
©2013 MedTech Media Government Health IT is a publication of MedTech Media
Advertise About Us Privacy Policy