Friday 26 June 2015

AHIMA starts campaign against ICD-10 ‘grace period’

The American Health Information Management Association is not a fan of a bill that would create a two-year grace period for ICD-10, and is asking its members to contact lawmakers about the legislation.

On its website, AHIMA has a letter template for members to use when contacting legislators. It says that the grace period could lead to waste, fraud and abuse and calls the bill “unnecessary.”

The bill was proposed by Rep. Gary Palmer (R-Ala.). During the grace period, physicians and other providers would not be “penalized for errors, mistakes and malfunctions relating to the transition,” FierceHealthIT previously reported.

“H.R. 2652 is a well-intentioned yet misguided effort to improve the claims process. The unintended consequences of this bill have the potential to lead to waste, fraud and abuse in medical billing and claims systems,” the AHIMA letter concludes.Letter

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