ICD-10 B19 is a used to indicate a diagnosis of viral hepatitis, unspecified.
Key Diagnostic Point:
Viral hepatitis, unspecified.
Code Complexity Analysis
Complexity Rating: Medium
Medium Complexity
Complexity Factors
Standard complexity factors
Audit Risk Factors
Standard audit considerations
Specialty Focus
Coding Guidelines
Inclusion Criteria
Use B19 When
The ICD
10 code B19 is a non
billable code
This indicates that the code is not applicable to any procedure that is billed to the 'medical beneficiary's medical health insurance that is apart of HIPAA standard transactions
The ICD
10 CM B19 is a diagnosis code, not a procedure code, therefore it is not billable
Here are the characteristics regarding the coding guidelines of ICD
Related CPT codes for this diagnosis will be displayed here when available.
ICD-10 Impact
Diagnostic & Documentation Impact
Enhanced Specificity
ICD-10 Improvements
The International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) is a coding system used to classify and code all diagnoses, symptoms, and procedures recorded in conjunction with hospital care in the United States. Transitioning from ICD-9 to ICD-10 brought about several changes to billing and coding processes, including for the B19 diagnosis code (also known as ICD-10-CM B19) commonly used for unspecified viral hepatitis.
1. Specificity: ICD-10 has a greater level of specificity compared to its predecessor, ICD-9. For instance, code B19 is non-billable and therefore considered invalid, as it is too general. However, ICD-10 allows healthcare providers to code for specific type of unspecified viral hepatitis such as B19.9.
2. Reimbursement: Under ICD-10, reimbursement can be heavily influenced by the level of specificity used in coding. General codes like B19, which are considered non-billable, may result in non-payment or delayed payment, as insurers often require more specific diagnosis codes. Therefore, it's essential to use the right level of specificity, like B19.9, to ensure reimbursement.
ICD-9 vs ICD-10
The International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) is a coding system used to classify and code all diagnoses, symptoms, and procedures recorded in conjunction with hospital care in the United States. Transitioning from ICD-9 to ICD-10 brought about several changes to billing and coding processes, including for the B19 diagnosis code (also known as ICD-10-CM B19) commonly used for unspecified viral hepatitis. 1. Specificity: ICD-10 has a greater level of specificity compared to its predecessor, ICD-9. For instance, code B19 is non-billable and therefore considered invalid, as it is too general. However, ICD-10 allows healthcare providers to code for specific type of unspecified viral hepatitis such as B19.9. 2. Reimbursement: Under ICD-10, reimbursement can be heavily influenced by the level of specificity used in coding. General codes like B19, which are considered non-billable, may result in non-payment or delayed payment, as insurers often require more specific diagnosis codes. Therefore,...
Reimbursement & Billing Impact
billing and coding processes, including for the B19 diagnosis code (also known as ICD-10-CM B19) commonly used for unspecified viral hepatitis.
Resources
Clinical References
No clinical reference resources available for this code.
Coding & Billing References
No coding and billing reference resources available for this code.