A final rule from HHS has officially confirmed Oct. 1, 2015 will be the compliance deadline for U.S. healthcare providers to begin using the ICD-10 coding system.
The ICD-10 transition was delayed in March, when language included in the Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014, or so-called "doc fix bill," stated HHS cannot require healthcare providers to switch to ICD-10 until at least Oct. 1, 2015, a year later than the previous deadline.
The final rule resolves the uncertainty created by the legislation, which did not give an explicit transition date.
What You Should Really Be Doing Now to Prepare for ICD-10 (Hint: Mostly, it Isn't Training)
8 Statistics on ICD-10 & Provider Concerns
NextGen, 3M Partner to Offer Industrywide ICD-10 Education
The ICD-10 transition was delayed in March, when language included in the Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014, or so-called "doc fix bill," stated HHS cannot require healthcare providers to switch to ICD-10 until at least Oct. 1, 2015, a year later than the previous deadline.
The final rule resolves the uncertainty created by the legislation, which did not give an explicit transition date.
More articles on ICD-10:
What You Should Really Be Doing Now to Prepare for ICD-10 (Hint: Mostly, it Isn't Training)
8 Statistics on ICD-10 & Provider Concerns
NextGen, 3M Partner to Offer Industrywide ICD-10 Education