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Querying for COVID-19 POA

Analysis  |  By Revenue Cycle Advisor  
   March 22, 2021

Coders should be mindful of the POA reporting guidelines found in appendix I of the 2021 ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting.

A version of this article was first published March 22, 2021, by HCPro's Revenue Cycle Advisor, a sibling publication to HealthLeaders.

Q: A patient was admitted to our facility with COVID-19-like symptoms, tested negative for COVID-19. Several days later, however, the patient was retested and found to be positive for COVID-19. Should we query the physician or assign a present on admission (POA) indicator of "no" or "unknown"?

A: Due to the clinical difficulties of COVID-19 testing (e.g., false negative results), a POA query to the physician is warranted in this case.

In addition, coders should be mindful of the POA reporting guidelines found in appendix I of the 2021 ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting.

These guidelines state, “There is no required timeframe as to when a provider ... must identify or document a condition to be present on admission. In some clinical situations, it may not be possible for a provider to make a definitive diagnosis ... for a period of time after admission.”

For more information, see "Paying close attention to COVID-19 POA indicators" in the March 2021 issue of HIM Briefings.

Revenue Cycle Advisor combines all of HCPro's Medicare regulatory and reimbursement resources into one handy and easy-to-access portal. News is not just repeated from other sources. It is analyzed by our Medicare experts so professionals can comprehend any new rule and regulatory updates thoroughly. Learn more.


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