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The 2014 CDI Pocket Guide helps you take clinical findings and dig deeper, and look for additional details-such as medications and other conditions-to develop the most accurate picture of the patient's condition. Authors Richard D. Pinson, MD, FACP, CCS and Cynthia L. Tang, RHIA, CCS, draw on more than fifty years' cumulative experience and provide the clinical coding authority to strengthen patient care quality and resource utilization, and improve compliance and reimbursement. The new 2014 edition includes critical new updates from the 2014 IPPS Final Rule, and additional ICD-10 documentation tips to ensure you are ready for the national Oct. 1, 2014 compliance deadline.
The 2014 CDI Pocket Guide helps you take clinical findings and dig deeper, and look for additional details-such as medications and other conditions-to develop the most accurate picture of the patient's condition. Authors Richard D. Pinson, MD, FACP, CCS and Cynthia L. Tang, RHIA, CCS, draw on more than fifty years' cumulative experience and provide the clinical coding authority to strengthen patient care quality and resource utilization, and improve compliance and reimbursement. The new 2014 edition includes critical new updates from the 2014 IPPS Final Rule, and additional ICD-10 documentation tips to ensure you are ready for the national Oct. 1, 2015 compliance deadline. Also new in this edition: New criteria for recognizing Acute Respiratory Failure Documentation strategies to address ICD-10 challenges New Key References with clinical indicators to support queries for HIV/AIDS, pericarditis, acute myocardial infarction APR-DRG overview and its impact on severity and mortality Strategies to effectively identify and capture diagnoses that impact APR-DRGs Severity levels for the key MCCs and CCs and a listing of other important diagnoses that impact APR-DRGs Updates to the Hospital Acquired Conditions (HAC) list with new section on Patient Safety Indicators (PSI) Tips to improve Pay for Performance and Value-Based Purchasing metrics What's inside: A portable, tabbed, and easy reference to keep DRGs and diagnoses at your finger tips The latest coding guidelines and relative weights so you don't report inaccurate codes Newly formatted and expanded DRG Tips section that includes DRGs with clinical and treatment indicators for alternate and optimal DRG assignment Clinical indicators to help identify documentation opportunities and formulate an appropriate query to the physician 2014 DRG table with relative weights, GMLOS, and transfer DRG indicator
The 2015 CDI Pocket Guide Richard D. Pinson, MD, CCS Cynthia L. Tang, RHIA, CCS "The"" 2015 CDI Pocket Guide" helps you take clinical findings and dig deeper, and look for additional details--such as medications and other conditions--to develop the most accurate picture of the patient's condition. Authors Richard D. Pinson, MD, FACP, CCS, and Cynthia L. Tang, RHIA, CCS, draw on more than fifty years' cumulative experience and provide the clinical coding authority to strengthen patient care quality and resource utilization, and improve compliance and reimbursement. The new 2015 edition of our popular CDI best-seller includes critical new updates from the 2015 IPPS Final Rule, and additional ICD-10 documentation tips to ensure you are ready for the national October 1, 2015 compliance deadline. New to this year is additional information on Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) and how CDI specialists can incorporate VBP initiatives into their health record reviews. What's new in this edition: Addition of pediatric clinical indicators and diagnostic criteria New Key References for Shock, Neoplasms, Pneumothorax, Functional Quadriplegia, Cystic Fibrosis, Asthma, Intellectual Disability, and more Standardized Key References format for each clinical topic: Definition, Diagnostic Criteria, Treatment, References, Challenges, and ICD-10 Content expansion of "MCC/CC" section to "Comorbid Conditions" that includes secondary diagnoses with a high impact focus for MS-DRG and APR-DRG, quality, and CMS Pay for Performance outcome metrics Strategies for integrating CMS Pay for Performance initiatives into your CDI program Expanded Reference citations of medical literature and other authoritative sources to support diagnostic definitions and criteria Exclusive web-based resource center with detailed supplemental information and updates for all "CDI Pocket Guide" customers Expanded and updated ICD-10 tips and strategies What's Inside A portable, tabbed, and easy reference to keep DRGs and diagnoses at your finger tips The latest coding guidelines and relative weights so you don't report inaccurate codes Newly formatted and expanded "DRG Tips" section that includes DRGs with clinical and treatment indicators for alternate and optimal DRG assignment Strategically placed "ICD-10 Tips" to start getting additional specificity now, in advance of the Oct. 1, 2015 compliance deadline Clinical indicators to help identify documentation opportunities and formulate an appropriate query to the physician 2015 DRG table with relative weights, GMLOS, and transfer DRG indicator Bulk Orders Earn special discounts when you buy multiple copies of The 2014 CDI Pocket Guide. Be sure every member of your team has this valuable guide. Call 800-650-6787 to learn more. Testimonials "My "CDI Pocket Guide" is an invaluable tool! I reference it daily in my reviews, writing queries and educating physicians regarding documentation opportunities. I would be lost without it!" --Norma B., Clinical Documentation Specialist, Bay Medical Center ""The CDI Pocket Guide" is a practical, portable reference that the CDS can carry in his/her pocket and easily reference while reviewing the record on the Patient Care unit versus having to carry cumbersome ICD Coding books to the units with "stickies" and notes throughout the coding books." --Cindy Z., Corporate HIM Director, Yale New Haven Hospital
Physician Documentation Improvement Pocket Card, Third Edition (Packs of 25) Cheryl Ericson, MS, RN, CCDS, CDIP, AHIMA-Approved ICD-10-CM/PCS Trainer Sold in packages of 25! Use the Physician Documentation Improvement Pocket Card, Third Edition, to help your physicians remember key documentation points. The six-panel card includes everything from documentation basics to severity of illness clinical indicators. Updated for 2014, this third edition simplifies tips to common documentation improvement opportunities. And it fits easily in the physician's pocket! Start your CDI physician education efforts with the accompanying online instruction manual and help physicians understand common documentation gaps. This product: Provides documentation basics for the short-term acute care inpatient setting Includes tips for discharge summary documentation Details documentation needed to establish a condition as a reportable diagnosis Presents key reminders for documentation to reflect patient acuity Offers advice for how to differentiate among acute, chronic, and resolved conditions Helps providers translate commonly vague documentation of a patient's chief complaint into a more precisely associated diagnosis Includes both printed pocket card and online PDF formats Folds for physicians to carry in their pockets and is laminated for durability and easy cleaning The latest edition of the Physician Documentation Improvement Pocket Card helps you improve patient acuity and severity by focusing on common areas of vague and nonspecific physician documentation. ACDIS Education Director and lead CDI Boot Camp instructor Cheryl Ericson brings her vast experience to bear in creating a simple to follow, easy to use tip sheet and accompanying user's guide to help improve your physicians' documentation. Online user manual will explain how to use the pocket cards and explain some CDI basics.
Pocket Guide to Bacterial Infections provides information pertinent to the behaviour of bacterial cells during their interactions with different cell types of multiple host systems. This book will present the role of various bacterial pathogens affecting the host system. The book is to be organized flexibly so that chapters and topics are arranged with continuity from the former chapters. Each chapter has been made as self-contained as possible to promote this flexibility. This book will discuss each of the virulence properties of the bacteria with reference to their interacting hosts in a larger perspective. Kwey selling features: Summarizes the role various bacterial pahtogens affect the host system Reviews recent advances for combating different types of bacterial infections that infect different body parts Designed as an effective teaching and research tool providing up to date information on bacterial infections Defines important terms Written in a readable and direct writing style
Learn all you need to know about gastrointestinal drugs and their clinical use with this one-stop, rapid reference pocket guide. Brought to you by many of the world's leading GI drug experts, Pocket Guide to Gastrointestinal Drugs provides comprehensive guidance to the pharmacological properties of drugs used to treat gastrointestinal conditions, including mechanisms of action, appropriate administration, and potential adverse effects associated with their use. Organized by class of drug and ranging from PPIs to immunosupressants, each chapter first examines the specific agents within that class and then their appropriate and judicious use across a range of specific GI disorders. Key features include: Introduction of drug class Basic pharmacology, including mechanism of action, bioavailability, metabolism, interactions, adverse effects, toxicity, and special considerations Dosing information for each GI condition and on- and off-label use Consistent use of both generic and trade names throughout Specific reference to drug use in pediatric patients and during pregnancy Perfect for quick consultation on the wards and in the office, Pocket Guide to Gastrointestinal Drugs is the ideal tool for all those managing patients with GI conditions, including gastroenterologists, GI trainees, emergency physicians, GI specialist nurses, primary care physicians and residents, intensivists and pharmacists.