Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research
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Alcohol. Clin. Exp. Res. · Nov 2018
Shifts in Alcohol-Related Diagnoses After the Introduction of International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification Coding in U.S. Hospitals: Implications for Epidemiologic Research.
In October 2015, the United States transitioned healthcare diagnosis codes from the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM), to the Tenth Revision (ICD-10-CM). Trend analyses of alcohol-related stays could show discontinuities solely from the change in classification systems. This study examined the impact of the ICD-10-CM coding system on estimates of hospital stays involving alcohol-related diagnoses. ⋯ Researchers conducting trend analyses of inpatient stays involving alcohol-related diagnoses should consider how ongoing modifications in the ICD-10-CM code system and coding guidelines might affect their work. An advisable approach for trend analyses across the ICD-10-CM transition is to aggregate diagnosis codes into broader, clinically meaningful groups-including a single global group that encompasses all alcohol-related stays-and then to select diagnostic groupings that minimize discontinuities between the 2 coding systems while providing useful information on this important indicator of population health.