ICD-10 Coding for Motion Sickness(H81.4, R10.84U, R11.2)
Learn about the ICD-10 coding for motion sickness, including T75.3, and documentation requirements for accurate medical records.
Complete code families applicable to Motion Sickness
Key Information
Essential facts and insights aboutMotion Sickness
Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions
Documentation & Coding Risks
Avoid these common issues when documenting Motion Sickness.
Vague documentation of symptoms
Impact
Clinical: May lead to misdiagnosis or inappropriate treatment., Regulatory: Non-compliance with documentation standards., Financial: Potential for claim denials or audits.
Mitigation
Use specific language linking symptoms to motion., Ensure documentation includes onset, duration, and resolution.
Using R11.2 alone without T75.3
Impact
Reimbursement: May result in denied claims due to lack of specificity., Compliance: Non-compliance with ICD-10 coding guidelines., Data Quality: Inaccurate data on motion sickness prevalence.
Mitigation
Always link nausea/vomiting to motion exposure.
Coding T78.- for medication-induced nausea during travel
Impact
Reimbursement: Incorrect DRG assignment may affect reimbursement., Compliance: Misclassification of the condition., Data Quality: Skewed data on adverse drug reactions.
Mitigation
Use T75.3 if nausea is motion-triggered, not drug-related.
Lack of external cause code
Impact
Failure to include Y92.81- can lead to audits.
Mitigation
Ensure all motion sickness cases include the appropriate external cause code.