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.

Also known as:
Travel SicknessAirsicknessSeasickness
Related ICD-10 Code Ranges

Complete code families applicable to Motion Sickness

Key Information

Essential facts and insights aboutMotion Sickness

Primary ICD-10-CM Codes
Differential Codes

Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions

VertigoH81.4

Use if a vestibular disorder is confirmed.

Generalized abdominal painR10.84

Use if GI symptoms dominate without a clear link to motion.

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.

Frequently Asked Questions