ICD-10 Coding for Nausea(O21.9, R11.0, R11.0B)
Explore ICD-10 coding for nausea, including R11.0 and R11.2 codes, documentation requirements, and common pitfalls.
Complete code families applicable to Nausea
Compare key differences between these codes to ensure accurate selection
| Code | Description | When to Use | Key Documentation |
|---|---|---|---|
| R11.0 | Nausea | Use when nausea is the primary symptom and no vomiting is present. |
|
| R11.2 | Nausea with vomiting, unspecified | Use when both nausea and vomiting are present and no specific cause is identified. |
|
Clinical Decision Support
Always review the patient's clinical documentation thoroughly. When in doubt, choose the more specific code and ensure documentation supports it.
Key Information
Essential facts and insights aboutNausea
Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions
Documentation & Coding Risks
Avoid these common issues when documenting Nausea.
Failure to document vomiting when present
Impact
Clinical: Inaccurate symptom representation, Regulatory: Non-compliance with coding standards, Financial: Potential claim denials
Mitigation
Always assess and document presence of vomiting, Review documentation for completeness
Using R11.0 when vomiting is present
Impact
Reimbursement: Incorrect coding may lead to claim denials., Compliance: Non-compliance with ICD-10 guidelines., Data Quality: Inaccurate clinical data representation.
Mitigation
Use R11.2 if both nausea and vomiting are documented.
Symptom coding accuracy
Impact
Inaccurate coding of nausea and vomiting can lead to audit findings.
Mitigation
Ensure thorough documentation and correct code selection.