ICD-10 Coding for Nausea and Vomiting in Pregnancy(O21.0, O21.0B, O21.0M)

Explore ICD-10 coding for nausea and vomiting in pregnancy, including hyperemesis gravidarum. Learn about documentation requirements and coding pitfalls.

Also known as:
Morning SicknessHyperemesis Gravidarum
Related ICD-10 Code Ranges

Complete code families applicable to Nausea and Vomiting in Pregnancy

Code Comparison: When to Use Each Code

Compare key differences between these codes to ensure accurate selection

CodeDescription
O21.0Mild hyperemesis gravidarum
O21.1Hyperemesis gravidarum with metabolic disturbance
O21.9Unspecified vomiting of pregnancy

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 and Vomiting in Pregnancy

Differential Codes

Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions

Nausea and vomitingR11

Documentation & Coding Risks

Avoid these common issues when documenting Nausea and Vomiting in Pregnancy.

Failure to document metabolic disturbances

Impact

Clinical: Inaccurate clinical picture, Regulatory: Non-compliance with coding standards, Financial: Potential claim denials

Mitigation

Include lab results in documentation, Use structured templates

Using R11 for pregnancy-related vomiting

Impact

Reimbursement: Incorrect DRG assignment and potential claim denials., Compliance: Non-compliance with ICD-10 guidelines., Data Quality: Inaccurate clinical data representation.

Mitigation

Always verify the vomiting is related to pregnancy and use O21 codes.

Metabolic disturbance documentation

Impact

Lack of documentation for metabolic disturbances in hyperemesis gravidarum cases.

Mitigation

Use structured templates and checklists to ensure all necessary details are documented.

Frequently Asked Questions