ICD-10 Coding for Substance-Induced Mood Disorder(F10.14, F10.14A, F10.14B)

Learn about ICD-10 coding for substance-induced mood disorders, including documentation requirements and common pitfalls.

Also known as:
SIMDDrug-Induced Mood Disorder
Related ICD-10 Code Ranges

Complete code families applicable to Substance-Induced Mood Disorder

Code Comparison: When to Use Each Code

Compare key differences between these codes to ensure accurate selection

CodeDescription
F10.14Alcohol-induced mood disorder
F15.24Stimulant-induced mood disorder with onset during withdrawal

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 aboutSubstance-Induced Mood Disorder

Differential Codes

Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions

Major depressive disorder, single episode, unspecifiedF32.9

Documentation & Coding Risks

Avoid these common issues when documenting Substance-Induced Mood Disorder.

Failing to document the specific substance causing mood disorder

Impact

Clinical: Misdiagnosis of mood disorder type., Regulatory: Non-compliance with coding standards., Financial: Potential claim denials due to incorrect coding.

Mitigation

Always specify the substance in documentation.

Using primary mood disorder codes for substance-induced conditions

Impact

Reimbursement: Incorrect DRG assignment leading to reimbursement issues., Compliance: Non-compliance with ICD-10 coding guidelines., Data Quality: Inaccurate clinical data affecting patient care.

Mitigation

Ensure documentation links mood symptoms to substance use or withdrawal.

Substance specificity in documentation

Impact

Lack of specific substance documentation can lead to audit flags.

Mitigation

Ensure all documentation specifies the substance and its temporal link to mood symptoms.

Frequently Asked Questions