ICD-10-CM Chapters 18–21 Coding Guidelines | Signs & Symptoms, Injuries, External, and Z Codes
VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT
Hello, hello, hello. Welcome to week
eight, everyone. I'm Mrs. J, your
curriculum developer here at AMCI. I'm
one of them. And I'm proud. I'm so proud
of you. I'm proud of the forensic coders
you are
becoming. You know what? Or you already
were. You no longer just you're just no
longer learning about diseases. You're
thinking critically about applying those
guidelines and coding with integrity.
That means you're following the
guidelines. Okay, coders. Last week you
mastered well some of you've mastered
and some of you are more proficient and
I love it. Chapters 15 through 17 that's
pregnancy perinatal and congenital
anomalies.
Now, you know these some of these,
especially chapter 15, demanded that you
pay particular attention to sequencing
guidelines. That chapter 15 really had
some aha moments coming through. I saw
you. I did. Also, this week we're going
to be stepping into chapters 18, 19, 20,
and 21. This is signs and symptoms,
injuries, fractures, external causes,
and health status. And you know, the
injury section, we're going to talk
about um fractures, burns, and
poisonings. So, just to let you know,
there are like four subsections of
chapter 14 that we're going to focus on.
Now, before I go any further, I just
want to send a huge shout out to our
instructors and intern team who continue
to model excellence. You know what? To
me, they are among the best, if not the
best in the industry. And coders, you
are a part of a community that believes
in lifting each other
higher. Now with saying
that I want to talk to
you. All right. So I feel I need to say
this and I need to speak directly to
you. you YouTube
students, every question that you see in
this course was created just for
you. These questions are brand new,
generated using
AI and the instructional team reviews
these
questions. So that means there may be
some
mistakes. Every scenario will not have
the best or the most accurate code
because sometimes it takes four
passes for us to to get all of the kinks
out. It does. I don't think very many
programs have that ability to give it
four passes and to
offer original
scenarios never seen before just for
you. And this is a good thing because
that means
that
no, we aren't formatting these questions
so you can get them right. It means that
you're getting them right because you
are doing the work. Now, if you are are
attending a course like the AMCI,
um we have our main
course. Most of the questions in
our paid course don't have errors. And
the reason is is because it's gone
through more than four passes, maybe 10
passes. So, it's rare to see it and if
you do see it, we fix it immediately.
Also, we're fixing your questions and
the errors if any immediately. So, when
you bring it to our attention, we fix
it. And I just want to let you know some
of you are expressing some concern like,
"Wow, this is wrong. That's wrong." I
want to let you know that is very very
discouraging to other to your peers. You
shouldn't do
that. And why why would you do
that? Don't do that. Don't discourage
others by negativity. And you do not see
AMCI students, team, instructors,
interns, nobody. We don't do that here.
Okay? So, we only encourage because that
is what you need to succeed. We are not
here donating our
time to be undermined by negativity.
So please, if you feel you have
something to get off your chest, contact
success and we will listen. But do not
discourage your peers because your peers
are telling
me. So your peers have told me that
there are some of you that are doing
that. Please stop. All right. So that's
all I want to say.
Now you got questions. We got answers.
And I'm also going to let you marinate
on
that. All right. How to join Discord?
This is the most common question. I
think there's something going on. It is
not simple. You do have to click on any
any lecture or video that we have. Click
join. After you click join, you're going
to have to pay a premium.
Then you have to click the
Discord link. A Discord link should pop
up. All
right. After that link pops up, you'll
need to link your YouTube channel.
You're going to pop into the Discord.
Now, you'll need to link your YouTube
channel. And this is how you do it.
You're in Discord. And on the right,
this is what you see. But down below in
the right corner right here, you'll see
a cog wheel. Click on
it. Then you're going to see this menu.
Click on
connections. Then you're going to see
all of the platforms that you can
connect to. And you're not going to see
YouTube right away because it's at the
end. So click the continue button until
you come to YouTube. Then follow the
prompts. Now make sure you use the same
email that you use on or with your
YouTube channel. Okay? Make sure your
Discord and your YouTube emails are the
same.
CPT is copyright of 2025 AMA. All rights
are
reserved. Keyword concept FTR Chun AMCI
FAB 7 AMCI ICD10CM flip tap and MCG are
registered trademarks of AMCI.
CPC, CRC, COC, CPMA, CPB, CPP, M, CPCO
are owned by
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are owned by AHEA and AMCI does not own
the rights to these
credentials. Goals of the presentation
for week eight. Number one, we're going
to review chapter 18, signs and
symptoms. Number two, chapter 19,
injuries. Number three, chapter 20,
external causes. And number four,
chapter 21, health status guidelines.
All for ICD10 CM section one.
Don't forget to follow along in your MCG
manual. Go ahead and flip to chapter
18. I think this is the best way to
follow along. The guidelines are laid
out a little nicer because you have the
sequencing order. However, if you don't
have the MCG manual, go ahead and use
the official ICD10 CM guidelines
published by CMS. The link is in the
chat. It's also outlined in order.
However, the sequencing order is not
there, but this is a good time to write
it down. All right, let's go ahead and
let's get started on chapter 18, signs
and symptoms.
All right, coders. Welcome to chapter 18
of ICD10 CM. We dive into coding signs
and symptoms and abnormal findings that
do not have a confirmed diagnosis. You
all have studied this, right? The signs
and symptom guidelines are actually the
general coding guidelines, right? These
signs and symptom guidelines are also
found in section four which we've
reviewed in week one of this course.
Right? So again we know what this is.
These are things like fever, chest pain,
nausea, abnormal blood test. So these
are signs and symptoms that do not have
a confirmed diagnosis. So, let's go
ahead and talk about some key FTRs that
you should know or be aware of when
coding for chapter
18. Number one,
coders, did you know that a
sign is what the physician can
observe? Yeah. Think of a stop sign.
We'll let that
marinate. Number two, a symptom is what
the patient
feels. Yeah. So only the patient can
provide a
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