

In 2004, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) launched the Hierarchical Condition Category (HCC) code set. While approaching its 20th anniversary, HCC coding is becoming more common as healthcare shifts to valuebased payment models, a change that has been actively pursued over the last decade.
HCC codes are directly related to ICD-10 coding – approximately 10,000 ICD-10 diagnosis codes out of 70,000 diagnoses are directly related to at least one of the 86 HCCs. HCC coefficients vary depending on the patient category.
Based on the patient’s demographics and diagnoses, the HCC model assigns a Risk Adjustment Factor (RAF) score, which is a relative measure of how expensive that patient is expected to be. As healthy patients have a lower-than-average RAF score, revenue from insurance premiums is transferred from healthy patients to patients with higher-than-average RAF scores.
According to the “American Academy of Family Physicians,” “hierarchical condition category coding helps communicate patient complexity and paint a picture of the whole patient,” allowing for appropriate quality and cost performance measurement.
One of the concepts that must be followed for the HCC risk adjustment model is having an accurate problem list. For years, healthcare organizations have filled EMRs with data, resulting in a large amount of data and, most likely, an inaccurate problem list. To ensure an accurate problem list, remove duplicate and inactive diagnoses and identify key areas for assigning HCC codes and RAF values. https://
Hierarchical condition category coding is designed to help determine patient care and long-term health complexity while also “painting a picture” of the entire patient. Painting a complete picture of a patient’s health necessitate more than just codes and technology, but also expertise and analysis.
Healthcare professionals, for instance, should be persuaded to review the entire patient record, looking for any potential social determinants of health (SDoH) that could affect the value of the care provided (as in value-based care).
HCCs use data collected from patient encounters that have been notated and coded to estimate predicted costs for individuals over time — in insurance, this could be the next year or more of coverage. These projections are based on the previous 12 months. https://www.247medicalbillingservices.com
Capturing HCC diagnoses across the continuum of care to reflect the total disease burden of a patient population benefits not only the patient but also physicians and payers. To achieve this goal, providers and medical coders must stay current on best practices and be educated on HCC. When done correctly, HCC streamlines the process, resulting in clean claims and quick reimbursements.
24/7 Medical Billing Services holds a team of well-trained and experienced HCC coders who are responsible for assigning appropriate diagnosis codes and CDI specialized to review all clinical documentation for completeness and accuracy. They also ensure thorough risk adjustment evaluation for each record in the best interests of the patient, provider, and payer. https://www.247medicalbillingservices.com