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10.1
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S10Q1
S10Q1
What is the role of the clinical coder in an organization?

Clinical coders review the coded data in the EHR or clinical notes, and provide a definitive discharge diagnosis. A coder will use all knowledge in the clinical notes to define the required classification code(s).

10.2.
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S10Q2
S10Q2
What terminology do coders work with? Are the coders dedicated to only one terminology?

Coders can work with a range of terminologies, including ICD-10, OPCS-4 and SNOMED CT. However, because SNOMED CT is designed for use by clinicians, a clinician will typically record the diagnosis as a SNOMED CT concept, and this will be mapped to a classification (e.g. ICD-10) by a coder (with the help of the default maps).

10.3.
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S10Q3
S10Q3
Do coders have a role in auditing the SNOMED-to-ICD mapping processes?

Coders can provide feedback on the SNOMED-to-ICD mapping.

10.4.
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S10Q4
S10Q4
Are the coding processes all automated and mapped automatically between SNOMED and ICD/reimbursement catalogs or does the coder have to actually code?

In many cases, the coding process to generate ICD codes from SNOMED CT codes is semi-automated. The maps define a default code, which is reviewed and agreed/changed by the coder.

10.5.
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S10Q5
S10Q5
When code discrepancies are found by the coder,

does she

do they have to get physicians to co-sign on all changes done by the coder?

This will be dependent on the organization, but in most cases the coder has autonomy to make the required changes.