The 2012 implementation deadline won't change, so now's the time to start preparing. Over the next few years, the entire healthcare industry -- including physician practices, hospitals, and payers -- have the potentially overwhelming task of preparing for two industry initiatives: compliance with CMS-mandated HIPAA transaction standards and converting to ICD-10. Many have compared implementation of these two initiatives to the Year 2000 (Y2K) initiative from more than a decade ago. However, industry experts suggest the HIPAA 5010 conversion and the ICD-10 conversion will actually be more time-consuming, more costly, and more complicated. If your practice fails to successfully migrate, you potentially face: Ensure your practice isn't already behind the eight ball by learning all the keys to the first deadline: the Jan. 1, 2012 version 5010 compliance date. Get to Know Version 5010 The start of your transition to ICD-10 begins with a piece of health insurance reform legislation known as Version 5010. 5010 lays out the technical electronic transaction standards mandated for Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) transactions, and includes, among other things, requirements for transmission of claims and payment data using ICD-10. Background: The current version -- version 4010/4010A1 -- does not accommodate the ICD-10 code set. Therefore, in preparation for the use of ICD-10, CMS has introduced its new HIPAA 5010 Version D.0 form, which will be required to use by all HIPAA-covered entities (i.e., providers, health plans, clearinghouses, and their business associates, including billing agents) as of Jan. 1, 2012. This implantation deadline falls long before the ICD-10 implementation date to allow adequate 5010 testing and implementation time. "Changing to the 5010 format sets the stage, so to speak, for moving to ICD-10," Weston says. In simplest terms: Version 5010 will replace 4010/4010A1 for electronic transactions, including claims, eligibility inquiries, and remittance advices. Timeline: Pitfall: If you're not ready to submit the 5010 form by Jan. 1, 2012, you will no longer be able to submit electronic transactions to Medicare and you'll quickly lose money. If you practice is submitting paper claim forms now, you should not experience a change in that paper claim form for 5010 or the ICD-10 projects. What is 5010 really? The Accredited Standards Committee (ASC) X12 develops electronic data interchange (EDI) standards Version 5010 is the latest major release of EDI X12. EDI X12 is in the most basic terms a data format used to exchange information between two entities. EDI X12 is based on ASC X12 standards. Capitalize on Diagnosis Reporting Improvements Version 5010 will address several problems and complexities you've suffered through with 4010. With 5010, the maximum number of diagnosis codes you can report on a claim increases from eight to 12. Take note that while you can report 12 codes on the claim, you'll only be able to point or link a service to four of those diagnoses. Keep in mind that individual payers may limit how many diagnosis codes they process as well. Note: 5010 allows you to submit either ICD-10 or ICD-9 on the claim but not both on the same claim. Bonus: Example: CMS hopes to use this data to monitor mortality rates for some illnesses, outcomes for specific treatment options, and hospital stay durations for some conditions. The new form also offers an indicator on institutional claims for "present on admission" conditions. UB-04 note: Learn the 5010 Specifics Dig into your claim forms now to ensure that the beneficiary's information is accurate to the letter, or you'll face scores of denied claims on the new HIPAA 5010 forms. Why it matters: Along with the patient's last name, you need to be sure you include suffixes whenever there is a one, such as Jr. orSr. abbreviations. You can include the suffix either with the patient's last name or in the suffix field. The date of birth you put on the claim form must match exactly to what the Social Security Administration has on file as well. New remark codes: Say goodbye to P.O. boxes: Beware: "Either directly or indirectly, HIPAA Version 5010 will impact nearly everyone involved in healthcare transactions -- providers, clearinghouses, and payers, as well as vendors who provide practice management (PM) systems and other transaction-related software(s)," says Kim Dues, CPC, owner of Mass Medical Billing Services in Dickinson, Tex. "It is mostly a complex technical issue for those on the business and administrative side. Although, if the implementation doesn't go smoothly, it will affect all." Stay tuned: