Anna Weaver
Guest
I have been reading some of the previously posted questions regarding "coding diagnoses from the path report" and everyone seems to agree that you should always wait for the path. I have read that you should only code from reports such as path and radiology if they have been interpreted by the physician, and I have also read that the pathologist or radiologist is a physician and you may code from their reports. Which is correct? This is just one of the many things that drives me crazy about this job, "Contradictory information"!!!!
This is unfortunately another of those gray area's in our black and white world. You can in an outpatient setting code from the pathology report. I will usually, always wait for the path report to code. The radiology report is the really gray area. Some will not code from them. It depends on what the setting is whether I will or not. I use it in the ER as confirmation. I usually don't pull from it except to confirm location etc. as in a fracture. If physician says fracture arm, I will check the radiology report to confirm exact location. I usually don't code the incidental findings in this instance, unless it's directly related. When coding radiology I do code directly from the radiology report. It is correct the radiologist and pathologist are both physicians so we can code from their reports. What confuses a lot is that we cannot code from the laboratory reports, but we can from pathologist. The laboratory reports are not signed by a physician. These tests are ran by lab techs/machines and are not interpreted at all until your physician gets them.
Hope I didn't make it more confusing for you.