The providers who document comorbidities well are doing their colleagues a quiet favor, the anesthesiologist, the hospitalist, the next surgeon all inherit a more honest chart. Most of this chapter has focused on CPT codes, the procedure and service codes that determine wRVU credit. But ICD-10 diagnosis codes matter too, and in ways that are often invisible to the provider writing the note.
Diagnosis Codes and MDM: The Outpatient Connection
In the outpatient world, the number and specificity of your diagnosis codes directly affects the MDM complexity calculation. If a patient with well-controlled hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and hypothyroidism comes in for a visit where you manage all three conditions, all three diagnoses should be on the claim, and all three should be documented as actively managed in the note. A claim submitted with only one ICD-10 code when three conditions were addressed tells an incomplete story of the visit's complexity.
Beyond the claim itself, diagnosis specificity matters. ICD-10 codes are specific, there is a meaningful difference between "type 2 diabetes mellitus without complications" (E11.9) and "type 2 diabetes mellitus with chronic kidney disease stage 3" (E11.22). The more specific code more accurately reflects the complexity you are managing. Using the specific code is not upcoding, it is accuracy.
Present on Admission (POA): The Inpatient Revenue Dimension
In the inpatient world, diagnosis documentation has a dimension that most surgeons do not think about but that affects hospital revenue significantly: Present on Admission (POA) status.
Medicare's inpatient payment system groups hospitalizations into Diagnosis Related Groups (DRGs). The DRG drives the payment for the entire admission. Higher-complexity DRGs, driven by major comorbid conditions, pay more. But a comorbidity only affects the DRG if it is documented and coded, and for certain conditions, only if it was present when the patient was admitted, not if it developed during the hospital stay.
Providers who admit or operate on patients in the hospital and who fail to document known comorbidities, obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, chronic kidney disease, peripheral vascular disease, malnutrition, are leaving DRG complexity undocumented. The hospital collects less for that admission than the patient's actual clinical situation would have justified.
The Most Commonly Under-Documented Comorbidities
Based on clinical documentation improvement experience across surgical practice, the most frequently missed comorbidities include:
- Obesity and morbid obesity (BMI documented in the chart but not listed as a diagnosis)
- Obstructive sleep apnea (mentioned in history but not coded as a current condition)
- Chronic kidney disease (stage specified in labs but not documented in the problem list or admission note)
- Malnutrition and frailty (present on clinical grounds but not explicitly documented)
- Peripheral arterial disease (relevant to surgical risk but omitted from the formal diagnosis list)
- Depression and anxiety (present and managed in outpatient setting but not listed in the inpatient documentation)
None of these are diagnoses you are fabricating. They are conditions your patient has that you know about and that affect their care. Documenting them is accurate and appropriate. Not documenting them is an incomplete medical record, and a missed revenue opportunity for the institution.