ICD-10 BMSG 2001

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The ICD-10 BMSG 2001 is the Austrian version of the ICD-10 , the German translation of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (10th Revision) of the WHO in version 1.3 created by DIMDI . It was published in paper form in 2001 by the Austrian Federal Ministry for Social Security and Generations, the Federal Ministry responsible for health at the time. In 2006, the Federal Ministry for Health and Women is responsible for the electronic version that appears annually as part of the LKF system. The ICD-10 BMSG 2001 is the legally prescribed documentation basis for the electronically documented discharge diagnoses for inpatient stays .

The main differences between the ICD-10-WHO version 1.3 and the ICD-10 BMSG 2001 are in Chapter XX, which has been completely replaced by Chapter XXa (with 22 U diagnoses, 11 of which are intended for coding). Furthermore, the diagnoses Z55-Z65 (persons with potential health risks due to socio-economic or psychosocial circumstances) were deleted. In addition, the license plates! (Call sign, for codes not permitted as main diagnosis in the inpatient documentation) and # ( pound sign , for codes in the inpatient documentation not to be transmitted to the BMGF). Furthermore, in the case of three-digit characters that have a fourth digit, these three-digit characters are marked with - (e.g. A00.- Cholera).

The print version of ICD-10 BMSG 2001 is freely available as a PDF version on the Internet. A supplement was also published for the ICD-10 BMSG 2001 in which a few corrections were made and coding instructions were given (e.g. B96.0-B96.8 with call sign identification, removal of the diamond identification for Z39.0 and Z43.3) . 22 codes were introduced as five-digit codes for documentation on neonatal / pediatric intensive care units in this supplement.

The ICD-10 database version of the LKF2006 contains over 14,000 entries. Of these, approx. 1,400 are three-digit codes with ".-" (dot-dash) codes that do not have to be coded themselves, but rather indicate the presence of codable four-digit or five-digit codes. A four digit would be e.g. B. M00.0 Arthritis and polyarthritis due to staphylococci. Approx. 4,000 codes are five-digit codes that often encode a localization of the four-digit code (e.g. M00.01 arthritis and polyarthritis due to staphylococcal shoulder region). Over 250 three-digit codes have no further subdivision. Almost 400 codes have a hash mark (#) and are only permitted for coding within the hospital.

There is also a diagnosis thesaurus in the database version as well as a table (STERNKR) that goes far beyond the print version for a detailed description of the + cross-diagnoses to be coded for * star diagnoses. The so-called DIAGLIST contains plausibility ranges for diagnoses with regard to age and gender.

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