And it could be as easy
as ABCD.
Kat
Eschner February 25, 2020
We now know that obesity, a
chronic disease that affects almost half of the United States population and
contributes to millions of deaths worldwide, isn’t just about how much you weigh. A huge variety of factors, from physical and mental
health to genetics and upbringing, all contribute to the national obesity
epidemic—and so do the human body’s own defense systems, which try to hold onto weight whenever possible.
Like any other complex and multifactorial disease, clinicians say that obesity
treatment requires a complex approach. But the system of billing
classifications that healthcare professionals use is lagging behind this
understanding, leading to suboptimal care: that’s the message of a new paper in the journal Obesity.
These diagnostic codes are
surprisingly important. Because they allow physicians to describe what they’re
doing and why so they can get paid by insurers, the codes can influence the way
doctors think about disease and what interventions they offer. Currently,
medical professionals treating obesity are only able to bill using a simple
diagnostic code provided by the International Classification for Diseases
(ICD): E66.0, defined as “obesity due to excess calories.” To arrive at that
diagnosis, a healthcare practitioner relies only on someone’s Body Mass Index
(BMI) as a metric. But BMI isn’t necessarily a good indicator of how much adipose
tissue (otherwise known as fat) someone has, meaning that the diagnosis may be inaccurate.
Beyond that, though, saying that people are obese because of “excess calories”
contributes to a damaging perception that obesity is a lifestyle choice,
says W. Timothy Garvey, one of the new study’s authors. It doesn’t encourage
medical professionals to think about obesity as the chronic illness we now know
it is—the result of complex factors that can differ
greatly between patients.
Garvey and coauthor Jeffrey
Mechanick, a Mount Sinai University endocrinologist, are proposing a new
classification system that they hope will be adopted by the ICD to replace
“obesity due to excess calories.” Instead doctors would bill for ABCD, or
“adiposity-based chronic disease,” which would connect to four different kinds
of codes related to treatment.
Adopting the system would
give healthcare providers more leeway to provide individualized and
evidence-based care for obesity, they write, rather than simply telling patients that they need to lose weight.
That’s why he and his
coauthor propose dividing the diagnosis of ABCD into four possible ICD codes,
denoting the related health treatment that’s taking place. “A” codes would be
related to weight gain and other obesity-related issues that are rooted in an
existing disorder or health issue; B codes would be related to BMI; C codes
would be related to heart or body complications that could be treated with
weight loss; and D codes would indicate how serious the complications are.
Secondary codes could help tailor the treatment further. The result is a lot
more complicated than a diagnosis of “obesity,” but it would go a long way
toward getting health professionals—and insurers—to treat the issue as a
complicated disease.
Garvey believes that changing
the code to reflect obesity’s complexity would prompt healthcare professionals
to do more than just tell patients to lose weight. “You treat a disease to
improve quality of life,” he says. “And with a chronic disease, that means
preventing or treating the complications of the disease state. That’s what
really improves quality of life.” When clinicians are able to bill for time
spent figuring out underlying issues that contribute to obesity, he
says—depression, lack of access to healthy food, injuries that prevent them from getting active—they
will be more likely to spend time addressing them.
“The current coding we have
in place for obesity does not take into consideration the complexity of the
disease as we think about it today,” Robert Kushner, an obesity medicine
physician specialist at Northwestern University, told Popular Science in an
email statement. “This new coding system is a step in the right direction.”
ABCD isn’t a new diagnosis:
it’s been embraced by the American
Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, among other medical groups. But it
could potentially be a game-changer if it’s adopted by the ICD, says Garvey. A
code that recognized obesity as a chronic disease related to—but not reduced
to—excess body fat would allow healthcare professionals to bill for treating
all different parts of the obesity equation, and hopefully lead to better
results for patients.
“At this time, coding
visits with the diagnosis ‘obesity’ or anything that has the word obesity in it
leads to inconsistent [insurer] reimbursement or none at all,” Rekha Kumar, the
medical director of the American Board of Obesity Medicine, told Popular
Science. ABCD “might encompass more aspects of the disease than just
‘obesity,’” he writes, “but the key will be whether this terminology actually
changes practice and reimbursement.”
Arya Sharma, the scientific
director of Obesity Canada, cautions that the proposed new codes would take a
long time to go into effect. The ICD is about to release the 11th edition of
its codes, which has a revised definition of obesity that still doesn’t look at
it as a multifactorial disease. For ABCD to get into ICD 12, Sharma says, would
be “a very slow and a very involved process.”
Although it remains to be
seen whether the ICD will take Garvey and Mechanick up on their proposed
reclassification, change is definitely needed. “There’s no doubt that the
current ICD codes are not helpful,” Sharma says.
https://www.popsci.com/story/health/obesity-icd-diagnosis/?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=email
No comments:
Post a Comment