ACDIS CCDS-O Web-Based Practice Test

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ACDIS CCDS-O Exam Syllabus Topics:

TopicDetails
Topic 1
  • Risk Adjustment Models and Impact of Documentation and Coding: Covers CMS-HCC model fundamentals, RAF scoring, Medicare Advantage payments, hierarchies, disease interactions, and compliant HCC reporting requirements.
Topic 2
  • and billing: Covers Official Coding Guidelines, OPPS reimbursement (APCs), and professional billing concepts including CPT E
  • M codes and Medicare Physician Fee Schedule documentation.
Topic 3
  • Quality, Regulatory, and Health Initiatives: Covers population health, MSSP, ACO models, MACRA
  • MIPS, compliant query development, RADV audits, OIG compliance, problem list maintenance, and HIPAA requirements in outpatient CDI.
Topic 4
  • CDI Program Concepts: Department Metrics and Provider Education: Covers provider education development, CDI performance metrics including query rates, RAF progression, HCC capture, ACO
  • MSSP impact, and physician documentation's effect on quality reporting.
Topic 5
  • Healthcare regulations, reimbursement, and documentation requirements related to the Official Guidelines for
Topic 6
  • Coding and Reporting, the Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS), and provider coding

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ACDIS Certified Clinical Documentation Specialist-Outpatient Sample Questions (Q116-Q121):

NEW QUESTION # 116
Clinic documentation states: "Follow-up for post-induction chemotherapy for metastatic uterine cancer." To BEST identify the conditions being monitored and treated, a CDI specialist should

Answer: C

Explanation:
When documentation states "metastatic uterine cancer," the most important missing element for complete, accurate outpatient coding is where the cancer has metastasized (the secondary site[s]). In ambulatory CDI, identifying secondary sites best clarifies the full scope of disease being monitored and treated because metastatic disease coding relies on documenting both the primary malignancy and the specific metastatic location(s) (e.g., lung, liver, bone, peritoneum, lymph nodes). This supports correct severity representation, risk capture, treatment intent, and medical necessity for ongoing chemotherapy follow-up. While tumor morphology can be clinically relevant, it is usually established earlier in the diagnostic pathway and does not, by itself, define current metastatic burden. Likewise, reviewing labs or MRI results may provide supportive indicators, but they do not replace provider documentation of the confirmed metastatic sites being managed. A compliant query focused on secondary sites prompts the provider to document the current metastatic disease status (active, responding, progressing) and specific locations, which most directly identifies the conditions under treatment.


NEW QUESTION # 117
An 81-year-old is seen by his family physician for continued confusion and poor memory. PMH includes HTN, GERD, and Parkinson's. The provider reviews the neurologist's consultation notes, evaluates the patient's current mental state, and addresses the diagnoses of HTN, GERD, and Parkinson's. The provider's problem list included: Dementia, GERD, HTN, and Parkinson's. Which of the following is the first-listed diagnosis?

Answer: B

Explanation:
In the outpatient setting, the first-listed diagnosis is the condition chiefly responsible for the services provided during the encounter. Here, the stated reason for the visit is continued confusion and poor memory, and the provider specifically evaluates the patient's current mental state and references neurology consultation notes-actions that directly support assessment of a cognitive disorder. While HTN, GERD, and Parkinson's are also addressed and may be reportable if they meet encounter relevance (e.g., monitored, evaluated, assessed/managed, or treated), they are not the primary driver for today's visit based on the presenting complaint. Outpatient documentation and coding guidance emphasizes sequencing the diagnosis that best explains the visit's main purpose first, with additional coexisting conditions listed afterward when they impact care. Since "dementia" is on the active problem list and aligns with the patient's cognitive symptoms and the physician's mental-status evaluation, it is the most appropriate first-listed diagnosis among the options.


NEW QUESTION # 118
Which of the following section(s) of the Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting are applicable to outpatient settings?

Answer: C

Explanation:
In outpatient CDI and coding, the Official ICD-10-CM Guidelines that apply are the universal rules plus the outpatient-specific rules. Section I contains conventions, general coding guidelines, and chapter-specific guidance that govern code assignment in every setting (e.g., code structure, "use additional code," laterality, sequencing instructions, and condition-specific rules). Section IV is specifically written for outpatient services and drives core outpatient behaviors such as selecting the "first-listed" diagnosis based on the main reason for the encounter, reporting additional diagnoses that are evaluated/assessed/treated or impact care, and applying outpatient-only restrictions (for example, diagnoses documented as "rule out," "probable," or "suspected" generally are not coded in outpatient the way they may be for inpatient reporting). ACDIS outpatient CDI education emphasizes teaching providers to document clearly the reason for visit, the assessment/clinical relevance of each condition addressed, and the linkage between conditions and services rendered so Section I and Section IV rules can be applied accurately for compliant reimbursement and reporting.


NEW QUESTION # 119
Which of the following actions should be taken when the documentation states: "Hemiparesis, history of CVA, and intracranial trauma?"

Answer: D

Explanation:
This documentation presents a key outpatient CDI problem: hemiparesis is present, but two potential causal conditions are referenced-history of CVA and intracranial trauma-without clear linkage. In ICD-10-CM, correct reporting of hemiparesis often depends on identifying whether it is a late effect (sequela) of a prior stroke, a residual from traumatic brain injury, or due to another neurologic condition. Coding hemiparesis automatically as a CVA sequela (option A) would be assumptive and potentially inaccurate, because the clinician has not documented the relationship. Likewise, simply coding hemiparesis alone (option D) may miss important etiologic specificity, and coding both histories without clarifying the cause (option B) still leaves the main clinical ambiguity unresolved. Outpatient CDI best practice is to issue a non-leading query requesting provider clarification of the etiology/source of the hemiparesis (e.g., due to prior CVA, due to prior intracranial trauma, both, or other/undetermined). This supports accurate diagnosis reporting, appropriate sequencing, and defensible risk/quality representation.


NEW QUESTION # 120
For outpatient/provider services, the primary sources of coding authority include the ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting, AHA's Coding Clinic for ICD-10-CM/PCS, as well as which of the following?

Answer: A

Explanation:
Outpatient/provider coding relies on two major code sets: ICD-10-CM for diagnoses and CPT/HCPCS for professional services, procedures, and supplies. Because of that, outpatient coding authority is anchored not only in the ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines and AHA Coding Clinic guidance for diagnosis reporting, but also in the authoritative guidance that clarifies CPT/HCPCS reporting. ACDIS outpatient CDI education stresses that CDI specialists must understand both sides: the diagnosis coding rules (ICD-10-CM) and the procedural/service reporting rules (CPT/HCPCS) that drive much of outpatient reimbursement. AMA's CPT Assistant is a key interpretive authority for CPT coding guidance, while AHA's Coding Clinic for HCPCS provides clarification on HCPCS Level II reporting. The other options focus on ICD-10-PCS guidelines and DRG tools, which are primarily inpatient facility concepts (PCS is inpatient procedure coding; DRGs are inpatient payment groupers). Therefore, the correct supplemental outpatient authority pair is AHA's Coding Clinic for HCPCS and AMA's CPT Assistant.


NEW QUESTION # 121
......

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