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Question No: 1
MultipleChoice
In which of the following ways does payment determination (risk score calculation) differ between HHS-HCCs and CMS-HCCs?
Options
Answer AExplanation
A key ambulatory CDI distinction between the two major risk models is timing. The HHS-HCC model (used for ACA Marketplace risk adjustment) is commonly described as a concurrent model: it uses the enrollee's demographics and diagnoses from the same benefit year to reflect morbidity and support that year's risk transfer/payment balancing. In contrast, the CMS-HCC model (commonly applied in Medicare Advantage) is prospective: conditions documented and coded in the prior data collection year are used to predict expected cost for the following payment year. From an outpatient CDI perspective, this timing difference affects operational priorities. For CMS-HCC, accurate annual capture and recapture of active chronic conditions is essential because last year's documented conditions drive next year's risk score and revenue. For HHS-HCC, complete documentation and coding during the current year impacts the current year's risk measurement. Options referencing CPT codes are not correct for the core HCC risk score calculation, which is driven by demographics and ICD diagnosis reporting mapped to HCC categories.
Question No: 2
MultipleChoice
Which of the following BEST defines a risk score under the CMS-HCC model?
Options
Answer CExplanation
Under the CMS-HCC model, a beneficiary's risk score (RAF) is intended to represent the expected cost of caring for that individual relative to an average beneficiary. The score is calculated using two primary inputs: (1) the beneficiary's demographic factors (such as age, sex, Medicaid status/dual eligibility, disability status, and original reason for Medicare entitlement, depending on the model segment), and (2) the beneficiary's documented disease burden captured through ICD-10-CM codes that map to Hierarchical Condition Categories (HCCs). Those HCCs reflect the person's health status and severity, with hierarchy rules preventing ''stacking'' of related conditions and with certain interaction terms in some model versions. Social determinants are not generally described as the defining basis of the traditional CMS-HCC RAF in CDI education, and ''family demographics'' are not used. The model is not a mortality predictor; it is a cost/risk prediction tool for payment adjustment. Therefore, the best definition is the beneficiary's individual demographic and health status.
Question No: 3
MultipleChoice
Which option best coding guidelines is MOST important for a provider to understand when selecting diagnosis codes for an office visit as opposed to an inpatient stay?
Options
Answer CExplanation
A core outpatient guideline difference is how to handle uncertainty in diagnoses. In the inpatient setting, facilities may code diagnoses documented as ''probable,'' ''suspected,'' ''likely,'' or ''rule out'' at discharge if they meet inpatient reporting rules. In outpatient/office settings, however, uncertain conditions generally are not coded as established diagnoses because the encounter is often focused on evaluation rather than confirmed final diagnoses. Instead, outpatient coding relies on confirmed conditions and/or signs and symptoms when a definitive diagnosis has not been made. This is why outpatient CDI education emphasizes precise provider language: if the clinician is still evaluating, they should document the symptom/abnormal finding and the assessment plan; if the condition is confirmed, they should state it clearly and link it to evaluation/management performed. Options A, B, and D are incorrect because chronic conditions may need to be reported whenever they are assessed/managed, ''first-listed'' is an outpatient concept distinct from inpatient ''principal,'' and documentation should support all clinically relevant conditions addressed, not only the chief complaint.