Why We Use Codes
Medical codes serve as a universal language that allows healthcare information to be communicated efficiently and consistently. Instead of describing a diagnosis or procedure in narrative form (which could vary significantly between providers), codes provide standardized representations that mean the same thing to everyone who uses them.
Codes serve multiple purposes beyond billing. They are used for:
- epidemiological tracking of diseases,
- quality measurement,
- research, and
- public health reporting.
When a diagnosis code is reported on a claim, that information becomes part of larger datasets used to monitor disease trends and allocate healthcare resources.
Billing Purposes
For billing purposes, codes communicate to payers exactly what was diagnosed and what services were performed. Payers use this information to determine whether services are covered, whether they were medically necessary, and how much should be paid. Accurate coding is essential for appropriate reimbursement.