Diagnostic Coding of Elder Mistreatment: Results From a National Database of Medicare Advantage and Private Insurance Patients, 2011-2017.

TitleDiagnostic Coding of Elder Mistreatment: Results From a National Database of Medicare Advantage and Private Insurance Patients, 2011-2017.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsRosen T, Wen K, Makaroun LK, Elman A, Zhang Y, Jeng PJ, LoFaso VM, Lachs MS, Clark S, Bao Y
JournalJ Appl Gerontol
Volume41
Issue4
Pagination918-927
Date Published2022 Apr
ISSN1552-4523
KeywordsAged, Clinical Coding, Databases, Factual, Elder Abuse, Humans, International Classification of Diseases, Medicare Part C, United States
Abstract

Health care providers may play an important role in detection of elder mistreatment, which is common but underrecognized. We used the Health Care Cost Institute insurance claims database to describe elder mistreatment diagnosis among Medicare Advantage (MA) and private insurance patients in the United States from 2011 to 2017. We used International Classification of Diseases (ICD) coding to identify cases, examining the impact of transition from ICD-9 (Ninth Revision) to ICD-10 (Tenth Revision), which occurred in October 2015 and added 14 new codes for "suspected" mistreatment. 8,127 patients (0.051% of all aged ≥ 65), including 6,304 with MA (0.058%) and 1,823 with private insurance (0.026%) received elder mistreatment diagnosis. Transition from ICD-9 to ICD-10 was associated with a small increase in diagnosis rate, with "suspected" codes used in 45.3% of ICD-10 versus 9.7% of ICD-9 cases. Overall rates remained low. Rates, settings, and types of diagnosis differed between MA and private insurance patients.

DOI10.1177/07334648211018530
Alternate JournalJ Appl Gerontol
PubMed ID34075830
PubMed Central IDPMC8636549
Grant ListK76 AG054866 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
R01 AG060086 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States

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