To the best of my ability I shall leave engineering out of this, but it will be tough. I see a partially cut down tree and many, many branches stacked in the back yard. Coding assignments or that...mess I have looked at all winter. The weather is right, grass will need to be mowed soon, I better tackle said tree.
Procedure Approach Tree and commence: ICD-10 PCS Root operation "Detachment". In the process I suffer punctures to both forearms S51.832A and S51.831A, but possibly with foreign bodies in each (S51.842A and S51.841A). Only to skin (Body Sys. only to Skin and Breast), so I commence with debridement. As all guys know, fingernails are an essential tool, but I had to realize not sharp enough to be considered for excisional debridement. This was definitely non-excisional and coded to "extraction". No foreign bodies in either arm. I just then wondered what my prothrombin time was.
Yard work. A new spin on an old task.
Keep your code book handy, Richard. Today is the day I plant all the seedlings that I grew from seeds. (Is that redundant?) At any rate, I can visualize bee and/or wasp stings, pollen allergies, cuts, bruises, etc. Be ready with all those codes! By the way, I'm really impressed with the work you do. I've been watching!
hahaha thats funny!
I feel your pain Richard! I have not been up to snuff on my yard (or house) maintenance for the past year and a half. *cough* I have been working full time and attending a different online school for my CPC crededential. I have made myself a honeydo list. I have a feeling that it will take quite a while for me to complete said list. I plan to multitask with education, stress relief and agricultural productivity (lol) for quite a while. I sincerely hope that I can find a remote job after obtaining my CCS so that i can continue my multitasking!
Please don't add sutures, incisions, skin flaps or the such to your own personal Procedure Note!