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Day 1 · Code systems overview, the coder's role

Introduction to Medical Coding

This is the first day of a 90-day curriculum that takes you from zero to CPC (AAPC), CCA and CCS (AHIMA) exam readiness. Read it free below, then sign up to take the quiz and unlock the rest.

Quick context

Medical coding turns what happens in a clinic into a small set of standardized codes. Three code systems do most of the work — ICD-10-CM for diagnoses, CPT for procedures, HCPCS Level II for supplies and drugs. This whole course will keep circling back to those three.

1

What is medical coding?

Big picture: A medical coder is a translator. They read a doctor's chart notes and turn them into short alphanumeric codes that insurance companies, governments, and researchers can all read the same way.

🌍 Global-learner note: This course teaches US medical coding (ICD-10-CM, CPT, HCPCS) — the world's most lucrative remote-coding opportunity. Other countries use plain ICD-10 or national variants (ICD-10-CA, ICD-10-AM, etc.); the underlying clinical concepts are universal.

Every time a patient visits a healthcare provider, the visit produces a chart note — the doctor's description of why the patient came in, what was found, and what was done. That note is written in clinical language: acute bronchitis, prescribed amoxicillin, ordered chest X-ray.

A medical coder reads that note and replaces the prose with codes. Those codes go on a claim form that gets sent to the patient's insurance (Medicare, Aetna, Blue Cross, etc.), which then pays the provider.

Why do we need this layer? Two reasons:

  • Money flows through codes. Insurance companies pay based on what code is on the claim. A wrong code can mean the wrong payment — or no payment.
  • Statistics flow through codes. Public health agencies track disease patterns, hospital quality, and treatment outcomes by analyzing billions of coded claims.

Medical coders work in hospitals, physician offices, billing companies, insurance companies, and increasingly from home. It is a credential-based career: the major certifications are CPC (Certified Professional Coder, AAPC) and CCS (Certified Coding Specialist, AHIMA).

Why it matters for coding

The whole job is reading carefully. A coder who skims a chart and misses one word — 'left' vs. 'right', 'acute' vs. 'chronic', 'open' vs. 'closed' — picks the wrong code. This course will train you to read like a coder.

2

ICD-10-CM — coding diagnoses

Big picture: ICD-10-CM is the code system for what's wrong with the patient. Every diagnosis the doctor records — a sore throat, a broken wrist, type 2 diabetes — gets an ICD-10-CM code.

ICD-10-CM stands for International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision, Clinical Modification. The U.S. uses the CM (Clinical Modification) version, which is more detailed than the international one.

A code looks like this: J20.9 (acute bronchitis, unspecified) or S52.501A (unspecified fracture of the lower end of the right radius, initial encounter).

The structure:

  • 3 to 7 characters. First character is a letter, the next two are numbers (that's the category — e.g., J20 is acute bronchitis).
  • Decimal point after the third character, then more characters specifying etiology, anatomic site, severity, encounter type.
  • "X" placeholder when a position must be filled but no value applies (you'll see this in injury codes).

The code book is split into 22 chapters, each covering a body system or disease group (Chapter 9 = Circulatory, Chapter 19 = Injuries, etc.). We'll dedicate Days 8–11 to walking through every chapter.

Key point for a beginner: ICD-10-CM never tells you what was done about the disease. It only tells you the disease exists. The 'what was done' part is CPT's job.

Why it matters for coding

When you read a chart, every diagnosis the doctor lists (sometimes called the **assessment**) becomes one ICD-10-CM code. The primary diagnosis — the main reason the patient was seen — goes first.

3

CPT — coding procedures

Big picture: CPT is the code system for what was done to the patient. Every procedure, surgery, test, or office visit gets a CPT code.

CPT stands for Current Procedural Terminology. It's maintained by the American Medical Association (AMA) and updated every year.

A CPT code is always 5 digits, all numbers: 99213 (a standard office visit), 47562 (laparoscopic cholecystectomy — gallbladder removal), 93000 (a 12-lead ECG with report).

CPT has three categories:

  • Category I — the main numeric codes for everyday services (covers 99% of what a beginner sees).
  • Category II — optional tracking codes for quality measures (end in F, e.g., 1036F).
  • Category III — temporary codes for emerging technology (end in T, e.g., 0510T).

Within Category I, codes are grouped by section: Evaluation and Management (9920299499), Anesthesia (0010001999), Surgery (1000469990), Radiology (7001079999), Pathology/Lab (8004789398), and Medicine (9028199607). We'll spend Days 13–19 inside CPT.

Modifiers are two-digit add-ons that change the meaning of a CPT code without changing the code itself — for example, -50 means "bilateral procedure", -25 means "significant separately identifiable E/M service". Day 21 is the modifier deep dive.

Why it matters for coding

Every action the doctor or facility performed and documented gets a CPT code. Read for verbs: *examined, repaired, biopsied, injected, ordered, removed.* Each one is potentially a code.

4

HCPCS Level II — everything else

Big picture: HCPCS Level II covers the things CPT doesn't — supplies, drugs administered to the patient, durable medical equipment, ambulance rides, prosthetics, and certain dental and vision items.

HCPCS stands for Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (pronounced "hick-picks"). It has two levels:

  • Level I = CPT (we just covered it).
  • Level II = the additional codes we're talking about here. These are maintained by CMS (the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services).

Level II codes are always one letter followed by four digits. The letter tells you the category:

  • A — supplies and transportation (e.g., A4253 glucose test strips)
  • E — durable medical equipment (e.g., E0114 crutches)
  • J — drugs administered other than oral (e.g., J3490 unclassified injectable)
  • L — orthotics and prosthetics
  • Q — temporary codes for things waiting on a permanent code

A beginner question to internalize: did the patient receive a physical item or a drug? If yes, you probably need a HCPCS Level II code in addition to the CPT and ICD-10-CM.

Why it matters for coding

When you see 'administered 1 mg of [drug]' or 'fitted with [device]' in a chart, that's a HCPCS Level II signal. We'll go deep on this on Day 20.

5

The coder's day-to-day workflow

Big picture: A coder's day is a loop: read a chart, assign codes, check edits, submit the claim, fix denials. Understanding the loop helps you see where your work fits.

A typical workflow:

  1. Patient visit happens — the provider sees the patient and documents the encounter (paper or electronic health record).
  2. Chart lands in the coder's queue — usually overnight, in batches.
  3. Coder reads the chart — pulls out every diagnosis (for ICD-10-CM) and every procedure/service (for CPT and HCPCS Level II).
  4. Coder assigns codes — using the official code books or encoder software, picks the most specific code that the documentation supports. If documentation is unclear, the coder sends a physician query asking for clarification.
  5. Edits run automatically — software like NCCI (Day 22) flags impossible combinations (e.g., billing for a procedure already bundled into another).
  6. Claim is submitted to the insurer on a CMS-1500 form (physician office) or UB-04 form (hospital). We'll cover claim forms on Day 25.
  7. Insurer pays, partially pays, or denies. Denials go back to the coder or billing team to fix and resubmit.

This loop runs constantly. A productive coder in a physician office handles roughly 20–30 charts per hour; in a hospital, fewer but more complex.

Why it matters for coding

Every chunk of this course maps to a step in this workflow. Knowing the loop helps you see why each topic matters — anatomy and terminology (steps 3–4), code books (steps 3–4), modifiers and NCCI (step 5), claim forms and denials (steps 6–7), compliance (the whole loop).

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What the rest of the course covers

Foundations (Days 1–30)

Medical terminology, all 12 body systems, pathology basics, pharmacology, lab values, imaging, surgical procedures, insurance basics, HIPAA.

ICD-10-CM + CPT (Days 31–60)

Every ICD-10-CM chapter, official guidelines, sequencing rules. CPT structure, E/M coding (2021 MDM), Anesthesia, Surgery I–IV.

Exam Prep (Days 61–90)

HCPCS Level II, modifiers, NCCI edits, compliance, payment systems, claim forms, denials, specialty coding, case studies, 100-question mock exam, CPC vs CCA vs CCS roadmap.

Medita is built for self-learners preparing for the CPC (Certified Professional Coder, AAPC), CCA (Certified Coding Associate, AHIMA), and CCS (Certified Coding Specialist, AHIMA) exams — the standard certifications behind US medical-coding jobs, many of which are fully remote.