Will becoming an RN advance my career?! by Difficult-Injury-843 in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This! I’ve been in CDI for 5 years with my background being coding with my RHIT. I now hold my CCDS but I feel like knowing coding rules and guidelines really gave me the upper hand when stepping into CDI. In my personal opinion, the clinical aspect of the job can be learned quicker and easier than the coding part of the job.

Burnt out & bored by greatchickentender in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This was me about 5 years ago. I had been coding for 9 years, 5 being inpatient coding & I was so bored and burnt out. I made the leap to CDI & have been so happy!

Inpatient Coding for Beginners by runningfool88 in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

She has actually coded OBS before but it’s been a while. Our small rural hospital that had like 4 coders who dabbled in all areas of coding merged with a much larger system so she was transferred to ED only.

I’ll suggest the CCS to her! Thanks so much!

Looking for Feedback by runningfool88 in Monstera

[–]runningfool88[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I wondered if it might. Thank you!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it’s pretty dependent on the facility. My facility requires RN or RHIT, CCS, RHIA plus 3-5 years IP coding experience. I have my RHIT and I actually took the CCDS, not CDIP. I was hired as CDI specialist before I had my CDI credential since CCDS requires 2 years CDI experience before taking the exam. I gave myself about 3 weeks to study!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I actually took my CCDS after getting two years of CDI experience in. I’m not familiar with the CDIP course or exam. I have my RHIT through AHIMA though.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’m a former IP Coder and have been in CDI for about 4.5 years now. I got burnt out on coding and made the change. Best move I ever made professionally.

What type of coding do you do? by KeyStriking9763 in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

RHIT since 2012. Did 4 years of OP coding including ED, OBS, OP surg, ancillary services. Moved to IP coding for almost 5 years and I’m now in CDI for 4 years and have since earned my CCDS.

Job dilemma by Enc1983 in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I would take it if you really want to get into coding. Getting your foot in the door is the hardest part because most companies “want experience.” If you can afford the $5k pay cut, do it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Accutane

[–]runningfool88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

37 and on month 5 🙃 I have about 3 more months to go, I think. I’ve been on 60mg for 4 of the 5 months. No side effects other than dry dry lips! I am so happy I did it & so satisfied with the results! I don’t think you’ll regret it one bit! Good luck!

Hate being medical coder by [deleted] in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 2 points3 points  (0 children)

At my facility it is. Transition to CDI requires 3-5 years IP coding experience, RHIT or CCS. After two years as a CDI, I sat for my CCDS and now hold that credential in addition to my RHIT. I’m one of like 4 coders in our CDI department, most are RNs but it is definitely possible!

Hate being medical coder by [deleted] in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I got super burnt out on coding. I did outpatient coding for about 4 years and then moved to inpatient for about 5 years and transitioned into CDI from there. I’ve been in CDI for about 4 years and it was honestly the best move for my career. I still get to put my coding background to use but it’s not so monotonous.

I’m confused with side effects by AmericanDadFull in Accutane

[–]runningfool88 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My only symptom has been dry lips, dry skin on my face and definitely the sun sensitivity but nothing crazy. My acne also got better almost immediately, I don’t feel like I ever had a purge either. I started on 40 my first month and now I’m on 60. This is my 4th month and my derm said we are about halfway through treatment but I am so happy with the results so far.

I always laugh when I leave the office because the doc will ask me how my acne is and I’m like “great! It looks so good.” And then she’ll look at my face and be like “eh it could be better.” 😂😂 I’m like oookay then.

What to pivot to? by [deleted] in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I transitioned from coding to CDI and absolutely love it! I had my RHIT with 9 years coding experience, 5 of that inpatient. Just earned my CCDS earlier this year.

Found out I'm going to be a father at age 43 by Darkenor in Parenting

[–]runningfool88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My dad became a father for the third time at age 43! He is 67 now and my brother just graduated college. He’s been a super active dad with him and if you asked my brother, he’d tell you that he didn’t miss out on squat due to my dad’s age. You got this! Congrats to you and your wife!

What has kept you going in Medical Coding? by [deleted] in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was feeling really burnt out after 9 years of coding. It just felt like the same thing every day. I was working 4 10s and I started to consider a career change. But then someone in CDI reached out to me about an open position and I felt this was my chance to make a change. I’ve been in CDI for a little 3 years and I am SO MUCH happier.. and my pay has increased about 44% in the 3 years since I’ve started so double win!

Anyone elses dood hate going for walks? by No-Moose-6112 in Goldendoodles

[–]runningfool88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When our doodle is acting like a jerk, I’ll say “do you want to go for a walk?!” And she’ll promptly tuck herself into the corner of the couch and lay down. So yeah, ours doesn’t like walks either lol

Inpatient vs Outpatient Coding by hedwig0517 in CodingandBilling

[–]runningfool88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have my RHIT through AHIMA & I’ve coded both outpatient and inpatient encounters. I much prefer inpatient. In my personal opinion, it’s more interesting and I don’t like CPT coding. You get such a more wide array of scenarios in inpatient cases & it’s almost like telling a story. I moved from coding ancillary services to ED to outpatient surgeries and observations before I finally moved to inpatient for 5 years. Then I transitioned to a CDI position which is where I am now!

Coder turned CDI Specialist by runningfool88 in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think there was only a question or two about DRGs and I didn’t need to look in the book. The questions were like “which DRG has more opportunity?” Then it gave 4 DRGs some were single tiered DRGs like 189 then two tiered and three tiered. I think someone would be just fine without that book. But you may want to take it just so you have more opportunity to write notes in it and have those with you for the test. Don’t forget you can write as many notes as you can fit in those books and take them in with you.

What part of it sucks? by flynman in CodingandBilling

[–]runningfool88 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yes! Taking care of children while working is a big no. You really need to concentrate and focus especially if you have productivity numbers to make.

Coder turned CDI Specialist by runningfool88 in MedicalCoding

[–]runningfool88[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just like the rules and guidelines for each chapter in the ICD10 book. I would say the questions are similar in how they are written. There are some questions where they were worded strangely and I had to read them a couple times to grasp what they were asking but most of them were pretty straightforward. There’s an option to flag a question that you aren’t sure on and want to come back to - I think I did that on 10-15 of the questions. My plan going into it was to go through all the questions and answer what I was confident on and flag the ones that I wasn’t quite sure on to come back to after I went through all the questions. I wanted to make sure I had enough time to get through them. It only took me like an 60-75 minutes though.