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Certified Risk Adjustment Coder

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About this Exam

The Certified Risk Adjustment Coder (CRC) designation is a specialized medical coding certification for professionals focusing on diagnosis coding under Risk Adjustment models. This certification, typically offered by the AAPC (American Academy of Professional Coders), validates proficiency in capturing accurate diagnostic documentation to support proper reimbursement. The CRC is designed for medical coders, medical records professionals, auditors, and healthcare compliance staff who want to specialize in this critical area of healthcare revenue cycle and quality reporting. By mastering the nuances of Hierarchical Condition Categories (HCCs) and other risk models, CRCs play a vital role in ensuring healthcare providers and plans are accurately compensated for the complexity of the patient populations they manage.

 

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Additional Information

What the Course Entails and Exam Details

The path to becoming a Certified Risk Adjustment Coder requires a deep understanding of medical documentation, accurate diagnosis coding, and the specific guidelines of risk adjustment models. The course and final exam cover several critical domains:

  • Risk Adjustment Models: Candidates must understand the fundamentals of various models, including Hierarchical Condition Categories (HCC), Chronic Illness and Disability Payment System (CDPS), and others, and how diagnosis codes impact reimbursement scores.
  • Medical Documentation Review: A significant focus is placed on reviewing medical records to identify and capture all relevant diagnoses that impact risk adjustment. This includes understanding the impact of chronic conditions and co-morbidities.
  • ICD-10-CM Coding Guidelines: The exam tests precise application of current ICD-10-CM guidelines for diagnosis coding, with a specific focus on conditions and situations common in risk adjustment.
  • Documentation Improvement for Risk Adjustment: Students learn strategies for working with clinicians to improve the quality of medical documentation, ensuring it supports accurate risk adjustment coding and reimbursement.
  • Compliance and Quality: Ethical coding, compliance with regulations, and the impact of risk adjustment coding on quality measures are essential components.

 

 

 What to Expect in the Final Exam

The final CRC exam is designed to be a comprehensive assessment of your practical skills and knowledge. Here is what you can expect:

  • Format: The CRC exam consists of multiple-choice questions. It is an open-book exam, allowing you to use specific current-year ICD-10-CM coding manuals.
  • Number of Questions: The exam typically includes 100 multiple-choice questions. These questions present coding scenarios, regulatory and guideline-based questions, and case studies where you must apply risk adjustment principles.
  • Time Limit: You will have 4 hours to complete the entire exam. Time management is crucial for success.
  • Passing Score: A passing score of 70% or higher is required to achieve your Certified Risk Adjustment Coder designation.
  • Specific Rules: Since it is a proctored exam, strict adherence to rules is required, including the use of only authorized reference materials.

 

 

 How to Study and Exam Centers

Preparation is key to passing the CRC exam on your first attempt. Utilize these actionable strategies to build your confidence and knowledge:

  • Engage in Practical Coding: Dedicate time to coding real-world patient records and scenarios specifically related to risk adjustment conditions. The more you code, the faster and more accurate you will become.
  • Focus on the ICD-10-CM Guidelines: Master the current ICD-10-CM guidelines, particularly the general guidelines and those for circulatory, respiratory, endocrine, and other systems crucial for HCCs.
  • Utilize Practice Exams: Take multiple full-length practice exams in a timed setting. Analyze your results to identify your weak areas and adjust your study plan accordingly. Practice exams help you get familiar with the question formats and time management.
  • Understand the "Why" and "How" of HCCs: Don't just memorize codes; understand the underlying hierarchical structure of HCCs and how diagnosis codes flow into risk scores.
  • Exam Centers: The AAPC offers two main ways to take the CRC exam: online through live remote proctoring, where you can test in the comfort of your home, or at physical testing centers around the country. You must schedule your exam well in advance through the AAPC website.

 

 

Job Opportunities from the Course

Earning your CRC certification unlocks a range of rewarding career opportunities in the growing field of healthcare risk adjustment. This credential signals to employers that you have the specialized skills needed to manage complex diagnostic coding. Job titles this certification can lead to include:

  • Risk Adjustment Coder
  • HCC Coder
  • Risk Adjustment Analyst
  • Risk Adjustment Auditor
  • Medical Documentation Specialist for Risk Adjustment
  • Clinical Documentation Improvement (CDI) Specialist focused on Risk Adjustment
  • Risk Adjustment Compliance Officer
  • Healthcare Data Analyst for Risk Models

Consultant, Risk Adjustment and Coding Quality

Frequently Asked Questions

This quiz contains a total of 0 practice questions carefully selected to test your knowledge on this subject.
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Yes, you can retake this practice test as many times as you need. The questions and options may be randomized on subsequent attempts to ensure comprehensive learning.

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