Glossary
AcronymsTerm Sort descending | Definition |
---|---|
DESIGNATED STANDARD | A standard which HHS has designated for use under the authority provided by HIPAA. |
DESIGNATED STANDARD MAINTENANCE ORGANIZATION | An organization, designated by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, to maintain standards adopted under Subpart I of 45 CFR Part 162. A DSMO may receive and process requests for adopting a new standard or modifying an adopted standard. |
DETERMINATION | A decision made to either pay in full, pay in part, or deny a claim. (See also Initial Claim Determination.) |
DIABETIC DURABLE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT | Purchased or rented ambulatory items, such a glucose meters and insulin infusion pumps, prescribed by a health care provider for use in managing a patient's diabetes, as covered by Medicare. |
DIAGNOSIS | The name for the health problem that you have. |
DIAGNOSIS CODE | The first of these codes is the ICD-9-CM diagnosis code describing the principal diagnosis (i.e. The condition established after study to be chiefly responsible for causing this hospitalization). The remaining codes are the ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes corresponding to additional conditions that coexisted at the time of admission, or developed subsequently, and which had an effect on the treatment received or the length of stay. |
DIAGNOSIS-RELATED GROUPS | A classification system that groups patients according to diagnosis, type of treatment, age, and other relevant criteria. Under the prospective payment system, hospitals are paid a set fee for treating patients in a single DRG category, regardless of the actual cost of care for the individual. |
DIAGNOSIS-RELATED GROUPS | A way to pay hospitals for health care based on diagnosis, age, gender, and complications. |
DIALYSATE | Dialysate or the dialysate fluid is the solution used in dialysis to remove excess fluids and waste products from the blood. |
DIALYSIS | A process by which dissolved substances are removed from a patient's body by diffusion from one fluid compartment to another across a semi-permeable membrane. The two types of dialysis that are currently commonly in use are hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis. |