Neonatology and Paediatric

Neonatology and Pediatric CDI

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TVH Neonatology and Pediatric

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For neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), documentation should distinguish:

2 / 45

For neonatal jaundice due to ABO incompatibility, the chart should state:

3 / 45

When documenting autism spectrum disorder, pediatrics should:

4 / 45

In pediatric seizure documentation, best practice is to record:

5 / 45

When a newborn is small for gestational age (SGA), the documentation should specify:

6 / 45

In a preterm infant with PDA, the note should state:

7 / 45

For failure to thrive, pediatric documentation should include:

8 / 45

For hypoxic‑ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) in a newborn, documentation must specify:

9 / 45

When documenting chronic conditions in a pediatric complex‑care patient (e.g., CP, epilepsy, GT), best practice is to:

10 / 45

When documenting pediatric obesity, the chart should indicate:

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When documenting acute gastroenteritis, pediatrics should:

12 / 45

A pediatric department wants fewer documentation queries about “feeding difficulties” in infants. Which change will improve documentation most?

13 / 45

When documenting bronchitis in a school‑age child, best ICD‑10‑CM wording is:

14 / 45

In neonatal notes, birth weight should be documented as:

15 / 45

For a neonate with meconium aspiration syndrome, wording should read:

16 / 45

For a pediatric UTI, the note should specify:

17 / 45

When documenting recurrent wheeze in a toddler, best wording to avoid premature labeling is:

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For neonatal exposure to maternal infections (e.g., hepatitis B), the newborn note should:

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In a child with type 1 diabetes, the diagnosis line should capture:

20 / 45

An internal medicine department wants to improve risk capture for multimorbid patients. Which structural intervention is most effective?

21 / 45

For respiratory distress in a term newborn due to transient tachypnea, best wording is:

22 / 45

When documenting neonatal sepsis, the note should clearly state:

23 / 45

In documenting bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), the neonatology note must indicate:

24 / 45

In infants with neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS), documentation should include:

25 / 45

For acute bronchiolitis due to RSV, pediatric documentation should state:

26 / 45

For a baby born at 29+3 weeks, the neonatal admission diagnosis line should document:

27 / 45

For a late preterm infant at 36+1 weeks without complications, the admission diagnosis should say:

28 / 45

When documenting recurrent otitis media, pediatrics should specify:

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In a term newborn with hypothermia immediately after birth, the diagnosis should read:

30 / 45

For a neonate with grade III IVH, best diagnosis wording is:

31 / 45

To reflect HF with recovered EF in a previously reduced EF patient, internists should document:

32 / 45

In pediatric documentation for suspected sepsis, the note should:

33 / 45

For a pediatric asthma patient, the problem list should distinguish:

34 / 45

For suspected child abuse, pediatric documentation must clearly state:

35 / 45

In neonatal records, multiple gestation should be documented as:

36 / 45

For a newborn exposed to tobacco in utero, the neonatal chart should state:

37 / 45

For neonatal hypoglycemia in an infant of a non‑diabetic mother, documentation should:

38 / 45

In pediatric documentation of anemia, the key for coding is to:

39 / 45

For pediatric COVID‑19 with pneumonia, documentation should read:

40 / 45

In a neonate of a diabetic mother with hypoglycemia, optimal diagnosis wording is:

41 / 45

For a child with known epilepsy and status epilepticus, the note should state:

42 / 45

For a child with ADHD, documentation that best supports coding is:

43 / 45

For neonatal abstinence requiring pharmacologic therapy, documentation should add:

44 / 45

For acute otitis media in a child, best ICD‑10‑CM‑ready wording is:

45 / 45

When documenting congenital heart disease, the pediatric note should: