We evaluate how ICD-10 coding, OASIS, and the Plan of Care work together — identifying gaps, inconsistencies, and areas that require alignment.
Each case below reflects real scenarios across Start of Care, Resumption of Care, Recertification and Discharge. These examples highlight the types of findings that can occur throughout the home health episode and the level of detail applied during our RN-led reviews.
Completing Coding and Ensuring Clinical Consistency from Referral Documentation
A partner agency submitted a complex Start of Care without diagnoses, relying on Kupono Solutions to complete ICD-10 coding and perform a structured clinical review based on referral documentation.
As I worked through this chart, the biggest gap was not just missing diagnoses — it was how disconnected the documentation was across sections. Once everything was aligned, the patient’s full clinical picture became much clearer.
Post-Hospitalization Review & Alignment
Ensuring Accuracy Following a Change in Condition
This chart showed how quickly things can become misaligned after a hospitalization. Small inconsistencies across sections made it difficult to clearly understand the patient’s current status until everything was brought back into alignment.
Continuity of Care & Skilled Need Support
Strengthening Documentation for Ongoing Services
The biggest gap here was not the care itself — it was how the story of the care was documented. Once the timeline, changes, and interventions were clearly outlined, the need for continued services became much easier to support.
Ensuring OASIS & Outcome Accuracy
Reviewing Discharge Documentation for Consistency Across the Episode
This review highlighted how easy it is for discharge documentation to miss important details from earlier in the episode. Small inconsistencies can change how the entire episode is interpreted if not corrected.
These are the patterns we see most often when reviewing charts across agencies. Left unaddressed, they can directly impact reimbursement, compliance, and audit risk.