Affected user(s):
The primary users concerned are physicians and nurse practitioners using MYLE to document diagnoses in the patient chart summary.
This may also indirectly affect medical office staff and billing administrators who rely on accurate diagnostic codes for reporting and claims.
The issue impacts all clinicians practicing in British Columbia (BC) who would prefer to use ICD-10 codes but are currently limited to ICD-9 within the summary section.
Task affected:
The problem occurs during the clinical documentation workflow, specifically when updating or entering diagnoses in the Summary section of the patient’s chart in MYLE.
When clinicians record a diagnosis, they must currently select or input an ICD-9 code, even though ICD-9 is outdated and lacks the necessary specificity for many modern clinical, administrative, and reporting needs.
The request is to enable the use of ICD-10 coding in the summary section.
Impact:
Frequency: This task occurs daily, often multiple times per day per clinician, as diagnoses are routinely updated or added to patient summaries.
Time savings: While the time saved per entry may be modest (e.g., 30–60 seconds per diagnosis when avoiding manual clarification, cross-referencing, or re-documentation), the cumulative impact across many patients and providers is significant.
Overall impact:
Improved diagnostic specificity supports better care planning and follow-up.
Alignment with current Canadian standards (most laboratories, public health reporting, and insurers use ICD-10 or ICD-10-CA) reduces inconsistencies and potential coding errors.
More granular coding improves reporting, quality metrics, research capabilities, and population health tracking.
Continued reliance on ICD-9 risks misalignment with external systems and outdated documentation practices.
Current state:
Clinicians must currently use ICD-9 codes in the summary section, even though ICD-9 is outdated and lacks granularity.
In some cases, users may document more specific clinical details in free text to compensate for ICD-9 limitations.
If ICD-10 codes are required for external reporting, users may need to manually convert or cross-reference codes outside of MYLE, increasing administrative burden and the risk of discrepancies.