Can I Bring Printed Errata and ICD-10-CM Guidelines Into the Exam?
For Online Exams, NO You Cannot
The AAPC has stated in a
Facebook video on September 10, 2020 the following:
So no additional paper is allowed in the exam. I’m being asked if you can print out the guidelines. The answer to that is “no” those are available in your ICD-10 codebook. So the only thing you will be permitted to have in the online exam are the physical codebooks and a white dry-erase board that you can use for process of elimination
Please read the
AAPC FAQ and our
Unofficial FAQ for more information about the online exams.
For In-Person Exams, YES You Can
We confirmed by email from the exams department at the AAPC and Teresa Zarco stated:
"Yes, they [examinees] are allowed to bring a printout of the current years guidelines."
"if the proctors have any questions regarding the guidelines the day of the exam. they are more they welcome to contact Wendy Willes, her number is on the Proctor Confirmation."
For a complete list of approved and recommended resources, please refer to the
"Approved Resources" document.
The ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines are allowed in all exams that list the ICD-10-CM as an approved resource. Highlighting, underlining and brief notations needed for day-to-day coding is permitted on the printed side of the pages. Long passages of information are not permitted on the blank pages of the print out.
You are also allowed to bring in any Errata from official sources like CPT, ICD, and HCPCS. At times certain publishers have errata - like in a previous years version of ICD a publisher was missing the ambulance modifiers. Examinees were allowed to bring in the official errata from the publisher with those missing pages.
You can always verify with the AAPC by calling 800-626-2633 or emailing them at
[email protected].
Handwritten notes are acceptable in the coding books only if they pertain to daily coding activities. Questions from the Study Guides, Practice Exams or the Exam itself are prohibited. Tabs may be inserted, taped, pasted, glued, or stapled in the manuals so long as the obvious intent of the tab is to earmark a page with words or numbers, not supplement information in the book. Altering, whiting out, painting, or printing over any pages within the code books (e.g., marketing pages, table of contents, reference pages, etc.) to supplement information is prohibited.
No materials (other than tab dividers) may be inserted, taped, pasted, glued, or stapled in the manuals.
www.cdc.gov