Catholic Health Initiatives Helps Lead Campaign to Create New ICD-10 Codes on Human Trafficking

New diagnostic codes will help medical professionals identify, assist victims of human trafficking

ENGLEWOOD, Colo.--()--Catholic Health initiatives helped spearhead an 18-month-long effort to create a diagnostic code that will allow medical professionals to identify victims of human trafficking when they arrive at facilities seeking health care.

CHI, one of the nation’s largest nonprofit health systems, collaborated with the American Hospital Association’s Hospitals Against Violence (HAV) initiative and clinicians at Massachusetts General Hospital’s Human Trafficking Initiative and Freedom Clinic to develop and secure ICD-10 codes that will allow providers to document sex and labor exploitation for the first time.

The 29 human trafficking-related codes, published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on June 11, will help providers identify victims and respond appropriately to assist victims. Set to take effect in October, the codes will also provide much-needed data to understand the scope of this problem.

“Like victims of child abuse or elder abuse, victims of human trafficking are coming into emergency rooms and health care facilities on a daily basis – and we have to be ready," said Colleen Scanlon, senior vice president and chief advocacy officer for Englewood, Colo.-based Catholic Health Initiatives. “This is a significant step forward. Having these codes will help clinicians adequately classify a diagnosis and plan appropriate treatment."

The new codes will be used to identify and document both confirmed and suspected cases of forced sexual and labor exploitation of children and adults who go to a hospital or medical facility for treatment of an injury, illness or condition. Like other ICD codes, they serve as an official diagnosis to describe diseases, causes of diseases and death.

Over the past several years, human trafficking has become a public health concern that is growing nationwide. Between 2007 and 2017, the National Human Trafficking Resource Center received more than 40,000 reports of human trafficking cases in the U.S.

Hospitals are in a unique position to identify and assist victims. One study found that almost 88 percent of sex-trafficking survivors surveyed said they had contact with a health care provider while they were being exploited. The most frequent site referenced was a hospital emergency department. Victims may seek treatment for occupational injuries, sexually transmitted diseases or pregnancy and HIV tests, or a host of other acute and chronic illnesses.

“Human trafficking is hiding in plain sight — we know victims are seeking care," said Wendy L. Macias Konstantopoulos, M.D., who is director of Massachusetts General Hospital’s Human Trafficking Initiative in Boston and served as the physician expert in the effort to win approval of the new codes. “Hospitals can and must take a leadership role in identifying victims and raising awareness about the issue. These new codes will strengthen data collection on the health and social outcomes of human trafficking and inform the development of resources and services better equipped to respond to the profound trauma associated with this underreported, abhorrent crime."

“The adoption of these codes is a huge step forward in combating human trafficking,” said Nelly Leon-Chisen, AHA’s Director of Coding and Classification, who was instrumental in developing and shepherding the codes through the approval process. “It will be crucially important for coding professionals to understand how to recognize and use these codes.”

Medical professionals will find more guidance on documenting and coding human trafficking on the HAV human trafficking website that will be launched later this month.

CHI’s work on the diagnostic codes coincides with its other efforts to prevent human trafficking. In Kentucky, CHI helped pass legislation that imposed stiffer penalties on human trafficking, provided identification training and ensured safe harbor for victims. And in Houston, CHI is working to unite hospitals and health providers on best practices for identifying and effectively responding to victims. CHI provides resources for violence prevention and has developed education on human trafficking.

Contacts

Catholic Health initiatives
Michael Romano, 303-383-2720
National Director, Media Relations
michaelromano@catholichealth.net

Release Summary

Catholic Health Initiatives helped spearhead an effort to create medical diagnostic codes for identifying and assisting victims of human trafficking.

Contacts

Catholic Health initiatives
Michael Romano, 303-383-2720
National Director, Media Relations
michaelromano@catholichealth.net